iRobot CEO Colin Angle on the shortcomings of humanoid robots (video)

iRobot CEO Colin Angle on the shortcomings of humanoid robots

Nearly everyone who’s purchased one the 10 million-plus Roombas sold around the world has inevitably asked the same question: whatever happened to Rosie? For all its charms, iRobot’s hockey puck-like floor cleaner will never compare to the Jetsons’ sass-talking maid. We’re living in an age of robots and we don’t even know it. They’re everywhere we look, but it’s hard to recognize them after countless science fiction books and movies have hammered home the image of electronic mirrors of ourselves. In order to embrace a robotic future, however, many have scrapped the traditional notion of the android.

“Building robot versions of people is very expensive,” explains iRobot co-founder and CEO Colin Angle. “The thing that iRobot had to do to become a legitimate business [was] take a great step away from the traditional notion of what a robot should be. Why should it be to vacuum that I need to build an upright person and give them a vacuum? Why not build the vacuum that can guide itself around, that can go under couches? You can make it radically less expensive.”

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This Speedy Robot Can Finish a Game of Checkers Before Your First Move

It’s no wonder that factories around the world want to replace humans with robots when it comes to menial, repetitive jobs. Just look at this thing in action. Now granted, you don’t come across a lot of job postings looking for skilled Chinese Checkers board shufflers, but Adept’s Cobra SCARA can probably be re-purposed for other tasks. And even if that other task is just making awesome YouTube videos, we’re OK with that. [YouTube via Automaton]

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All the things that make us nervous (and excited) in the new RoboCop

All the things that make us nervous (and excited) in the new RoboCop

Yesterday we saw the trailer for José Padilha brand new RoboCop Reboot. And it made us feel a lot of things. Some excitement, but mostly dread. Here are the moments that got us the most worked up in the new RoboCop reboot trailer.

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New Robocop Trailer Released: I’d See That for a Dollar

I’ll admit I’ve been out of the loop when it comes to the new Robocop movie the last several months. Last time I mentioned it here, Hugh Laurie, the guy that played House, was set play the CEO of OmniCorp. It looks like while I wasn’t paying attention they made a few changes.

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Nowhere in the trailer do we see Hugh Laurie, but you do see that bad motherfu**** himself Samuel L Jackson. It’s hard to tell from the trailer, but it appears that Jackson is playing the Chief Executive A-Hole of OmniCorp. The trailer also shows a Robocop who is more human than he was in the old-school 80s flick.

Notably, Robocop isn’t doing the robot at each turn. He appears to be quite fluid and has an auto-retracting face shield. The trailer also shows that while Robocop thinks he’s in control, he actually doesn’t have as much free will as he believes. I’m particularly glad to see not a single Ford Taurus in any of the scenes.

“Superman” Robot Lifts 80 Times Its Own Weight

“Superman” Robot Lifts 80 Times Its Own Weight“Hulk is the strongest one there is!” is a catchphrase that we have heard before many times, if you happen to be an ardent fan of Marvel Comic’s jade giant. Well, another character that has proven to be nigh invulnerable would be Superman of DC Comics’ fame, and it would be interesting to see what happens when both titans of strength collide in an arm wrestling match. Well, researchers over at the National University of Singapore (NUS) have managed to come up with a robot that while it might not have the legendary strength of the Incredible Hulk or Superman, it is still capable of lifting 80 times its own weight.

Yes sir, this robot manages to perform such a feat thanks to its polymer-derived artificial muscles which are capable of stretching out up to five times in length, which in turn allows them to lift 80 times their own weight. Who knows, we could have such robotic muscles implemented in various industries that could ease the backbreaking labor of humans, and even better is the fact that robots would not go on strike unless the suddenly become self aware and have a maniacal leader to lead them in annihilating us humans, their creators.

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    Artificial muscles lift 80 times their weight, pave the way for robot Superman

    Artificial muscles could pave the way to robots with 'superhuman' strength

    Other than a few models from Boston Dynamics, most robots don’t exactly leave us quaking in fear. That might be off the table soon, though, thanks to a breakthrough from researchers at the National University of Singapore (NUS). They’ve developed polymer-derived artificial muscles that can stretch out up to five times in length, enabling them to lift 80 times their weight. That could one day result in life-like robots with “superhuman strength and ability,” which could also run on very little power, according to the team. They expect to have a robotic limb that could smack down any human in arm-wrestling within five years — putting a possible cyborg version of Over The Top alarmingly within reach.

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    Robot Astronaut Kirobo Calls From Space

    Robot Astronaut Kirobo Calls From SpaceIt was at the beginning of last month when the robot Kirobo was sent to space as an astronaut – or rather, space tourist. So far, we have not heard from it since then – at least not until today, where the Japanese talking robot’s message from space has arrived, beautifully timed to coincide with the Land of the Rising Sun’s bid to host the 2020 Olympic Games. Calling home for the first time while it remains in orbit 230 miles above the earth at a velocity of over 17,000 miles per hour, this pint-sized robot now holds the proud record of being the first robot to “speak” from space, according to the team of researchers who were behind Kirobo.

    Kirobo stands at 34cm in height and tips the scales at just 1kg, where it broadcasted a message from the International Space Station (ISS), delivering greetings to the numerous citizens of Earth while paying a cheeky tribute to Neil Armstrong. Kirobo said, “On August 21, 2013, a robot took one small step toward a brighter future for all.” It continued in Japanese, “Good morning to everyone on Earth. This is Kirobo. I am the world’s first talking robot astronaut. Nice to meet you.” We do wonder what Kirobo does to pass its time in space…

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    ‘Kirobo, please stop talking and open the pod bay doors’ (video)

    Japanese robot Kirobo speaks in space, leaves pod bay doors alone

    Kirobo, the mini-robot / Japanese Space Agency marketer, has spoken his first words in space after being launched last month. The University of Tokyo and Toyota research project wished Earth “good morning” and mouthed other space platitudes from his perch at the International Space Station. The bot can also recognize voices and will converse with astronauts as part of his mission goals. Then, after he’s lulled them into a false sense of security…

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    1-2-3-4: I Declare a Miniature Rock ‘Em Sock ‘Em Robots Thumb War

    1-2-3-4: I Declare a Miniature Rock 'Em Sock 'Em Robots Thumb War

    Hot on the heels of its remote control robotic Battrogborg pugilists, Tomy has revealed another toy designed to quench our robo-combat lust. This time it’s a way to bring thumb wrestling into the 21st century with a pair of small, thumb-controlled robots that duke it out until one loses its head.

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    Dash Robotics Reveals A DIY High-Speed Running Robot Kit, Which Hobbyists Can Own For Just $65

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    Dash Robotics is using crowdfunding to help build its first hobbyist robot for home robotics enthusiast, with the aim of providing advanced tech for very little money thanks to a unique combination of materials, design and manufacturing. Dash’s first robo is a smartphone-controlled, insect-like running robot, which can be shipped in a flat pack as a 2D kit, and then folded out “origami” style and assembled by consumers at home.

    The Dash is designed by a team of Berkeley PhD students, including Nick Kohut, Paul Birkmeyer, Andrew Gillies and Kevin Peterson, who worked together in the Millisystems Lab on robots using small legs. The team worked out a revolutionary way to manufacture new prototypes quickly and cheaply, in order to help with experimentation, and were surprised to find that people witnessing them in action had a “strong, visceral reaction” (you can see if you feel the same when you view the video below) and wanted to know if they were for sale, Kohut explained in an interview.

    “Dash is very engaging, we’ve seen boys and girls play with him for hours before being pulled away by their parents,” Kohut said, discussing not only the product’s appeal but also why he and his co-founders think it’s needed. “Dash is also dramatically low cost. ‘Low cost’ robotics today means about $150, but we’re pricing Dash at $65 [for an unassembled unit], less than half that. This is possible because of our unique flat manufacturing process, which allows us to build Dash out of affordable materials, and our animal-inspired design, which means we don’t have to compromise on performance at that price point.”

    The Dash is available in alpha form (runs straight, doesn’t do much else) unassembled for $40, in beta form (navigable, more extensible) for $65, and fully assembled by the founders themselves as a complete unit for $100. Kohut says that it’s also highly hackable, and Arduino compatible, so that home hobbyists are limited mostly by their imagination in terms of what else they can make Dash do. The robot as designed can run at over 5 feet per second, and will run for over a mile on a single battery charge.

    For Dash Robotics, this insectoid runner is just the beginning. Kohut says that they plan to expand their core product offerings in the future, as well as offer up a variety of accessories.

    “In our past lives as PhD researchers, we’ve added wings, tails, and even gecko feet to these robots,” he said. “It would be really cool to see a “Gecko Dash” kit that can climb walls. Additionally, enabling these robots to talk to each other would open up all kinds of possibilities. You could have them race or battle and keep score, or cooperate to complete a mission, guided by your smartphone.”

    Long-term, Kohut sees possibilities extending beyond the hobbyist sphere. The size, lightweight construction, all-terrain capabilities and cost of the current Dash would all be assets for use in search-and-rescue operations, he says. You can imagine sending in swarms up thousands of Dash robots into a collapsed building with CO2 sensors to located survivors, for instance. Minefield clearing is another use case that comes to mind.

    Dash Robotics sees itself as part of a movement, which includes Adafruit and others, to inspire and grow the worldwide community of makers. The new crowdfunding platform Dash is using to launch the project, Dragon Innovation, is another player in that movement, with a Kickstarter-style platform aimed specifically at backing makers and their projects. Dash is also looking for traditional Angel investment to get to the mass production stage, and has been part of The Foundry @ CITRIS, a hardware accelerator operating out of UC Berkeley.