Boston Dynamics' Atlas shows off its acrobatic 'gopher' skills

Ahead of the next inevitable round of herp de derp “Skynet iz here” hot takes on social media, Boston Dynamics showed off more of its Atlas robot’s stunning agility and dexterity in a new demo video Wednesday morning. This time, the humanoid machine had to deliver a tool bag to the top of some scaffolding using only its roboparkour powers.  

In the video above, Atlas shows a surprising amount of forethought, grabbing and placing a wooden plank across a large gap before heading over to pick up the tool bag itself. From there, it’s a simple matter of climbing a set of stairs, balancing across said plank, hopping up a couple ledges, jump spinning in place to turn around and gently hucking the bag over its head to the platform above. That’s all before it shoves a box off its platform — carefully avoiding not tilting over the side itself and then, “dismounting with an inverted 540-degree flip that project engineers have dubbed the Sick Trick,'” according to Wednesday’s release.

“Parkour forces us to understand the physical limitations of the robot, and dance forces us to think about how precise and dexterous the whole-body motion can be,” Robin Deits, a software engineer on the Atlas controls team, said in that release. “Now, manipulation is forcing us to take that information and interpret it in terms of how we can get the hands to do something specific. What’s important about the Atlas project is that we don’t let go of any of those other things we’ve learned.” 

Except none of that is “a simple matter.” At the start of the decade, bipedal robots would wilt if you looked at them sideways, much less asked them to climb a set of stairs. In 2015, robots were still so janky that we ran supercuts of them falling down. And today, they — well Boston Dynamics’ at least, Elon’s robot is barely more than a skinny guy in a suit — can outrun, outjump, and outclimb the average sedentary American. It’s a damn good thing the company, along with six other robotics industry leaders, has pledged not to use its legion of bag-delivery bots for war

But don’t expect an Atlas to replace your local UPS driver anytime soon (for one, their union would never allow it) because for as impressive as this video is, it took a substantial amount of time and effort to develop. As you can see in the behind-the-scenes video above, Atlas suffered dents, scrapes, scratches, and more than a few tumbles in learning this routine. 

“This is more a demonstration of some of the robot’s new control capabilities, and a fun connection to our prior work,” Scott Kuindersma, Atlas team lead said. “Our hope is that, if we can build the foundational technology that allows us to easily create and adapt dynamic behaviors like these, we should be able to leverage it down the road to perform real, physically-demanding jobs with hustle. There are many pieces required to deliver a complete solution in a domain like manufacturing or construction—this video highlights a narrow slice of what we’re working on.” So maybe it isn’t so much the hyper-agile acrobots we need to worry about as it is the EOD machines armed with high explosives and piloted by the cops

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ATLAS Robot Is Now That One Worker Who Ignores All the Safety Rules on a Construction Site

Over the years, Boston Dynamics has shared several videos demonstrating the continually improved capabilities of its ATLAS humanoid robot. We know the robot can do everything from hauling heavy goods to performing parkour-caliber backflips, but if the company really wants to convince us that ATLAS will one day be an…

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'Returnal' will arrive on PC on February 15th

The next former PS5 exclusive that Sony is bringing to PC is Returnal, as the bullet hell roguelike will hit Steam and the Epic Games Store on February 15th. That’s just a couple weeks before The Last of Us Part I lands on PC on March 3rd. 

Alongside the release date, Sony-owned Housemarque revealed more details about the PC version. There’s support for NVIDIA DLSS and AMD FSR upscaling, as well as NVIDIA’s image-scaling tech. Climax Studios, which supported development of Returnal, added support for ray-traced reflections to go along with the existing RT shadows.

Returnal has two new wide-resolution formats on PC, Ultrawide 21:9 and Super Ultrawide 32:9. On the audio side, you can expect Dolby Atmos, two 3D audio options and 5.1 or 7.1 surround sound. You can plug in a DualSense controller for haptic feedback and adaptive trigger support, or you might prefer to try and survive the deadly alien planet of Atropos using a mouse and keyboard.

To play Returnal on PC, you’ll need at least an NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1060 (6GB) or AMD Radeon RX 580 (8GB) GPU, Intel Core i5-6400 (four-core 2.7GHz) or AMD Ryzen 5 1500X (four-core 3.5GHz) processor, 16GB of DDR4 memory and 60GB of storage. Naturally, you’ll need a more powerful rig to get the full impact of Returnal‘s impressive visuals and neon bullets. The PlayStation Blog has more details on the specs.

Kristi Noem Wants More States To Adopt Extreme Abortion Laws

The South Dakota governor’s spokesperson previously criticized Republican Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis for “hiding behind a 15-week ban.”

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Rocket-Shaped Quadrocopter Sets New Speed Record

Built by Ryan Lademann and his team, a rocket-shaped quadrocopter recently set a new Guinness World Record for the fastest ground speed of a battery-powered RC quadrocopter, hitting a max speed of 257.25 MPH and an average speed (used for the record) of 224 MPH. That’s fast! Could you imagine if food delivery drones were this fast? Every menu item would just be a deconstructed version of itself by the time it got to you.

The world record isn’t measured by max speed, rather, an average is calculated from two different runs in opposite directions (to negate the wind’s influence), and that’s the world record speed. For reference, the quadrocopter I got for Christmas briefly hit about 20 MPH right before hitting the ceiling fan and being rendered inoperable.

The quadrocopter takes off vertically (like a rocket), then turns sideways when it’s ready to start setting speed records. Should they have painted ACME on the side of the rocket and attached a little Wile E. Coyote figure for added fun? Of course, they should have. Come on, Ryan, what were you thinking?

[via TechEBlog]