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Hidden away in a lab in north-west London three black metal robotic hands move eerily on an engineering work bench. No claws, or pincers, but four fingers and a thumb opening and closing slowly, with joints in all the right places.
"We're not trying to build Terminator," jokes Rich Walker, director of Shadow Robot, the firm that made them.
Bespectacled, with long hair and a beard and moustache, he seems more like a latter-day hippy than a tech whizz, and he is clearly proud as he shows me around his firm.
"We set out to build the robot that helps you, that makes your life better, your general-purpose servant that can do anything around the home, do all the housework..."
But there's a deeper ambition: to address one of the UK's most pressing challenges - the escalating crisis in social care.





