General-purpose robot

General-purpose humanoid robots

One of the most persistent designs in robotics is the humanoid.  Mimicking humanity was the most obvious path to development for many early efforts in the field.  As a result, many of the most successful robot designs have been humanoid in form.

After the Third Robot War, the Planetary League adopted the Rubric of Duty into law, officially confining all commercially produced robots and AIs to a single specialized purpose, effectively preventing them from achieving general intelligence.  Even with this regulatory regime, general-purpose hardware remained popular, and many programmers and DIY enthusiasts (on both sides of the law) continually sought to push the boundaries of ability.

For example, the Pegasus Cybernetics S-series, which first saw production in GSC 54 was widely popular, and was adapted to a wide variety of tasks.

Robots

Robots fill many roles, and have a wide array of functions here are some examples:

 

Cargo robots are designed to carry heavy loads.

General-purpose robots could perform most of the functions of a human worker, but were generally limited to a single function.

Power Utility robots store and dispense large amounts of energy.

Superstructure Maintenance robots repair the outer hulls of space-craft and space stations.

Virobots are parasites on intelligent life-forms.