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HitchBOT: US tour ends as hitchhiking robot is vandalised in Philadelphia HitchBOT: US tour ends as hitchhiking robot is vandalised in Philadelphia
(about 9 hours later)
A robot that had been hitchhiking across the US met a bitter end in Philadelphia yesterday. Philadelphia, William Penn’s “city of brotherly love” has fallen far. For on its streets this weekend came the demise  of HitchBOT, a friendly robot whose only wish was to  see America.
HitchBOT - attempting to make the cross-state journey from Massachusetts to San Francisco - was damaged beyond repair in the Pennsylvanian city, researchers told AP. The hitch-hiking robot that spent 26 days travelling all the way across Canada in 2014 lasted just two weeks on the mean streets of the US. It was roughed up and left for dead in Philadelphia this weekend.
Frauke Zeller, one of the robot’s creators, said: “Sadly, sadly it’s come to an end.” A child-sized robot created by Canadian researchers as a social experiment and then set free to travel the continent unsupervised, HitchBOT was damaged beyond repair as it passed through “Philly”. A photograph of what appeared to be its dismembered remains scattered on a Philadelphia pavement was posted on Twitter on 1 August.
The Canadian robot had successfully hitchhiked across Canada in 26 days last year, but his American tour ended after around two weeks. It set off from Boston on 17 July. The robot, unable to move on its own, relied on the kindness of strangers to pick it  up, pass it along, or put it beside a busy road to be spotted by the next generous driver. Last year it made successful trips across not only Canada, but also Germany and the Netherlands.
AP reported that some tape wrapped around hitchBOT's head read: “San Francisco or bust.” It had a GPS and camera installed, which took a photo every 20 minutes to document the trip. People shared photos of their encounters with hitchBOT HitchBOT’s doomed American road trip began in Marblehead, Massachusetts on 17 July, with the hope that it could again cross the continent, this time to California. The robot spent several days in and around Boston, including attending a Boston Red Sox baseball game.  But tragedy awaited HitchBOT at its next city stop in Philadelphia.
The creators were sent an image of the damaged robot but they could not track its location because the battery was dead, AP reported. Its creators, led by Frauke Zeller of Toronto’s Ryerson University and David Harris Smith of McMaster University in Hamilton, Ontario, were sent a picture of the mutilated robot on 1 August but were unable to track its location because the battery was dead. They do not know who destroyed it, or why.
A statement on the robot’s website read: “Oh dear, my body was damaged, but I live on back home and with all my friends. I guess sometimes bad things happen to good robots! My trip must come to an end for now, but my love for humans will never fade.” Though it was immobile, HitchBOT was able to hold up a limited conversation. It contained a camera that took photos approximately every 20 minutes, and a GPS tracker to relay its location.
Some fans reacted to the news about hitchBOT's damage on Twitter. Following its successful journey across Canada, Ms Zeller and Mr Smith explained the project in the Harvard Business Review. “When we set out to see if a robot could hitch-hike across Canada, we were trying to initiate discussions about trust, notions of safety, and about our attitude towards technology,” they wrote. “We also wanted to see whether a robot could hitch-hike across the country, relying only on the goodwill and help of strangers.”
Thanks Philly!!! You freaking Killed @hitchBOT I'm so mad right now. In its short but eventful life, HitchBOT attended a wedding and a comics convention, and spent a week on the road with a heavy metal band. On its website, the robot admitted that its preferred genre was electronic music, writing: “Kraftwerk are... amazing.”
Whoever killed Hitchbot- YOU’RE ON MY LIST HitchBOT leaves behind the team of researchers it described as its “family”, some 44,200 Twitter followers, and one sibling, KulturBOT, a robot devoted to visiting art galleries and tweeting images of the artworks. Ms Zeller was particularly concerned about children who followed HitchBOT on social media. “I hope that people won’t be too disappointed, too sad,” she said.
The robot had a bucket list of sites to see while travelling through the US, including the lights in New York’s Times Square, Las Vegas in Nevada and the Hollywood sign in California. HitchBOT itself issued a short statement from beyond the grave. “I guess sometimes bad things happen to good robots! My trip must come to an end for now, but my love for humans will never fade. Thank you to all my friends.”
People shared photos of their encounters with hitchBOT
Photos taken by the robot and those by people who found it were posted on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram.
Although hitchBOT could not actually move, it could engage in limited conversation.