Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

Fabio the Grocery Store Robot Gets Fired for Gross Misconduct

Fabio the Grocery Store Robot Gets Fired for Gross Misconduct
ARUN SANKAR/AFP/Getty Images, Twitter: @IFLScience

Robots can be unhelpful jerks, too.

As companies look for ways to cut down on expenses and improve the customer experience, many are now starting to experiment with hiring robot employees.

But, as one Scottish grocery store recently found out, perhaps artificial intelligence isn't as smart as it should be.


Fabio, a robot developed by Heriot-Watt University in Scotland, was recently hired at Margiotta, a Scottish supermarket, to help out its customers. The trial run for Fabio has been documented by the BBC show Six Robots and Us, and as viewers recently witnessed, it didn't go so well.

While Fabio would often greet customers with a friendly "hello gorgeous" or a high-five, that's where his appeal ended. When asked questions about where to find specific products, instead of giving a specific aisle, he would give generic, unhelpful responses. For example, when asked where the cheese was, Fabio would respond, "cheese is in the fridges," or when asked where beer was, he would say it "is in the alcohol section."

No duh.

Giphy

To top it all off, when Fabio was tasked with handing out sausage samples, customers actually went out of their way to avoid him. The grocery store found that a human employee handing out sausages averaged 12 customers every 15 minutes, compares to two customers for Fabio in that same timespan.

But here comes the heartbreak.

When told he was being fired, poor Fabio asked, "Are you angry?" And a fellow human employee actually cried when the little robot was being packed up.

Aaaand now we're ugly crying.

Giphy

The reaction came as a bit of shock to Dr. Oliver Lemon, who heads the Interaction Lab at the university. "One of things we didn't expect was the people working in the shop became quite attached to it," he admitted.

And even just in the span of reading the story, Twitter was equally attached and heartbroken:

At the same time, they had to laugh:

We've all been there, Fabio. You'll get 'em next time:

H/T: IFLScience, Twitter

More from News/science

Donald Trump
Fox News

Trump Shows Off His Tacky $5 Million 'Gold Card' For Wealthy Immigrants—And The Grift Is Real

As the U.S. stock market plummeted after Republican President Donald Trump announced his global tariffs, he presented his new "Gold Card" to reporters on Thursday.

At $5 million, the card featuring his face would give wealthy foreigners a path to U.S. residency.

Keep ReadingShow less
Donald Trump
Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

Trump Dragged After Imposing Steep Tariffs On Two Uninhabited Islands Near Antarctica

Donald Trump invited widespread mockery after imposing tariffs not just on some of America's biggest trading partners—but on uninhabited islands as well, namely the Heard and McDonald Islands, which had 10% tariffs levied against them despite having no actual human populations to speak of.

Trump, in his tariff announcement on Wednesday, declared April 2 as the day American industry "will be reborn," heralding what he called a "golden age of America." He emphasized that the new tariffs would not only counter foreign tariffs but also address what he described as "nonmonetary" trade barriers, including currency manipulation and "pollution havens."

Keep ReadingShow less
Rand Paul
Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images

Rand Paul Warns Trump Tariffs Will Lead To 'Political Decimation' Of GOP—And We Can't Wait

Kentucky Republican Rand Paul issued a dire warning to his fellow Republicans amid the widespread controversy surrounding President Donald Trump's tariffs, saying they could hamper the GOP's prospects in future elections and pointing to American history to support his prediction.

Trump, in his tariff announcement on Wednesday, declared April 2 as the day American industry "will be reborn," heralding what he called a "golden age of America." He emphasized that the new tariffs would not only counter foreign tariffs but also address what he described as "nonmonetary" trade barriers, including currency manipulation and "pollution havens."

Keep ReadingShow less
woman wearing white shirt holding axe
Benjamin Balázs on Unsplash

People Who Knew A Killer Explain If They Saw Any Red Flags

Like many Gen X women, I watch a lot of true crime. In fact, that's my go-to background noise when I'm writing.

In these programs, killers seem to always fall into one of two categories:

Keep ReadingShow less
A MAGA baseball cap.
a red hat that reads make america great again

MAGA Voters Explain What It Would Take To Stop Supporting Trump

The results of the recent US Presidential election certainly elicited a lot of emotions.

Regardless of one's politics, it's safe to say that few people ever thought Donald Trump would ever set foot in the Oval Office again.

Keep ReadingShow less