Well, on a large scale you'll probably need a few highly skilled people working a control station/processing near the mining sites, since there's a several minute signal delay between Earth and the asteroid belt. Those robots will be much busier and need more supervision than a rover.
It would take FAR less energy to just send the processed materials back than to drag the asteroid all the way. That and you risk slamming it into the Earth.
Nope, you don't need more supervision. The robots have the benefit of operating in zero-g (or close enough to make almost no difference), making maneuvering much easier. Additionally, their task is also easier. The robot doesn't have to look for interesting areas, danger avoidance or any of that. It just needs to break up the asteroid, and throw the pieces in a refining installation*. Easy.
Besides, many mining vehicles on earth are already operated, little problems with that.
*After all, the main resources looked for a various rare earths, which are spread thorough the asteroid. Don't need to teach your droid to be smart enough to actively look for them. Cheaper to just process everything into a semiprocessed package, and then send it for additional, complicated further processing.
Additionally, the dragging into orbit system only works for near miss planetoids. Of which there're enough for a mediocre mining operation. Additionally, we're pretty good with moving stuff around now. (Also, highly eccentric orbit is good enough)
Sure, that makes sense, but it depends how big the processing plant is. For any given asteroid, we're probably talking about a human-controlled drone operation, bringing what's necessary to set up a factory and then expanding the facility with in-situ materials.
That means you'd have to get the right materials on site. Some asteroids might have those, but the majority 90% + is rather metal poor. Also, humans are more of a problem than an aid to an operation that far out. For comparison, each person/day on the ISS costs 7.5 million dollars. For psychological reasons, you need to send at least 3. Also remember that costs increase exponentially as time and distance increases, so I honestly doubt your operation will be profitable.
I mean, the Beagle II lander (while unsuccesfull) cost only 60 million dollars. I'm confident that we can make succesfull fully automated mining rovers for less than 100 million. Sure, a significant amount of rovers will fail before the end of the mission, but they're replaceable, especially at that cost. ((Really, that's been a proposal. Mass Manafacture Beagle II landers, each at less than 4% of the cost of the Curiosity, and send them everywhere interesting. Quite a few will fail, but the rest will still give a best cost/return ratio.))
Well, on a large scale you'll probably need a few highly skilled people working a control station/processing near the mining sites, since there's a several minute signal delay between Earth and the asteroid belt. Those robots will be much busier and need more supervision than a rover.
It would take FAR less energy to just send the processed materials back than to drag the asteroid all the way. That and you risk slamming it into the Earth.
Most of the proposals I have read about involve using a small object with a very low delta-v as a source of water or oxygen for an earth orbiter. In that context, bringing the whole thing back with a fully automated craft could make a lot more sense because the fuel spent on the excess materials would be less than the fuel spent on sending mining equipment that far.
Yup, it depends on the asteroid. Some contain quite a lot of ice, which can easily be transformed into quality rocket fuel. If you run that through a high specific impulse engine, you can get quite a long way.