The Beautiful, Scary Robots of Shigeo Hirose


There are plenty of robot builders, but none bring as much elegance to engineering as Shigeo Hirose. His creatures are Star Wars, Iron Giant and Dean Kamen rolled into one cybernetic maki.

Truth is, I’d never heard of Shigeo Hirose or the Hirose-Fukushima Robotics Lab at Tokyo Tech until I read Wired for War—author PW Singer, featured in our interview here, sings the praises of the robot master, possibly the world’s foremost.

As you can see in the montage and the rundown, below, the dude has been building stuff for years, and things he designed 30 years ago, still seem startling compared to the commercial robotics we’ve grown used to. Swimming snakes, tiny velociraptors, and giant hands that close around women’s waists—this guy seems to know that the real fuel of robotic development is a careful combination of humor and fear.

Make sure you watch all three minutes of the video—the last 30 seconds feature a rollerskating robot that quite frankly blew my mind. Here’s a rundown of the featured models, in the order in which they appear in the video:

Active Code Mechanism R5 (2005) – This swimming snake scared the hell out of me. I used to be afraid of sharks, now sharks should be afraid of ACM.

Elastor (????) – What’s cool about this slinky with a claw is that it can easily reach things a human arm can’t. That and it looks like the prototype for the Lost In Space robot. Danger!

Genbu (1995) – This “articulated multi-wheeled mobile robot” is one of many robots Hirose has designed that can navigate over debris. What makes this one special is it’s shiny silver spiky look—like it’s also a lot of fun at S&M parties.

Soft Gripper II (1978) – We have all seen this in movies: The robot hand reaches out and grabs someone, King Kong style, around the waste. But when you see it demonstrated in real life, with a giggling woman, it’s frankly chilling. Where’s the rest of your gargantuan killer robot, Hirose? Wait, don’t answer that.

VmaxCarrier (2000) – This “holonomic omni-directional vehicle” at first reminded me of Eddie Murphy’s Billy Ray Valentine, panhandling the beginning of Trading Places. Then I glimpsed the underside of this lightweight device—with its four omni-discs, each with eight motorized wheels (for a total of 32 wheels)—and realized this was no movie prop.

Titrus III (????) – I think the lack of a page describing this robot confirms that Hirose only did it to show that he could. The shuffling little dinobot may be more cute than practical, but damn if I don’t want six of them.

SMC Rover (1997) – This planetary exploration robot can send its wheeled legs off on autonomous missions, owing to motors and batteries housed in the wheels themselves. It’s brilliant and whimsical, but it also reminds me of John Carpenter’s The Thing for some reason.

TAQT Carrier (1991) – This mechanical wheelchair is no match for Dean Kamen’s pre-Segway one, but it was built many years earlier, and has a rounded styling that reminds me of Star Wars, like it could be found on Tatooine.

Soryu V (1997) – One set of treads, and a robot can fall on its back as it climbs vertical terrain. Two or three, as in this case, and it’s suddenly more adaptable. Here, to prove the point, Hirose shows it on grass and snow.

Roller-Walker (1994) – It’s a rollerskating robot. A rollerskating robot. It’s like Xanadu meets Short Circuit. Somebody call Steve Guttenberg, Olivia Newton-John and Jeff Lynne, pronto.

More fun with Shigeo Hirose:

BBC gallery of his “robot menagerie,” including the wall climbing “Ninja” not included in the video.

Hirose-Fukushima Robotics Lab, website in English

Wired for War book on Amazon and author site

Video montage expertly assembled and edited by our own Mike Byhoff; “Music for a Found Harmonium” and other yodels, airs and preludes by the Penguin Cafe Orchestra available for MP3 download at Amazon.com.

Scenes from GDC 2009

While it may not have the same mainstream cachet as the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) or the Electronic Entertainment Expo (E3), the annual Game Developer’s Conference, also known as GDC, is always one of the most interesting places to gauge the health of the video game industry.

So far, …

Microsoft’s new ad shows how people shop for computers in the real America

Microsoft’s latest ad — a companion-piece to its new “Laptop Hunters” website — stars “real person” Lauren. Lauren’s a little funky, a little folksy, and 100 percent real. She doesn’t have an agenda to push, she’s just out in the world, living in “reality” searching for a sweet laptop that’s under $1,000. She admits to herself she’s “not cool” enough for a Mac (though cool enough for a Volkswagen) and gets on with her life. She’s a real American — with an unpretentious, pragmatic life. The ad rather smartly puts the focus on our current economic climate, while expertly reinforcing that age old Apple-user-as-dick stereotype, pejoratively wielding the word “cool” as an underhanded insult — odd, since the Microsoft portal it wants you to visit helps “socialites” pick a laptop. All in all? It’s kind of a brilliantly mean piece of work — check it out after the break.

[Via BoingBoing]

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Microsoft’s new ad shows how people shop for computers in the real America originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 27 Mar 2009 10:58:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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iPhone 3G finally available contract-free

At long last folks with a contract phobia or just a general penchant for lawlessness can pay exorbitant amounts of money to get an iPhone 3G contract-free. As promised, 8GB models for $599 and 16GB ones for $699 are now available from AT&T and Apple stores, with AT&T requiring buyers to be existing AT&T customers, limited at one per, while Apple stores will sell the handsets to anyone wandering in off the street — rebellious demeanor preferred.

[Via Boy Genius Report]

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iPhone 3G finally available contract-free originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 27 Mar 2009 10:31:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Hands On: be-ez La Besace 15 Lime Drop Messenger Bag

Be-Ez-La-Besace-15-lime-drop.jpg
The be-ez La Besace 15 Lime Drop messenger bag ($90 street) provides a stylish enclosure for a 15-inch laptop along with a reasonable amount of accessories and papers. On the outside, the gray nylon shell is low-key, although with intriguing sloping seams. (Set it on the floor and it always falls over because the bottom isn’t flat.) Side stiffeners keep the bag expanded to its 4.7-inch depth even when there’s nothing inside. Unzip the flap and there’s a riot of lime green lining material.

AnandTech explores the virtues and woes of today’s SSD

AnandTech explores the virtues and woes of today's SSD

If you’re interested in SSD, chances are you’ve been paying attention to the allegations of performance degradation in Intel’s X25-M drives. AnandTech dives into the issue (and many, many more topics) in 31 page exploration of the state of solid state. It’s a spine-tingling read, in part explaining how write-speed degradation is largely thanks to partially used pages containing portions of deleted files. We all know deleted files typically aren’t really gone until they’re overwritten, a problem in SSDs because to clear a section of a page the entire page needs to be cleared. That entails moving anything you want to keep to the cache, wiping the whole page, then re-writing that good data from cache. The hope is that a new delete command dubbed TRIM (set to find support in Windows 7) will speed up writes by forcing the system to perform this work during deletes, but ahead of that the article still recommends Intel’s drives; even at their worst they’re still generally faster than the comparably priced competition when it comes to average use — not to mention faster than your platters.

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AnandTech explores the virtues and woes of today’s SSD originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 27 Mar 2009 10:09:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Apple Stores Stocking Contract-Free iPhones

Want an iPhone, but can’t deal with the commitment of a two-year contract? Starting yesterday, customers can now pick up the handset sans-contract through the Apple store. AT&T has already begun offering the deal, but phones bought through that channel were limited to one per customer. With Apple, you can pick up as many as you want–assuming that you have a lot of money to burn through.

The contract-free handsets run $599 for the 8GB $699 for the 16GB models. Users can activate the phones through iTunes. Without going so far as unlocking the phone (which will void your warrant, naturally), you’ll still be beholden to AT&T.

Havok and AMD show off OpenCL with pretty pretty dresses

Havok and AMD show off OpenCL with pretty pretty dresses

With all the talk about OpenCL and Snow Leopard together and how the spec will allow Apple’s upcoming hotness to exploit graphics accelerators, it’s easy to lose track of the place where the standard could make its biggest impact: gaming. Yes, OpenGL may have lost favor in that realm in recent years, but OpenCL looks to captivate the hearts and GPUs of gamers everywhere by applying some much-needed standardization to the physics acceleration realm, first shown in public at GDC running on some AMD hardware. Havok is demonstrating its Havok Cloth and Havoc Destruction engines, the former of which is embedded below, and we think you’ll agree it’s quite impressive. OpenCL allows such acceleration to switch between the GPU and CPU seamlessly and as needed depending on which is more available, hopefully opening the door to physics acceleration that actually affects gameplay and doesn’t just exist to make you say, “Whoa.”

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Havok and AMD show off OpenCL with pretty pretty dresses originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 27 Mar 2009 09:46:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Canon EOS 5D Mark II flash drive: just 21.1MP shy of awesomeness

You could say that this is the perfect USB flash drive for existing EOS 5D Mark II owners. We’d argue, however, that this is the perfect USB flash drive for those looking to just live vicariously while not shattering the bank. ‘Course, $129.99 for a 4GB USB key is pretty absurd, but at least that gets you Live View and a 1080p movie mode. Er, wait…

[Via Zungua]

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Canon EOS 5D Mark II flash drive: just 21.1MP shy of awesomeness originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 27 Mar 2009 09:23:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Simple keystroke sniffing schemes work where keyloggers won’t

Ah, the wonders of CanSecWest. The famed security conference has delivered yet again in 2009, this time bringing to light two simple sniffing schemes that could be used to decipher typed text when keyloggers are just too noticeable. Gurus from Inverse Path were on hand to explain the approaches, one of which involved around $80 of off-the-shelf gear. In short, curious individuals could point a laser on the reflective surface of a laptop between 50 feet and 100 feet away, and then by using a “handmade laser microphone device and a photo diode to measure the vibrations, software for analyzing the spectrograms of frequencies from different keystrokes, as well as technology to apply the data to a dictionary,” words could be pretty easily guessed. The second method taps into power grid signals passed along from PS/2 keyboard outputs, and by using a digital oscilloscope and an analog-digital converter, those in the know can pick out tweets from afar. Check the read link for more, and make sure you close those blinds and pick up a USB keyboard, pronto.

[Via Slashdot]

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Simple keystroke sniffing schemes work where keyloggers won’t originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 27 Mar 2009 09:01:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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