Just think one of the reason for "why people lost there jobs".
Robots making a bus
Japan’s legions of robots, the world’s largest fleet of mechanized workers, are having a tough time finding work as the country suffers its deepest recession in more than a generation. Here, robots work on new vehicles at a Nissan plant in Japan.
Thanks to Photographer: Junko Kimura/Getty Images
Robots are working in an Electrical industry
Yaskawa Electric's industrial robots in Tokyo.
Thanks to Photographer: Yuriko Nakao/Reuters
A Robot in serving
Here, a robot washes a cup during a demonstration in Tokyo.
Thanks to Photographer: Kim Kyung-Hoon/Reuters
A Robot help & take care a person
A chef robot. With citizens 65 or older approaching 25 percent of the population, Japan was also banking on robots to help take care of retirees and the elderly.
Thanks to Photographer: Koji Sasahara/Associated Press
A Robot work in a company as a welcome man
In Japanese pop culture, robots have long been portrayed as friendly helpers. Here, a robot by the Japanese robotics company Tmsuk
Thanks to Photographer: Everett Kennedy Brown/European Press photo Agency
A Robot Play with children
Sony pulled the plug on its robot dog, Aibo, in 2006, just seven years after its launch. Though initially popular, Aibo, with a price tag of over $2,000, never managed to break into the mass market.
Thanks to Photographer: Shizuo Kambayashi/Associated Press
A robot Talk with a scientist
The i-Sobot, a toy robot that can recognize spoken words, from Takara Tomy. The company has sold 47,000 of the bots since they went on sale in late 2007.
Thanks to Photographer: Yoshikazu Tsuno/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images
A robot playing violin
Toyota's violin-playing robot. Some say Japanese robotics projects tend to be concentrated on humanoids or futuristic to the point of being far-fetched.
Thanks to Photographer: Everett Kennedy Brown/European Press photo Agency