Supertoy Teddy Is The Teddy Ruxpin We All Dreamed Of – A Stuffed Bear With Conversation Skills

ConlanFluegge

A new Kickstarter project seems like the wish fulfillment of a child of the late 80s or early 90s: the Supertoy Teddy is a stuffed bear you can talk to, just like Teddy Ruxpin, but this one intelligently talks back, rather than just operating via an embedded cassette deck with a fixed number and order of recorded statements. Supertoy Teddy is a robot, with AI-like conversational powers, built by a robotics company in Wales.

The Supertoy’s pedigree is a good one, as Supertoy Robotics’ co-creators Ashley Conlan and Karsten Flügge previously made Jeannie Rabbot, a Siri-like virtual assistant powered in part by Nuance tech that’s available for iPhone, Mac, Android and more. The Teddy inherits Jeannie’s bubbly personality, offering human emotion approximations and totally autonomous speech generation.

Supertoy Teddy uses a smartphone and remote server to do the heavy lifting of processing requests and formulating answers, using a free Android or iOS app to do so. The stuffed bear itself has a zipped compartment to hold the phone and connect it to its internal processing bits. The company says they’ve already built three prototypes, with the last being production-ready, which is why they’re targeting a December rollout for the first backer shipments if the campaign is successful.

Teddy has a mouth that moves, and later on will get more robotic movement in his limbs and other areas, too. The toy can also learn a person’s preferences and change its attitude accordingly, meaning an adult with one could end up with a Ted-like companion, while a kid would get the sweetest bear around. The Teddy can also be a practical help, offering up weather, setting alarms, reading bed time stories, playing music, doing phone calls, sending texts or emails and more.

Out of the box Supertoy Teddy can manage 30 different languages, with planned support in the future for different voices specially tailored to each. The tone of its voice already adapts to different emotions, to make it more lifelike. Backers can get one starting at £42 (around $62 U.S.).

Teddy Ruxpin was the toy we all imagined would actually come alive and talk to us, but Supertoy Teddy looks to be the real fulfillment of that childhood dream. Plus, since it’s designed for kids of all ages, anyone who still remembers Ruxpin fondly can get one, too, and use the Supertoy to help do their taxes or whatever else comes to mind.



Prototype Aerial Drone “Walks” On Its Wings, Too

Prototype Aerial Drone “Walks” On Its Wings, TooAerial drones seem to be the way that modern warfare is headed – as pilots start to “fly” from the comfort of a control room, without having to risk their lives on the battlefield while the drone takes all the fire from behind enemy lines. Well, here is a drone that does not seem suited for the battlefield, as it is small in size, but comes with a feature that no other drone has so far – being able to move about at ground level on its wings. Researchers from Switzerland’s Lausanne Polytech are the ones behind this particular drone, where it remains as a prototype as at press time, sporting a straightforward and familiar configuration alongside a rear-facing propeller. Whenever this prototype hits the ground, however, the wings would have a secondary function – to help it move around.

Known as the DALER (Deployable Air Land Exploration Robot for short), it sports wings that have been mounted on shafts which can be locked or rotated, depending on your choice. While it is on the ground, the drone is capable of shuffling around at 20cm per second, allowing it to handle high obstacles and rough terrain without missing a beat.

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Veebot Draws Your Blood

Robots are most definitely helpful, and they have certainly assisted in ensuring the industrial revolution has moved at a breakneck pace. Most factories these days have robots do all the heavy lifting at assembly lines, although these robots are more of machines than the common bipedal form factor that science fiction movies employ. Robots in the realm of medicine, too, have helped surgeries be more efficient than ever before. Well, here we are today presented with the Veebot, a robot that is capable of drawing human blood.

Veebot also happens to be the name of the very same California start-up behind it, where it will merge robotics alongside image-analysis software in order to locate the most ripe vein possible in your arm before it starts with the blood drawing process. It will first restrict the blood flow to your arm in order to have some veins pop up (hopefully), before an infrared light is shone on your skin while a camera gets to work by looking for a suitable vein. Before it plunges in the needle, ultrasound is used to ensure that it is an actual vein and not something else. The entire blood drawing process takes up to a single minute, and is said to come with an 83% accuracy in locating a vein. Veebot will need to touch 90% accuracy levels before it can proceed with clinical trials, now that is certainly going to induce a sigh of relief, no? [Veebot Page]

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Disney’s Papillon Tech Offers Robots Come With Expressive Eyes

Disney’s forte would be their cartoons – and one thing about cartoons that we know of would be this; they come with extremely attractive eyes. Disney has come up with a new technology that they call Papillon, which happens to be a bundle of optical fibers that have been printed with the Papillon 3D printing tech. Using this particular technique, researchers realized that they are able to project an image on one end of the bundle, while making it appear at the other end. In a nutshell, the Papillon technology enables displays of emotions in physical toys as well as robots which will be able to match those that are often found in cartoons and animated shows.

For instance, when one character is in love with another cartoon character, you will see a literal heart appear in the eyes, or a dollar sign that denotes greed. Papillon’s technology has been touted to deliver an incredible amount of accuracy that enables the aforementioned displayed images to appear without looking distorted. Disney’s very own research webpage mentioned, “Papillon is based on a set of algorithms that implements classic Fibonacci spirals and Voronoi tessellation for efficient packing of fibers on a surface of an eye and in the bundle. This allows creating arbitrary curved display surfaces while minimizing visible artifacts, such as light distortions on the edges of the eye. The resulting technology is effective in designing compact, efficient displays of a small size and shape that can have a broad range of applications.”

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This Robot Can Draw Your Blood

This Robot Can Draw Your Blood

Some people are champs about having blood drawn and even go back as often as they’re allowed to donate blood. If you’re one of those people that’s frickin great. Go pat yourself on the back. If not you are probably thinking that you don’t want a robot coming anywhere near you with a needle. But the robot might actually be the better bet.

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18 Gorgeous Images of Job-Stealing Factory Robots

18 Gorgeous Images of Job-Stealing Factory Robots

Robots have ruled industrial production for decades in many fields, from the auto industry to food processing and consumer electronics. The Singularity isn’t here yet—but in the world of manufacturing, it’s been knocking on the door for years.

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Oculus Rift Used To See Through A Drone’s Cameras

We’ve seen the Oculus Rift virtual reality headset used for video games, which we guess that was what it was designed for, but it seems that the headset is capable of doing more than that and has actually been used […]

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King Kong Robot Comes Alive On Stage

There are robots, and then there are robots. King Kong can be said to be the most famous silverback gorilla ever on the silver screen (now, is that a coincidence or what?), has made his way not to the top […]

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Watch This Robot Hexapod Perform Parkour

The last time we saw RHex, he/she/it wasn’t quite as polished and coordinated as this latest video shows. A lot can and did happen in three months.

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RHex robot uses leaping ability to do ‘Parkour’ (video)

RHex robot now has 'Parkour' talents to go along with leaping ability video

It’s easy for a robot to perform in a sterile lab environment, but only a select few devices — like Boston Dynamics notorious AlphaDog — have proven themselves in the wild. However, the University of Pennsylvania’s X-RHex Lite has also made that leap, as it were, and a new video shows just how talented it’s become. In it, the droid puts all of its running, jumping and grabbing talents together to perform flips, chin-ups and even Parkour-like moves over campus obstacles. The researchers hope it’ll perform rescue missions or research in tough environments one day, but until then, gaze in awe at the video after the break.

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Via: Gizmag

Source: University of Pennsylvania