The instruction referred to “the doorway on your left”, not “on the left”; “on your left” is even worse in context.
It doesn’t give a coherent world model that the rest of its instructions follow. e.g. if it thinks I didn’t take a photo from that door when it asked me to, then its instruction “walk straight ahead past where that bedroom doorway was on the left” gets me past the kitchen again.
No, I didn’t mean to say that it thought you didn’t take the correct picture that it asked for. It thought you did and therefore thought that the left doorway was eliminated and asked for the right doorway instead. Later, having eliminated (in its mind) both the right and left doorway, it asked for a picture from the hallway past the two doors it already eliminated.
I think my interpretation fits better with the appliance it saw and its later instruction to take a picture of the other door, the one on the right.
Hm, I think I’d bet against this:
The instruction referred to “the doorway on your left”, not “on the left”; “on your left” is even worse in context.
It doesn’t give a coherent world model that the rest of its instructions follow. e.g. if it thinks I didn’t take a photo from that door when it asked me to, then its instruction “walk straight ahead past where that bedroom doorway was on the left” gets me past the kitchen again.
No, I didn’t mean to say that it thought you didn’t take the correct picture that it asked for. It thought you did and therefore thought that the left doorway was eliminated and asked for the right doorway instead. Later, having eliminated (in its mind) both the right and left doorway, it asked for a picture from the hallway past the two doors it already eliminated.
I think my interpretation fits better with the appliance it saw and its later instruction to take a picture of the other door, the one on the right.