Reporter Gives Robonaut Space Robot a Squeeze

Reporter and Robonaut 2She called it a date, but as far as we can tell, the meeting between MSNBC reporter Stephanie Pappas and soon-to-be the first humanoid robot in space Robonaut 2 was a bit of a one-sided affair.

A joint project between General Motors and NASA, Robonaut 2 is expected to help astronauts perform repairs and other maintenance on the International Space Station. This model, Robonaut 2B will travel on the very last Space Shuttle mission; Originally scheduled a November 1 launch, fuel leaks have delayed the Shuttle Discovery blast-off until Tuesday of next week.

Pappas, who met the robot at NASA’s Johnson Space Center, reports that the 330 pound automaton was a little intimidating and looked as if it might be “ready to throw a punch.” It does look a tiny bit like a giant version of one of those punching puppets (our favorites were always the nun and ET) . Though only a torso, Robonaut 2 can replicate human hand and arm movement and perform tasks such as drilling and painting. During Pappas’ date, however, Robonaut didn’t paint, throw a punch, speak or even move. To be fair, Pappas’s date is not the robot heading into space. The final model, Robonaut 2B, has new fire-proof skin and a few space-ready parts. Plus, as Pappas notes, it doesn’t have any smell. (Now you know the answer to the age-old-question, “Do things still smell in space?”).

As Pappas’ date neared its conclusion, the reporter did manage to make brief contact with the humanoid robot’s arm. She reports that it felt like a “cross between a memory-foam pillow and a well-muscled human arm.”

We’re taking bets on whether or not Robonaut will call Pappas, or at least text her.

Northrop Grumman’s CaMEL ‘bot features one .50 caliber gun, loads of class

When the dream factory that is Northrop Grumman needed to up the “wow factor” at its Association of the U.S. Army’s Washington conference booth, it did what plenty of CES exhibitors wished they could do: it weaponized. Hence, the deadliest CaMEL yet. The acronym stands for Carry-all Mechanized Equipment Landrover — think of the BigDog robot, but with treads instead of legs. The motorized platform will hump up to 1,200 pounds of gear at seven miles per hour, and as Spencer Ackerman at Wired points out, over sixty of them have been sold to the Israeli military. But the above pictured CaMEL is the only one floating around with armaments: in this case, a .50-caliber M2 machine gun. The gun is fired remotely, via touchscreen controls, and the platform itself could support any number of weapons including the M249, the MK19 grenade launcher, or 30mm cannon. Which kind of proves a pet theory of ours: if you build it, eventually someone will mount a gun on it.

Northrop Grumman’s CaMEL ‘bot features one .50 caliber gun, loads of class originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 28 Oct 2010 15:13:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Watch This Robot Mouse Blow Through a Maze Faster Than You Can [Video]

Okay, this might not look impressive at first. The maze isn’t that complicated. But imagine being the size of the robotic Micromouse—relatively, this is a human-sized hedge maze. Then imagine running to the finish in only five seconds. More »

University of Chicago, Cornell researchers develop universal robotic gripper

Robotic hands are usually just that — hands — but some researchers from the University of Chicago and Cornell University (with a little help from iRobot) have taken a decidedly different approach for their so-called universal robotic gripper. As you can see above, the gripper is actually a balloon that can conform to and grip just about any small object, and hang onto it firmly enough to pick it up. What’s the secret? After much testing, the researchers found that ground coffee was the best substance to fill the balloon with — to grab an object, the gripper simply creates a vacuum in the balloon (much like a vacuum-sealed bag of coffee), and it’s then able to let go of the object just by releasing the vacuum. Simple, but it works. Head on past the break to check it out in action.

[Thanks, Jeremy]

Continue reading University of Chicago, Cornell researchers develop universal robotic gripper

University of Chicago, Cornell researchers develop universal robotic gripper originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 27 Oct 2010 11:37:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Mint Automatic Floor Cleaner review

We live in a world full of fabulous idle distractions — a million TV channels, videogames at our fingertips, the world’s greatest literature just a few menu selections away. Yet still we’re stuck cleaning the same floors more or less the same way our forefathers did, despite the fact that they had a lot less fun stuff they could be doing instead. The $249 Mint Automatic Floor Cleaner is another attempt to free us from that burdensome task and, like the Neato XV-11 we recently reviewed, it is quite clinical and comprehensive in the way that it does things. However, while this one is likewise a heck of a lot smarter than a Roomba, for some it’ll be of rather more limited usefulness. Why? Read on to find out.

Continue reading Mint Automatic Floor Cleaner review

Mint Automatic Floor Cleaner review originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 26 Oct 2010 11:58:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Versatile Robot Arm Built With Coffee Grounds, A Balloon

coffee_balloon_arm.jpg

Hey friends, you too can make a robot from perfectly ordinary household materials. Have a balloon and some coffee grounds lying around the house? Stick the grounds in the balloon and voila, you’ve got a super awesome, super grippy robot arm.

As for the rest of the robot arm, that’s going to require some serious electronic engineering–and a degree in advanced robotics certainly wouldn’t hurt, but at least you’re half of the way there, right?

The simple machine was devised by a team of robotics types in Chicago and New York. If the video is any indication, the device can pick up just about anything. In just under three minutes, the device picks up a spring, a jack, plastic tubing, a light bulb, an uncooked egg, pours a cup of water, and draws a square with a pen.

The Register explains the mechanics of the coffee and balloon concoction,

The manipulator works by pressing the soft balloon full of loose coffee grounds down on the object to be gripped. Then the air is sucked out of the balloon, causing the coffee granules to press together and lock into a rigid shape – just as they do when vacuum-packed. The object is now securely grasped by the manipulator, and can be released as desired by ending the suction on the granule-filled bulb.

A scientist involved with the project suggests that it “could be on the market tomorrow.” In the meantime, I can watch video of the arm picking up stuff all day long. Check it out in all of its glory, after the jump.

Daiwa House enlists Moogle for remote control crawlspace inspections

Apparently Japanese homebuilder Daiwa House offers crawl space inspections as part of its warranty service, and to that end have enlisted Moogle (rhymes with “goggle,” not “Google”). The robot weighs just under 30 lbs, measures roughly 20 x 12 x 9.5 inches, and rocks a laser rangefinder, WiFi connectivity, and two cameras: one for driving, one for inspecting. If you happen to be in the country yourself and wish to try the thing out, it can be leased monthly for ¥40,000 ($500) or purchased outright for ¥200,000 ($2,500). Just brace yourself — you never know what you’re gonna find when you start digging around under people’s houses. See it in action after the break.

Continue reading Daiwa House enlists Moogle for remote control crawlspace inspections

Daiwa House enlists Moogle for remote control crawlspace inspections originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 25 Oct 2010 16:22:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Daiwa House enlists Moggle for remote control crawlspace inspections

Apparently Japanese homebuilder Daiwa House offers crawl space inspections as part of its warranty service, and to that end have enlisted Moogle (rhymes with “goggle,” not “Google”). The robot weighs just under 30 lbs, measures roughly 20 x 12 x 9.5 inches, and rocks a laser rangefinder, WiFi connectivity, and two cameras: one for driving, one for inspecting. If you hapeen to be in the country yourself and wish to try the thing out, it can be leased monthly for ¥40,000 ($500) or purchased outright for ¥200,000 ($2,500). Just brace yourself — you never know what you’re gonna find when you start digging around under people’s houses. See it in action after the break.

Continue reading Daiwa House enlists Moggle for remote control crawlspace inspections

Daiwa House enlists Moggle for remote control crawlspace inspections originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 25 Oct 2010 16:22:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Akihabara News, Plastic Pals  |  sourceIza  | Email this | Comments

Fauxhawk robot exterminates wasps, is something of a fashion victim

When Professor Sekine of Utsunomiya, Tochigi Prefecture, Japan, heard that his friend had been stung upwards of 90 times exterminating wasps, he was inspired to act. Why not build a robot to do the job instead? Presumably he threw some old parts together that he had laying around anyways — why else would he build a humanoid robot with a mohawk, when an AR.Drone — or a spray bottle with an extra long hose — could just as easily do the trick? Called Mohican (in honor of its awesome wig), this device is intended to be controlled via remote and voice (“climb the ladder,” for instance), and seems way over-qualified for its intended task. But who knows? Maybe Sekine is a visionary! After all, he has big plans for his automaton: After it’s released “sometime next summer,” he wants to devote his time to an updated model that will work in other hazardous environments, such as nuclear power plants.

Fauxhawk robot exterminates wasps, is something of a fashion victim originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 24 Oct 2010 08:08:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Robot Bowler Still Can’t Best Bowling Pro

EARL the Bowling Robot

EARL is the perfect name for a robotic bowler, but even if we strip away the acronym artifice to reveal the technology’s full name–Enhanced Automated Robotic Launcher–EARL’s a pretty cool invention. According to a post on Coolest Gadgets EARL is an expert bowling robot used by the Equipment Specifications and Certifications team of the National Bowling Congress to test bowling gear.

I used to bowl a bit and always imagined that if I, like EARL, could throw the ball exactly the same every time, and consistently hit the sweet spot between the 1 and 2 (or 3) pin, I’d have a strike every time. I never bowled above a175, but strangely, EARL, a seemingly perfect bowler–it’s a computer for heaven’s sake–can’t bowl perfectly either. Learn why (and see EARL compete) after the jump.