International Tokyo Toy Show 2013 – Lots of cool stuff and lots of fun!

International Tokyo Toy Show 2013

We went to the International Tokyo Toy Show at Tokyo Big Sight yesterday and had so much fun seeing all the cool characters, new releases and classic stuff. And playing with stuff!

Dominating the show were large Japanese toy makers Bandai and Takara Tomy, each of which had whole floors to themselves with huge displays, and endless stuff to look at. Other companies, including foreign companies, were there as well so there was a lot of cool stuff to see.

Please take a look at the pictures attached to this article to see some of the things that were there. :)

We’ll also follow-up with some posts about a few of the things that we say that were pretty interesting…

Japan Trust Technology – radio-controlled bug line-up: cockroaches, Japanese centipedes…

Japan Trust Technology (JTT) - radio-controlled bug line-up: cockroaches, Japanese centipedes...

While the radio-control tanks are the latest from JTT (Japan Trust Technology), they have a lot of other interesting (and disgusting radio-control stuff).

Another type which you can control by your iPhone/iPad is the Goki-Raji – the radio-controlled cockroach. “Goki” is part of the word for cockroach in Japanese which is “Gokiburi”. I think this is one of the most unappealing and least desirable products on the market in Japan. But I know that some people would love to play with this – especially to give their girlfriend a hard time…

Possibly worse than Japanese “gokiburi” are the poisonous centipedes found in the Japanese countryside. These are called “mukade” and JTT has a radio-contolled version of these too… the “Muka-Raji”. Not only are these things disgusting, they are poisonous and indestructible.

The “Muka-Raji” has its own handheld controller and is not controlled via an iPhone/iPad.

I have no idea why anyone would want something like this either but here you go…

Japan Trust Technology – “Raji-Combat” – world’s smallest radio-controlled tank – control it with your iPhone/iPad and battle against other mini-tanks!

Japan Trust Technology (JTT) - "Raji-Combat" - world's smallest radio-controlled tank - control it with your iPhone/iPad and battle against other mini-tanks!

JTT (Japan Trust Technology) just released that world’s smallest radio-controlled tank called the “Raji-Combat” that you can control with your iPhone or iPad and battle against other mini tanks. There are 2 historically famous real tanks they modeled the “Raji-Combat” on: “Tiger I” and “T-34″

You will be able to control the tank with your iPhone/iPad after installing a dedicated application.

If there are more than 2 sets of Raji-Combat, you can have a battle against each other. When you give 4 damages to the sensor on the upper part of the turret of the other tank by blasting with an infrared ray cannon, you win.

It’s a very powerful tiny tank that can ascend a 30-degree uphill slope…

Price: ¥2,980 for each model/ ¥5,280 for a set of “Tiger I” and “T-34″
Size: Approx. 56 x 39 x 39 mm
Weigt: Approx. 30g
Charging time: 30-50 minutes by USB
Battery life: 5 minutes

CCP – NANO-FALCON – Infrared ray-controlled miniature helicopter – Certified by Guinness World Records

CCP - NANO FALCON - Infrared ray-controlled miniature helicopter - Certified by Guinness World Records

CCP Co., Ltd., is releasing the world’s smallest helicopter – “NANO-FALCON” – on June 8. It is certified by Guinness World Records as the world’s smallest helicopter controlled by infrared light.

Parts used for small-sized precision machinery and devices such as smartphones are used for “NANO-FALCON”. The helicopter weighs only 11g and is 65mm long. Even though it’s a tiny helicopter, it’s able to fly stably because of a high performance gyrosensor and contra-rotating propellers. You can make the helicopter go up, go down, turn, circle, go forward and go backward.

Price: 4,704 yen (including tax)
Size: 65mm long, 11g
Controlling distance: 5m indoor
Battery for the helicopter: Rechargeable lithium ion polymer battery (built-in)
Battery for the controller: Alkaline size AA batteries x 4 (sold separately)
Continuous flying time: About 5 minutes
Charging time: 30 minutes
Includes: Helicopter, controller, spare tail propellers x 2, propeller remover

Japanese Robot Art: Nice to Look At, and Don’t Forget the Inspiration!

Science fiction robots

Japanese Robot Art – It’s Good, Man!
Illustration, product packaging, statues & sculpture, and even some transhumanist pin-ups; for decades Japan’s been pounding out the robot art like nobody’s business. Last week’s robotics piece examined the artistic legacy influence of giant Japanese robots on the upcoming film Pacific Rim, but this week it’s just cool robot art for the sake of looking at cool robot art.

Some readers might just see the shiny, and that’s cool – some might find a new robo-wallpaper or screensaver, and that’s fun – or, as happens more than one might suspect, the exploration and enjoyment of sci-fi imagery and entertainment can result in actual factual inspiration.

Art Can Make Science, The -Fi Drives the Sci-
A guy named Martin Cooper, inspired by the communicators from the original Star Trek series (60s), went on to lead the Motorola team that invented the first mobile phone (70s). The Panasonic/ActiveLink exoskeletal Power Loader & Power Loader Light look a whole lot like the safety-yellow power loader from Aliens. The 1959 novel Starship Troopers has been cited as a major inspiration for those working on real-life badass robot suits. Sikorsky’s helicopters & Lake’s early submarines were heavily inspired by Jules Verne. It goes on.

Art & The Contemporary Robotics Revolution
The social and economic significance of the ongoing explosion in practical robotics shows a lot of parallels to the communications boom and media upheaval centered around the rise of the internet – in all likelihood, it’s not going to slow down. At all. And one has to wonder how many Gen-X roboticists fell in love with their field as children playing, watching, reading the Transformers, Voltron, Gundam, Star Wars, etc. Certainly went that way with at least one dorky keyboard pounder, as well.

Whatever the result, humans need art – and those of use with deep-seated robo-geekery proclivities, we need robot art. And so, enjoy the four forms below, and see the links at the bottom if you need a little more enjoyment, something that’ll look cool on your laptop or phone, and if the imagery below inspires you to invent, kindly link here when you go public, yeah?!

Form #1 – Illustration Because Illustration:
Doesn’t have to be a whole lot of practicality to robot art, just looking good is good enough. The main image above and the first work below is that of Toshiaki Takayama, who goes all kinds of robo-cyborgy on humans and dragons and other imaginary stuff:

Another great illustration is this Gundam going all robo-rage on… something, via Concept Robots, artist unfindable:

Form #2 – Transformers Box Art:
Now, this is also illustration, but for marketing and product packaging, of course. These images, perhaps modern vintage, were included on the 80s Transformers packaging. With plastic & metal toy in hand, these were the mind’s landscape.

In Japan it was this:

And across the Pacific:

Form #3 – Statues & Sculpture:
The most well-known and pun-intended visible robot statue is the life-size, 1:1-scale Gundam that pun-intended pops up from time to time around Tokyo. Ironically, this is Gundam Suit is, well, Mobile. The attention to detail is fantastic:

And just how big is the 1:1-scale Gundam? Could ask this dude:

Form #4 – Japanese Robot Art for Big Boys & Girls (CAUTION – the link below will deliver some NSFW):
For those who’d like a little more, ummm… nudity and sexuality in their robot art, a good place to begin is the work of nasty robot airbrush wizard Hajime Sorayama. His iconic and widely recognizable work was transhuman before transhumanism was cool, but his name isn’t exactly household. Below is a pretty mild sample, but if you’re like, you know, into that sorta thing, jump through the link down there – but not at work or in front of grandma:

Thanks for viewing – if you’ve got a favorite Japanese or otherwise nationalitied artist who represents with the robot art, let us and other readers know down below.

• • •

Reno J. Tibke is the founder and operator of Anthrobotic.com and a contributor at the non-profit Robohub.org.

Image Sources: Toshiaki Takayama at deviantARTGundam Gallery at Concept Robots & Blog of DARWINFISH105Transformers Box Art at Botch the CrabHajime Sorayama’s Beleaguered Website (Google Image Search is better)

Takara Tomy – Dancing Face-Stand for iPhone – Take photo! Set and choose music! Let’s Sing! Dance!

Takara Tomy - Dancing Face-Stand for iPhone - Take photo! Set and choose music! Let's Sing! Dance!

From Takara Tomy comes the must have accessory for summer fun – The Dancing Face-Stand for iPhone – it is an iPhone stand that looks like a robot. It will dance with the music you play from your iPhone. Download the dedicated app “Face sing” to your iPhone and you will be able to display your friends or family member and watch as they enjoy the dancing and singing.

The Dancing Face-Stand was seen previously at toy shows but will finally be available on June 27.

Check out the video on Takara Tomy’s site.

You can mount an iPhone with a charging cord on the stand.

It is self-powered through batteries, not through the mounted iPhone.

Price: 3,465 yen (including tax)
Colors: White, Red, Blue
Compatible with: iPhone 5, iPhone 4S, iPhone 4, iPod touch (4th generation or later)
Size: 170 x 130 x 105mm
Weight: 280g
Battery: 2 x size AA battery (sold separately)

LightUp electronic blocks and AR app teaches kids circuitry basics (hands-on)

LightUp electronics building blocks and augmentedreality app teaches kids circuitry basics handson

There are plenty of kits out there designed to help kids learn the ins and outs of electronics, but LightUp hopes to stand out from the crowd with not just easy-to-use building blocks but an accompanying augmented reality app as well. From resistors and LED modules to light sensors, each block represents a real component that can be attached to each other via magnetic connectors, hopefully creating a circuit in the process. LightUp even offers an Arduino-compatible microcontroller block to help kids start coding — clip the programming wand to the block, hook it up to your computer, and away you go.

What really sets LightUp apart is the aforementioned AR app. Simply snap a picture of your circuit, and the software will let you know what’s wrong with it if there’s a mistake. If everything’s working, it’ll display an electrical flow animation atop the picture, showing kids the magic of electricity. We had a go at creating a circuit ourselves, and were delighted at how easy it was. The connectors fit in either direction, and can be attached and reattached with ease. We also saw a brief demo of the prototype application, and sure enough, it showed us when an LED block was placed backwards with an error message — you can see it in action in the video below.

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Source: LightUp, Kickstarter

Pacific Rim and the Legacy of Giant Japanese Robots

Wednesday Robotics: Pacific Rim and the Legacy of Giant Japanese Robots

A Slice of Giant Japanese Robot Lineage:
With a marketing campaign aimed at pretty much any human being with electricity, high levels of robo-geekery aren’t at all required for one to be aware of this summer’s giant robot & monster movie, Pacific Rim. However, awareness of the nearly 60-year legacy of giant Japanese robot fiction could use some press. Thankfully, you don’t have to be an anime fanboy to get hip; working forward from the 1950s, and mercifully avoiding discussion of the convoluted and often bizarre plot lines, check this out:

Oldest: Tetsujin 28-go (1956 – Approx. 34ft/10m; pictured above-left)
Directly translatable as “iron human,” Tetsujin is probably the oldest example of specifically Japanese giant robot fiction. While no humans piloted Tetsujin from within, it was human-controlled. What was the influence, and was Tetsujin brought to the English-speaking world, one might wonder? Why yes, in 1964 Tetsujin came to America and changed his name to “Gigantor.

Older: Giant Robo (1967 – Probably 100ft/30m; not pictured)
This manga and anime series was created by Mitsuteru Yokoyama, the same guy who made Mr. Tetsujin up there. The human-controlled “Giant Robo,” which is Japanified English that could only appeal in that (lack of) linguistic context, came to America shortly after it’s J-release as “Johnny Sokko And His Flying Robot.”

Old: Mobile Suit Gundam (1979 – Approx. 60ft/18m; above-center)
These giant Japanese robots got a person inside at the wheel. Gundam is one of the better known yet mostly Japan-only giant robot franchises, and is one of the few properties on this list to actually grow in popularity since its initial release. Global coverage of a 1:1-scale Gundam statue in Tokyo definitely helped that along.

New-ish: Microman and Diaclone Robots (1974 & 1980, respectively – various largeness; not pictured)
While not human-driven nor necessarily human-controlled, we best not go without mentioning what are perhaps the most famous giant robots in all of modern fiction: the American Hasbro & Japanese Takara Tomy co-produced Transformers franchise, launched in 1984. The concepts for which were co-opted and incorporated from the latter Japanese company’s Microman and Diaclone toys.

Newer: Beast King GoLion (1981 – inconsistently huge but always huge; above-right)
Actually a team of five human-driven giant robot lions who combine their powers to form an even larger giant robot. Beast King GoLion far and away has the most awkward in-English-yet-Japanese-sounding translation of the original title (what the hell’s a “GoLion,” right?). As such, when it made its way to rest of the world, it became the very well-known “Voltron: Defender of the Universe.”

Other notable giant Japanese robot series include the human-controlled Mazinger Z (1973) and the more recent human-driven Neon Genesis Evangelion (1995). And there are more. Actually, several more. And someone needing a master’s or PhD in Japanese studies should probably dig into why nearly all of the giant robot pilots are children.

But okay, okay – point made, yes?

So, Are We Sure Pacific Rim isn’t a Giant Japanese Robot Movie?
Guillermo del Toro, Pacific’s Rim’s well-respected director, has indicated that while the whole legacy of Japanese giant robot fiction has a presence in the film, it’s not a specifically Japanese-style giant robot & monster movie. But look – it’s got huge monsters coming out of the ocean [uh… CHECK!], and giant, human-controlled robots have to fight them and save the world [CHECK!].

Given the obvious monster movie influence of Godzilla, Ishiro Honda’s 1954 allegorical classic, and the above detailed genre-spawning giant Japanese robot factoid expo, the logic of precedent dictates that Pacific Rim essentially cannot avoid being by default, de-facto, and by-proxy, specifically Japanese. Kinda like any McDonald’s, anywhere on earth, just can’t help but be American.

Absent whatever makes Japanese artists and writers so keen on the concept, would humans have come up with giant driveable robots anyway? Yeah – totally. But in this universe, Japan did – so viewers of Pacific Rim, know that the film is standing on some big, beefy, giant Japanesey robotic shoulders.

The Just for Fun Pacific Rim & Robot Jox Addendum:
Now, we’re not the first to point this out, but Pacific Rim is obviously, ummm… also influenced by the so-bad-it’s-awesome, barely seen even by robo-dorks, confusing and intellectually assaulting live-action cartoon that is 1990’s Robot Jox. To be fair, “influenced” probably isn’t the right word; some of the parallels are just conceptually and anatomically unavoidable.

Given that Guillermo del Toro’s driving Pacific Rim, comparisons probably aren’t really that fair. But, if you wanna ferociously lower your expectations and see what a bad giant robot movie looks like, go ahead and YouTube Robot Jox. It’s out there.

Wednesday Robotics: Pacific Rim and the Legacy of Giant Japanese Robots

Reno J. Tibke is the founder and operator of Anthrobotic.com and a contributor at the non-profit Robohub.org.

Images: Gundam: DARWINFISH105 (definitely visit this guy’s blog); Tetsujin 28-go: Kobe, Japan Tetsujin Project; Beast King GoLion Studio S.A; Robot Jox: Probably Owned by Sony; Pacific Rim: Warner Bros. Pictures

 

 

Kidswalker NT Has Your Child Piloting Their Own Drill-Equipped Mech

Riding a fully-functional mech is probably extremely high on most people’s list, or at least people that could be considered to be extremely cool, and we might never get to see the day where we can ride a mech, a Japanese company is making it possible for your kids to do so.

Sakakibara-Kikai created the Kidswalker NT, which is a miniature gas-powered exoskeleton which features a chest plate that flips up to protect the rider, moving arms and a “drill” attachment for those days when adventuring into ground is a must. The drill can be activated by twisting on the Kidswalker NT’s throttle-like controls, although we certainly would warn the kid rider to watch where they point that thing as we’re sure it’ll poke more than a few hundred eyes out.

The Kidswalker NT measures in at 5.2 feet and weighs 397lbs and costs a total of $21,000, although if you’re thinking of having it shipped to the U.S., we’re sure its shipping costs would certainly reach in the thousands as well. If you’re an awesome parent with some extra pocket money to spend, we’re sure your child will never forget this gift.

By Ubergizmo. Related articles: New York City Celebrates Earth Day With All-Electric Taxi Pilot, Boeing 787 Dreamliner Battery Modifications Approved By FAA,

    

Takara Tomy – Battroborg 4G – Interchangeable body parts – Customize your warrior robot for battle!

Takara Tomy - Battroborg 4G -  Interchangeable body parts - Customize your warrior robot for battle!

On April 20, the new “Battroborg 4G” model will be added to the popular Battroborg series. 300,000 sets of Takara Tomy’s battle robot “Battroborg 20″ that were out in July, 2012 have been shipped for the half year since since the release date.

Battroborg is a 90mm tall warrior robot. A 2-handed control device comes with the robot. When you make a punching motion with the right control, the robot throws a punch with the right hand and when you make a punching motion with the left control, the robot throws a punch with the left hand. This time, 2 robots (“Upper Champ” with a red body and “Push Baron” with a blue body) will be released as part of the new “Battroborg 4G”. The unique thing about “Battroborg 4G” is that each robot has different interchangeable types of arms, legs, and fist parts so that you can customize them and throw different punches.

Partner, DigInfo.TV highlighted the original version of the Battroborg:

Price: 4,725 yen (including tax)
Battery: 4 size AA alkaline batteries

Buy the Battroborg 4G here.