In Bicentennial man by Isaac Asimov the robot Andrew Martin obsesses about modifying it’s body to be what it is not. Is this the first robot that does this or are there examples in older stories of a robot that obsessed on changing it’s self. I do not want to include computers that upgrade themselves into ones of larger capacity. Let’s stick to robots that decide the body needs an upgrade.
A secondary topic for this thread can be robots that upgraded found in any media before 1980. I put this limit as I don’t want a thread full of the robot deluge that hit the world as computers did take a large part in modern society.
Bicentennial Man was published in February 1976 the Bicentennial of the U.S.A…
The comic-book villain Ultron seems to fit. (In fact, just calling him “Ultron” sort of misses the point; even back in the '60s he was upgrading from “Ultron-5” to “Ultron-6” and so on.)
Joe the narcissistic Robot in Henry Kuttner’s The Proud Robot and subsequent tales (1943) upgrades himself by adding features that his alcoholic inventor, Gallegher, didn’t give him.
I’m not sure, but I think Adam Link (1939-1942) had some upgrades.
I’m going to nominate L. Frank Baum’s The Tin Man (first appeared in 1900). I’m not sure if he qualifies as a “robot” as we know the term, but I think it’s close enough for government work.
The Tin Man stretches the point, because he technically was a cyborg. As he lost biological parts he replaced them with tin parts. A fairy enabled magic puppet is not a robot. There is also Tik-Tok a purely mechanical soldier in Oz but he is not obsessed with modifying his body.
If you go by the later (but still Baum) Oz mythology, the Tin Man was a fairy-enabled magic creature also. Under my clarified understanding of your rules for this thread, I’d definitely rule out both of them.