August 30, 2010

TREES ARE NO PROTECTION FROM SNAKEBOTS

CMU just posted this new vid of their Snakebot (Modsnake) climbing a tree and looking around. It’s still tethered, but it’s a snake, so that just makes it seem more snakey. This isn’t the first video we’ve seen of CMU’s Snakebot climbing stuff, but it’s the first one we’ve seen outside of the lab, so that counts for something, right? Sure! [ CMU Biorobotics ] VIA [ Hizook ]
August 30, 2010

MICROSOFT SURFACE IS THE ROBOT CONTROL SYSTEM OF THE FUTURE

Shared by Daniel RTS games in the future are going to be so cool I love Microsoft Surface. I’ve been in love with it ever since the hands-on demo I got back at CES 2008. Since then, Surface has trickled into a few retail settings (and become the most epic D&D tabletop ever), but it shines when it comes to practical applications, too. Mark Micire at UMass Lowell has taken a Surface table and set it up to control a small swarm of (as yet hypothetical) robots through one of the most simple and effective interfaces I’ve ever seen, a hallmark of Surface. Not only can you just tap, touch, and drag to command as many robots as you like, but if you need to take personal control, the interface for that is extremely slick, Minority Report style. Furthermore, the control interface is also the display, making it fast and intuitive to change commands based on new data. Although it’s not implemented here, a logical next step might be to update the Surface display based on real-time mapping data from the robot swarm. Another advantage of this kind of system is that you can combine multiple types of robots returning all kinds of data into one seamless command and control display. Like, imagine that some of the swarm consisted of UAVs, and you could add a Z coordinate and send them off to scout ahead. And maybe they have radar or LIDAR, and then that data gets overlaid on the display as well. Sort of like this, except real. Am I gushing? I think I’m gushing. But this is totally cool, and there’s tons of potential. It’s not even that there’s anything that innovative going on here, strictly… It’s just that Surface is able to merge existing hardware and existing […]
August 26, 2010

UAV LOSES TAIL, WING, MORE TAIL, BARELY NOTICES

We already knew that in some specific cases, robots are better pilots than humans, but this footage from Rockwell Collins really drives home the fact that under extreme circumstances, there’s just no out-flying a robot. This small autonomous demonstrator suffers all kinds of damage, but not only does it not crash, it keeps on flying its mission and then lands. For the record, humans are pretty adaptable too, but this next one takes the cake: Let me just reiterate what’s going on here: the aircraft has no aileron control and is rolling randomly, but is still able to navigate in three dimensional space (it’s flying in a big circle) by using its other control surfaces in conjunction with whatever its roll angle happens to be. At roll speeds of up to 500 degrees per second, there is no way a human could do this, but to the robot, it’s just not that big of a deal. This technology is great for UAVs, of course, but personally I wouldn’t mind in the least if every airplane I flew on had this capability sitting dormant in a subroutine somewhere until the wing falls off and everybody starts to PANIC and then realizes oh, it’s fine, apparently we don’t need that wing anyway. Next up: cut-rate airlines invest in adaptive intelligent flight control technology, auction off wings and tails. [ Rockwell Collins ] VIA [ I Heart Robotics ] and [ DIY Drones ]
August 26, 2010

BUTTERSAFE – UPDATED TUESDAYS AND THURSDAYS » ARCHIVE » WHAT IT MEANS TO BE ALIVE

Shared by Daniel Perfect (h/t Kirk)
August 25, 2010

SEASWARM BRINGS SWARM ROBOTICS TO OIL SPILL CLEANUP

Getting oil out of water isn’t that hard, on principle. What is hard is getting a huge amount of oil out of an even huger amount of water. If you think about it, this is really a perfect task for a swarm of robots, since it’s simple and repeatable and just needs to be done over and over (and over and over and over) again. With this in mind, MIT’s Senseable City Lab has created Seaswarm, a swarm of networked oil spill cleanup robots: Seaswarm is designed to be simple, cheap, and efficient. To collect oil, the robots use a wide belt covered in a special hydrophobic nanofabric (about the consistency of a paper towel) that sucks 20 times its own weight in oil (and other pollutants) out of water. The belt moves around like a treadmill, which passes the befouled nanofabric back to be cleaned while simultaneously propelling the robot forward. The video talks about heat being used to separate oil from the nanofiber, while the description on the Seaswarm website makes it seems like the oil is squeezed out using rollers… Whatever floats your robot, I guess. What I’m not too sure about is where all of that captured oil goes. Using their solar panels for power the bots can collect for several weeks at a time, and the more oil they collect, the heavier they’ll get, and the more energy it’ll take to keep them moving. The website does mention that the oil will be ‘digested,’ which I assume implies microbes, but they’ll either have to collect oil very slowly or have some wicked crazy hungry bugs to be able to get around the problem. Seaswarm is designed from the water up to utilize swarm behaviors. To combat a spill the size of the recent one in […]
August 24, 2010

BEAR LIFTS STUFF, BREAKS STUFF, LIFTS MORE STUFF

Vecna Technologies sent along this new video of BEAR, their Battlefield Extraction something Robot. I don’t immediately see any new capabilities, but BEAR does show a penchant for wanton (or premeditated) destruction, smashing through doors and car windows with no apparent sense of remorse. BEAR’s selling point (besides the cute ears) is its ability to lift ludicrous amounts of weight while simultaneously balancing on two extendable treads, which enables it to be (potentially) more useful than a human for performing certain heavy lifting and moving tasks. With all of that power comes a corresponding amount of infrastructure, though, and for BEAR to be really useful in the field it’s going to need to be both durable and easy to repair, and that huge betubed hydraulic backpack looks kinda fragile. [ Vecna Robotics ] Thanks Andy!
August 23, 2010

DEEDS WITHOUT DOERS | MINDS AND BRAINS

Shared by Daniel internet There is a concept in phenomenology that is critical for understanding the nature of animal minds: prereflective experience. This level of experience is
August 21, 2010

A COMPENDIUM OF EVERYDAY GENIUS – NYTIMES.COM

At the Vitra Design Museum in Germany, a new exhibition highlights a collection of inventions that inhabit and inform our daily lives, from bubble wrap to Velcro — brilliance hiding in plain sight.
August 16, 2010

ROBOT SELLS ICE CREAM, WE LOVE HIM FOR IT

Now, two of our favorite things in the world just so happen to be ice cream and robots. So combining the two could only lead to awesome things, right? Well, that’s Yaskawa-kun is: a robot that vends ice cream. And yes, it’s super fantastic. Currently working a Tokyo Summerland, Yaskawa-kun has a touchscreen ordering panel, and you can even watch him make your treat for you. While the video below is pretty impressive, this is one thing we just need to see for ourselves. Continue reading Robot sells ice cream, we love him for it Robot sells ice cream, we love him for it originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 16 Aug 2010 18:58:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds. Permalink CrunchGear | source Robonoble | Email this | Comments
August 15, 2010

JAPAN DAY 1

My plane left Hong Kong just after midnight. I spent my last hours in China wandering the halls of the Hong Kong International Airport. The shops were all closed, the lights were dim, the cast cosmopolitan. I should have taken more pictures, but I wanted to find an outlet to charge my batteries and spend my last few precious minutes online, since I had no idea what my access would be like in Japan. The smoking room at HKIA was small and filthy, but it also had the highest ratio of beautiful young women to lonely old men I’ve seen. Near the smoking room was a prayer room, where I snapped this. I landed at Haneda at 5 am, after passing by Mt. Fuji just as the sun was rising. It was beautiful. The international terminal at Haneda is tiny, no more than two dozen chairs in the waiting area. I made it through customs quickly and looked around for Kosuke. I didn’t really know who I was looking for, but I didn’t see anyone who looked like they were looking for me. After a few laps around the terminal I decided to find somewhere to hang out for a while. I sat down and made myself visible and failed to find a wireless signal and didn’t really know what to do with myself. I went to the bathroom, which had both a traditional Japanese toilet and a robotic toilet from the future that was clearly labeled “Western Style”. The fact that I was in Japan with no idea where I was going and no back up plans or internet to coordinate any back up plans suddenly began to sink in. Around 6am I started worrying that either Kosuke showed up at the wrong terminal or expected me to meet […]
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
December 9, 2010

CHINESE HOTPOT RESTAURANT GETS ROBOT WAITERS, MAY SOON BE SERVING DROIDS AS WELL (VIDEO)

Why, it’s another robot-themed hotpot restaurant! This time we’re looking at Jinan — once famous for demolishing a whole stash of illegal arcade machines — up in north China, where a ballsy robotics manufacturer started trialling a robot-themed eatery. While there are still human chefs working back in the kitchen, some near-hundred customers will be served by six robots (about ¥40,000 or $6,000 each to build) that follow a white line to seat diners and deliver dishes. Oh, and don’t expect any slapstick comedy here — these bland-looking droids will only stop if you dare stand in front of them. You’ll have to hurry up, though, as this venue closes in about 16 days; but for those who can’t make it, we’ve got a video right after the break. Continue reading Chinese hotpot restaurant gets robot waiters, may soon be serving droids as well (video) Chinese hotpot restaurant gets robot waiters, may soon be serving droids as well (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 09 Dec 2010 09:49:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds. Permalink Dvice | source iQilu, Xinhuanet | Email this | Comments
December 10, 2010

GLENN GREENWALD ON THE ARREST OF JULIAN ASSANGE AND THE U.S. “WAR ON WIKILEAKS”

GLENN GREENWALD: Well, I just want to underscore how alarming everything is that you just described, both in that report and in your earlier one, which is, whatever you think of WikiLeaks, they’ve never been charged with a crime, let alone indicted or convicted. And yet, look at what has happened to them. They’ve been essentially removed from the internet, not just through a denial of service attacks that are very sophisticated, but through political pressure applied to numerous countries. Their funds have been frozen, including funds donated by people around the world for his—for Julian Assange’s defense fund and for WikiLeaks’s defense fund. They’ve had their access to all kinds of accounts cut off. Leading politicians and media figures have called for their assassination, their murder, to be labeled a terrorist organization. What’s really going on here is a war over control of the internet and whether or not the internet can actually serve what a lot of people hoped its ultimate purpose was, which was to allow citizens to band together and democratize the checks on the world’s most powerful factions. That’s what this really is about. It’s why you see Western government, totally lawlessly, waging what can only be described as a war on WikiLeaks and Julian Assange outside the bounds of any constraints, because that’s what really is at stake here. If they want to prosecute them, they should go to court and do it through legal means. But this extralegal persecution ought to be very alarming to every citizen in every one of these countries, because it essentially is pure authoritarianism and is designed to prevent the internet from being used as its ultimate promise, which is providing a check on unconstrained political power.
December 10, 2010

MEDIABERKMAN » BLOG ARCHIVE » RADIO BERKMAN 171: WIKILEAKS AND THE INFORMATION WARS

Shared by Daniel Excellent discussion.
December 15, 2010

STUMBLES PREVENT ROBO-SPRINTER FROM SPREADING ABJECT ‘TERMINATOR’ TERROR

The T-1000 shape-shifter robot in ‘Terminator 2’ serves as a terrifying upgrade over its Arnold predecessor. But, that intimidation doesn’t arise from its morphing capabilities, because the robot truly horrifies us when it breaks into — with those disturbing swinging arms — an emotionless, unflinching sprint. Well, finally, an engineer has decided real robots should possess those same stupefying skills. MIT scientist Ryuma Niiyama is developing a running robot, simply named ‘Athlete,’ that employs seven complex muscle systems. The artificial muscles, which mimic human sets like the gluteus maximus and the hamstring, power prosthetic blades similar to those utilized by amputee athletes. Embedded sensors and inertial measurement units monitor the bot’s orientation, so that it — conceivably — can maintain a steady, sickening sprint. Continue reading Stumbles Prevent Robo-Sprinter From Spreading Abject ‘Terminator’ Terror Stumbles Prevent Robo-Sprinter From Spreading Abject ‘Terminator’ Terror originally appeared on Switched on Wed, 15 Dec 2010 10:40:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds. Permalink | Email this | Comments
January 22, 2011

WINDORO THE WINDOW-CLEANING ROBOT – BOING BOING

January 24, 2011

X-RHEX: RHEX GETS AN UPGRADE

It looks like that desert testing we wrote about in May of last year has paid off, and UPenn’s KodLab has developed a new version of their RHex wheeled/legged robot called X-RHex. X-RHex is about the same size and weight as RHex, but it’s stronger, more durable, and has as longer run time of up to two hours. It’s also got a couple mil-spec rails mounted on top along with standardized electrical connections, which could be just for convenience or could be because X-RHex has a probable military future, or both. X-RHex doesn’t seem as capable of the speeds exhibited by other leg/wheel hybrid robots such as Whegs, but its strength is in its adaptability and the way it can make it through basically any sort of terrain, even things that would challenge conventional wheeled or tracked robots. [ X-RHex ]
January 24, 2011

AUTONOMOUS QUADROTOR TEAMS MAY BUILD YOUR NEXT HOUSE

Back in July, we wrote about how UPenn’s GRASP Lab had taught their quadrotors to work together to grasp and move things. The next step, it seems, is teaching the quadrotors to work together to grasp and move things and actually build buildings. The video above shows a team of quadrotors cooperating to construct the framework of a (rather small) building. The building’s structure is held together with magnets, and the quadrotors are able to verify that the alignment is correct by attempting to wiggle the structural components around, which is pretty cool. It’s fun to speculate about how this technology might grow out of the lab into the real world… To build actual buldings, you’d either need much bigger quadrotors (which is possible), lots of small quadrotors cooperating in big pieces (also possible), or buildings built out of much smaller components (which might be the way to go). The quadrotors probably wouldn’t be able to do all the work, but they have the potential to make construction projects significantly more efficient. [ GRASP ]
January 24, 2011

A SOFTER WORLD: 633

February 10, 2011

AHUMANRIGHT.ORG PLANS TO BUY SATELLITE AND PROVIDE FREE INTERNET ACCESS FOR ENTIRE WORLD

Shared by Daniel ht becca
February 12, 2011

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