June 1, 2010

VGO TELEPRESENCE ROBOT

In what may be (but probably isn’t) just a coincidence, a third telepresence robot has made a (pre) commercial appearance in as many weeks. This robot is called Vgo, and… Well, it does telepresence. Stop me if you’ve heard this before, but you get on your computer on one end, connect to the robot, and then drive it around while looking through its cameras. Sensors keep you from running into stuff or falling down stairs, and it’ll run all day on one battery charge. The biggest news, at this point, is that the Vgo is only supposed to cost $5000. Plus a mandatory support contract of $1200 a year. So, $6000. The Boston Globe has a nice piece on Vgo… There aren’t many more technical details, but I did find this interesting: Two analysts I spoke with differed on the potential for robotic videoconferencing. Rob Enderle, a technology analyst at the Enderle Group who has written about the slow spread of traditional videoconferencing systems, said that “the closer we get to simulating being there, the better an alternative to travel it will become.’’ But Dan Kara, president of the publishing company Robotics Trends in Framingham, said, “I’m not quite sold on mobile telepresence. How is it that much better than having someone at the remote site carry around a netbook computer with a free copy of Skype on it?’’ The whole minion+laptop+Skype thing is exactly the point we made back when Anybots’ QA was introduced at CES for $30k. Obviously, a telepresence robot is much better than minion+laptop+Skype, but the question is, is it really that much better in terms of cost effectiveness? At the $6k price point, perhaps. Or maybe that’s not the question… Maybe the question should be, how much hardware is required to simulate being somewhere else […]
June 1, 2010

MILITARY ROOMBA CLEANS LAND MINES WITH EXPLOSIONS [WEAPONS]

Like its domestic ancestor, iRobot’s new military robot is also a cleaning machine. But instead of dust devils, this one cleans land mines and barbwire obstacles. It works using the Mk7 Anti-personell Obstacle Breaching System. Not subtle, but extremely effective. More » Military – Weapon – Business – Defense – Aerospace and Defense
June 1, 2010

ANYBOTS OFFICIALLY LAUNCHES QB TELEPRESENCE ROBOT

We first introduced you to Anybots’ QA telepresence robot back in January of 2009 at CES. QA was pretty slick looking, with features like a bendy waist and an LCD tie and a pricetag of about $30k. QB, a stripped down slimmer version of QA showed up about 9 months later, and now Anybots has announced the official launch of QB. All QB needs to be fully functional is you plus a computer on one end, and it plus wireless internet on the other. It has a top speed of 3.5 mph and will run for a solid eight hours per charge. The Anybots QB telepresence robot will be available this fall for $15,000, which seems like a lot… But, compared to the cost of (say) hiring a new employee and paying for them to relocate, or flying people back and forth across the country all the time, a $15k telepresence robot may make sense for a lot of businesses. [ Anybots QB ]
May 31, 2010

HOW PHONES RING A BELL IN YOUR HEAD [RINGTONES

The instant you hear a cellphone ring, your brain reacts in a unique way – if the ringtone matches that of your own phone.More » Ringtone – Cellular Phone – Communications – Wireless – Shopping
May 29, 2010

FABBALOO – FABBALOO BLOG – 3D BONE PUZZLE: SOLVED

Shared by Daniel “They hope to devise a “minimally invasive surgical robot” to perform the actual reconstruction, under the direction of a certified surgeon, of course.” Of course. They hope to devise a “minimally invasive surgical robot” to perform the actual reconstruction, under the direction of a certified surgeon, of course.
May 29, 2010

UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN’S MABEL ROBOT HITS A STRIDE, BREAKS A LEG (VIDEO) — ENGADGET

We’re going to warn you up front. This isn’t easy to watch, but robotics research can sometimes be a nasty business, and some things just
May 28, 2010

MAN IS WORLD’S FIRST TO LEAVE HOSPITAL WITH ARTIFICIAL HEART

Arizona man Charles Okeke spent the last two years of his life connected to a 400-pound machine that functioned as his heart. Now, he’s able to shed that bulk thanks to the new “Freedom Driver,” a backpack-powered, totally artificial heart that’s letting him leave the hospital grounds. He’s an honest-to-goodness bionic man. The Freedom Driver’s advanced miniaturized technology makes totally artificial hearts possible. Produced by Tuscon’s SynCardia — the same company behind the Total Artificial Heart that was keeping Okeke alive for two years — the Freedom Driver only weighs 13 pounds. Children go to school with book bags heavier than that. Okeke isn’t the first person to depend on a completely artificial heart. It’s a common layover on the way to a heart transplant. He is the first, however, to leave the hospital with one, and the first to test the Freedom Driver. Consider this: Keeping people alive while they wait for a suitable donor, without robbing them of their day-to-day freedom? That’s a major breakthrough. Amazingly, doctors say that even if a suitable donor is not found, Charles Okeke may be able to live the rest of his life with the Freedom Driver instead, which costs upwards of $125,000 and $18,000 a year to keep running. Check out the Freedom Driver and Charles Okeke in the video below. Via PhysOrg
May 27, 2010

ROBOT WARS: THE 6 SCARIEST UNMANNED AERIAL VEHICLES

Robot Wars: The 6 scariest unmanned aerial vehicles Look out, everybody, because here come the unmanned aerial vehicles, otherwise known as UAVs or drones. They’ve been flourishing in the Iraq War, starting with just a few unarmed drones when the conflict began in 2003, and now growing in numbers to more than 7,000. Many are packing serious missiles and bombs, and some soon could be autonomous. This is undoubtedly the dawn of an entirely new era of military might: robot wars. Flying over battlefields in a variety of shapes and sizes, the aircraft are controlled from either the battlefield itself, thousands of miles away, or anywhere in between. They can keep an eye on bad guys wherever they may roam, and some can even blow them up at a moment’s notice. One reason they’re so compelling for military types: They present no danger to their pilots. To help you recognize and identify these scary robotic birds, we picked out a representative sample of six of these these soulless, empty flyers for you to contemplate.
May 26, 2010

YOUTUBE– PREGNANT ROBOT TRAINS STUDENTS

May 26, 2010

YOUTUBE – RHEX BIPED ROBOT RUNS!

May 26, 2010

YOUTUBE – HOVER FROM MDA

May 26, 2010

YOUTUBE –HIGH-SPEED ROBOT HAND

August 15, 2010

ONJUKU, JAPAN

The next two days were wonderful and strange. I was taken to a large house in a beach front town named Onjuku in the prefecture of Chiba, where my Great Uncle, Tomoshisa Aoyama (my maternal grandmother’s youngest brother) owned a house that he designed himself on a half acre of land. It was a mixture of traditional Japanese design with a modern twist, so there was lots of open space in the central living area, which was unique to Japanese architecture. You can see something of the layout of the house in the Facebook pictures. You can make out in the pictures that the only real furniture in the house was a long wooden board that served as the main dining table, propped up on cardboard boxes and lined on both sides with pillows, and a very expensive looking leather sofa set and a fancy wood table. Furniture in Japan is always expensive, and this seemed particular classy. So classy, in fact, that my uncle Tomo was featured in the official Onjuku community brochure. If you go to this page and click on the first link with the “NEW” animated gif, you get the official brochure in pdf format. On the second page is a picture of Tomo in his leather couch, answering some question in Japanese and generally looking like a VIP. Soon after I arrived and met the people as best I could without sharing a common language, and was able with some complicated gestures to work out the family relations, Tomo took out an old scrap book of pictures of my mom’s family, which I looked through carefully and pointed and shared some laughs with the family. I was also offered a beer, which I drank and then began to feel quite sick. Unfortunately this was also […]
August 14, 2010

PROTOTYPE OF ROBOT THAT DEVELOPS EMOTIONS ON INTERACTING WITH HUMANS OFFICIALLY COMPLETE

The first prototype of a Nao robot that can develop emotions as it interacts with a human caregiver has been completed. A team across Europe was led by Dr. Lola Cañamero of the University of Herefordshire in the UK to develop the bot, which differs in several significant ways from those that came before it. These robots develop over time in much the way that a child does, learning to interact with and respond to the human beings around them. Modeled after human and chimpanzee childhood development paths, they are programmed to be highly adaptable to the people around them, and to become attached to whatever person is most suited to its needs and ‘personality’ profile. Over time, the more they interact, the more they learn and bond to the human being. These little ones, moreover, are capable of expressing a wide range of emotions, including anger, frustration, fear and happiness. The next steps are to research the bots’ emotional and non-linguistic behavior, and to move toward combining linguistic and non-linguistic communication to become further attached and adapted to them. Yes, we want one. Prototype of robot that develops emotions on interacting with humans officially complete originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 14 Aug 2010 12:44:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds. Permalink | source University of Herefordshire | Email this | Comments
August 14, 2010

WHAT A ROBOT NEEDS

Shared by Daniel h/t to everyone who sent this to me “Vacuum living room” is where “sex” would be on the human version Maslow’s hierarchy of needs. It doesn’t strike me as quite the same, but who knows… Maybe, to a Roomba, it is. Man, that’s deep. [ Lunchbreath ] Thanks TheophileEscargot!
August 12, 2010

JAPANESE RESEARCHERS DEVELOP ROBOTIC WHEELCHAIR THAT CAN FOLLOW HUMANS

We’ve already seen robotic wheelchairs designed to navigate autonomously, but it looks like some researchers at Saitama University’s Human-Robot Interaction Center are taking a slightly different approach with their latest project. They’ve developed a wheelchair equipped with a camera and a laser sensor that instead of tracking its surroundings, simply locks onto a nearby human companion and follows them around. It can even apparently anticipate the direction the person is going to go by using a distance sensor to check which way their shoulders are facing. Still no word on a commercial version, but the wheelchair is already being field-tested in care centers, where the researchers say it could be particularly useful if the facilities are short-staffed. Head on past the break to check it out in action. Continue reading Japanese researchers develop robotic wheelchair that can follow humans Japanese researchers develop robotic wheelchair that can follow humans originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 12 Aug 2010 23:59:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds. Permalink | source DigInfo TV | Email this | Comments
August 10, 2010

GOOGLE BUYS MICRODRONE, IMAGINATIONS RUN WILD

If you were Google, what would you do with an autonomous, camera-equipped quadrotor? Google, who is Google, must have a pretty good idea (or ideas), since they’ve bought their own Microdrone, which (last time we checked) costs somewhere in the neighborhood of $60k. According to the German publication Wirtschaftswoche, Microdrones GmbH says that their UAVs “are superbly suited to deliver more up-to-date recordings for mapping service Google Earth,” although that may just be a potential use that they’re suggesting as opposed to what Google is actually planning. Still, it’s kinda fun to think about… Like, it might be possible for Google to deliver a live version of Google Earth, at least over a small area, using a Microdrone (or a network of microdrones!) and a georeferenced live video network link. Or they could be doing something entirely different. The point is, I guess, that the Microdrone offers a way to collect data that is pretty much limited only by the imagination of the user, and Google has proven to be pretty creative when it comes to collecting and deploying imagery. So now that they have one, the sky’s the limit. Or rather, it isn’t. [ Microdrones GmbH ] VIA [ Blogoscoped ]
August 7, 2010

YOUTUBE – HAL(HYBRID ASSISTIVE LIMB) FROM CYBERDINE

Shared by Daniel missing from the screening list ATTN Jon
August 5, 2010

ROBOT DEMONSTRATES BALL HANDLING SKILLS (SFW)

Yep, it’s yet another thing that robots can do that I can’t do. At least the skills of this Gifu robot hand, programmed by the Cognitive Interaction Technology center at Bielefield University, aren’t totally beyond human abilities… Not yet, anyway. [ Neuroinformatics @ Bielefeld University ]
August 4, 2010

ROBOT PIONEERS:A DOCUMENTARY

Alex over at Trossen Robotics writes, “Our intern Jennero Rossi has been working diligently on his very first short documentary to give a first hand look into the world of robotics. We’re hoping that people who are interested in learning about robotics could find this video inspirational and see that they don’t need a PhD to start getting involved.” Not that you should underestimate the knowledge, skill, and ingenuity of robot builders, but you shouldn’t let the fact that it’s robotics intimidate you, either. As several people in the video point out, a lot has changed in a very short time, and robotics is easier to get started with now than it’s ever been before. Go to an event. Take a class. Join a club. Buy a kit. Before you know it, you’ll have your very own mechanical minion with which to enslave and/or destroy humanity. It’ll be fun, I promise! [ Trossen Robotics ]
August 3, 2010

SHAM SHUI PO

Today is my last day in Hong Kong. I just left the graduation ceremony, there is a dance party for the students in an hour, and I will leave from there to catch a bus to the Airport and head to Tokyo. I want to get one more blog post up at the airport so I can dump some of these pictures to the cloud. There are definitely some stories that need to be told. In this post, I will chronicle my rather turbulent experience with electronics in Hong Kong. I came to Hong Kong with the intention of buying a laptop, hoping I’d get it for cheaper here than in the states. was wrong; I’ll get better warranty coverage and default software in the states. In Mong Kok I did some price checking at a store called Broadway, which is basically the Hong Kong answer to Best Buy and is literally on every other street corner in Mong Kok. The prices were comparable to anything you could get online in the states, though I saw a lot of KIRFy tablets and MIDs and other fancy video devices that will never be available in the US. But if you want a serious computer market in Hong Kong that isn’t just a chain outlet, and it is clear that there is only one place to go: the Golden Computer Arcade in Sham Shui Po. Sham Shui Po has several blocks of open air markets down roads that are mostly closed to traffic, and is generally far less crowded than other places in Hong Kong. It is also far less commercial; although it is easy to find a KFC or a McDonalds, most of the restaurants are tiny local places, and this is pretty far north in Kowloon away from the more […]
August 3, 2010

ATHLETE ROVER BUSTS A MOVE

That’s not my headline. That’s JPL’s headline. And when JPL talks about something busting a move, you know it’s gonna be good. This robot is called ATHLETE (All-Terrain Hex-Limbed Extra-Terrestrial Explorer), and although we first wrote about it over two years ago, it’s great to see an update. This latest version of ATHLETE actually consists of two entirely independent three-limbed robots that attach to each side of a cargo pallet and then operate as a single system. The wheels may look small, but ATHLETE is designed to traverse pretty much any terrain on Earth (or any other planet); if its wheels get stuck, it just uses its limbs and starts to walk. The limbs also function as arms: on the inside of each axle is a quick-disconnect adapter that can select a tool off of the base of the robot to let it do things like sample collection or even construction. Look for ATHLETEs in the near future (let’s hope) on the lunar or Martian surface, helping to unload and transport cargo over challenging terrain. [ ATHLETE ]
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