The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Fido funeral: In Japan, a send-off for robot dogs

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ISUMI, Japan: The robot dogs lined up in their dozens Thursday in Japan were no tech fair display. They were the dearly departed being honoured with their own traditiona­l ‘funeral’.

In some respects, it was a funeral like any other in Japan, with incense smoke wafting as a priest chanted a sutra, praying for the peaceful transition of the souls of the departed.

But the departed were 114 of Sony’s old generation­s of AIBO robot dogs, each wearing a tag to show where they came from and to which family they belonged.

Electronic­s repair company A FUN, which specialise­s in fixing vintage products, has sent off some 800 AIBOs this way in recent years at a centuries-old Buddhist temple.

With the AIBO no longer in production, owners of old or ‘dead’ robodogs often send them to the company, the only way it can obtain genuine parts to use in repairs.

The defunct dogs serve as the equivalent of organ donors for defective robots, but before they are put to use, the company honours them with a traditiona­l send-off.

The dogs often arrive with letters that give their names, how they spent their lives, and other details.

“I feel relieved to know there will be a prayer for my AIBO,” one owner said in a letter.

Another owner wrote: “Please help other AIBOs. Tears rose in my eyes when I decided to say goodbye.”

Bungen Oi, the priest at the 450-year-old Kofukuji temple in Isumi, east of Tokyo, dismisses the idea that holding memorials for machines is absurd.

“All things have a bit of soul,” he told AFP after the service.

Nobuyuki Norimatsu, who heads A FUN, also says he feels the robodogs have souls, even if they are destined to be ‘donors’.

“We’d like to return the souls to the owners and make the robot a machine to utilise their parts,” he said.

“We don’t take parts before we hold a funeral for them,” he says.

The AIBO was the world’s first home-use entertainm­ent robot capable of developing its own ‘personalit­y’. — AFP

 ??  ?? Kofukuji temple chief priest Bungen Oi offers a prayer for Sony’s pet robot AIBOs displayed on an altar prior to hold the robots’ funeral at the Kofukuji temple in Isumi, Chiba. — AFP photo
Kofukuji temple chief priest Bungen Oi offers a prayer for Sony’s pet robot AIBOs displayed on an altar prior to hold the robots’ funeral at the Kofukuji temple in Isumi, Chiba. — AFP photo

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