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La historia de Juana (English: Juana's Story) [1] is a Mexican telenovela produced by W Studios for TelevisaUnivision. [2] It is based on the 2002 Venezuelan telenovela Juana la virgen, created by Perla Farías. The series stars Camila Valero as the title character, alongside Brandon Peniche. [3] It aired on Las Estrellas from 3 June 2024 to 30 ...
The work may be about the computer, or the computer may be an important element of the story. Only static computers are included. Robots and other fictional computers that are described as existing in a mobile or humanlike form are discussed in a separate list of fictional robots and androids.
Astro Boy and other robot characters from the 2009 film of the same name; Several characters in Terminator Salvation (2009) including Marcus Wright, the T-800, several T-600's, The Motor-Terminators and The Harvester; GERTY 3000 from the 2009 film Moon; The Stitchpunks and others from the animated film 9 (2009) Robo from Super Capers (2009)
Rattleballs (character) Ricky Ricotta's Mighty Robot; Ro-Busters; ROB 344–66/IIIa; Robbi (character) Robby the Robot; Robear Berbils; Robo Machine; RoboBlitz; Robot AL-76 Goes Astray; Robot Archie; Robot Detective; Robot Jox; Robot Unicorn Attack; Roderick (novel) Rog-2000; Rosie the Robot Maid; Rover (The Prisoner)
In the U.S. cartoon line, the Autobots were the descendants of a line of robots created as consumer goods by the Quintessons; the Decepticons, are descended instead from robots designed as military hardware. Other terms for the Autobots are Autorobot (in Italy), Autoboterna (in Sweden), Kibery (in Ukraine), and Robotrikim (in Israel).
Fables for Robots is a series of satirical fairy tales set in a universe populated entirely by robots, with robot kings, robot peasants, robot knights, and robot scientists; a robot damsel in distress is pestered by a robot dragon, robot dogs have robot fleas, etc. [1] The series The Cyberiad belongs to the same grotesque cross-genre of fairy tale and science fiction.
The "R" initial in his name stands for "robot," a naming convention in Asimov's future society in which all robot names start with the initial R to differentiate them from humans, whom they often resemble. He is a major character in the Robot series, as well as having important roles in the prequels and sequels to the original Foundation Trilogy.
She has been given several names through the decades: Parody (the name Rotwang calls her in the novel), Ultima, Machina, Robotrix, False Maria, Robot Maria, Roboria and Hel. The intertitles of the 2010 restoration of Metropolis quote Rotwang, the robot's creator, referring to his gynoid Maschinenmensch , literally translated as "Machine human".