Archive for May, 2007

Soldiers become emotional about their bots

Thursday, May 10th, 2007
girlbot

The Washington Post has an interesting article on the emotional attachment soldiers have with their robots. We are glad this new technology is keeping more soldiers safe. It would make sense that such machines would become endearing to the very people they help protect.

“Sometimes they get a little emotional over it,” Bogosh says. “Like having a pet dog. It attacks the IEDs, comes back, and attacks again. It becomes part of the team, gets a name. They get upset when anything happens to one of the team. They identify with the little robot quickly. They count on it a lot in a mission.”

The bots even show elements of “personality,” Bogosh says. “Every robot has its own little quirks. You sort of get used to them. Sometimes you get a robot that comes in and it does a little dance, or a karate chop, instead of doing what it’s supposed to do.” The operators “talk about them a lot, about the robot doing its mission and getting everything accomplished.” He remembers the time “one of the robots happened to get its tracks destroyed while doing a mission.” The operators “duct-taped them back on, finished the mission and then brought the robot back” to a hero’s welcome.

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FIRST Robotics: Video Coverage from the Competition Floor

Wednesday, May 9th, 2007

Watch Design News’ coverage of this years FIRST event.

The 16th annual FIRST Robotics Competition, held this year in Atlanta, GA, featured a challenge called “Rack ‘N’ Roll” in which two alliances of three high school teams each went head to head to try and place as many inner tubes, called “ringers,” as possible on the arms of a center structure rack. The matches, held on four fields set up in Atlanta’s Georgia Dome, were 2 min long, with a 15 sec autonomous challenge at the start of each match.

FIRST

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Top 10 Video Glasses

Wednesday, May 9th, 2007

Building a remote presence robot? These glasses might help you to get the job done. Full list after the jump.

myvu

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Maker Faire 2007 ! MS Coding4Fun Booth

Tuesday, May 8th, 2007

It’s almost time for Maker Faire again!

Maker Faire is like the Lollapalooza of conferences. Last year there were fireballs, crazy clothes, robots, Segway Polo and people riding around on crazy bicycles. It was a blast. See Pics on Flickr.

We will be out there again this year in the Microsoft Coding4Fun booth. Here is their teaser page on what you can find there. Below are 2 sneak peak pictures of what we are building. To find out what on earth it all is you will have to come visit us at the Faire to find out!

It’s only $15 to attend! A great way to spend a weekend day.

balls
gun

Building a Low Cost COTS PC-Based Robot

Tuesday, May 8th, 2007

We’ve definitely seen our share of some pretty wicked DIY robots in the past, but this one really stands out!

DIY COTS Robot

Sure, it doesn’t have too much functionality to it as of yet (that’s to come, I’m sure), but this is one of the most resourceful displays of DIY PC based robotics I have seen in a while! Check out dotnetrobot for all the sweet details about this robot.Kudo’s Chris!

Humanoid HR-V1 inspecting pen

Monday, May 7th, 2007

Um, holy crap this is impressive. (As long as it’s not faking it)

Can’t tell you much other than we stumbled upon this video on Youtube. It was posted by an Alex Vogler and here is his homepage.

The Top Ten ’80s Robots (We Expected to Exist By Now)

Monday, May 7th, 2007

Another fun Cracked list :P

johny 5
Johny 5 is alive ! 

We were promised robots. Crazy electronic sidekick or death-dealing automaton of doom, we didn’t care, as long as the future shaped up to be the awesome electronic robo-battle we’d dreamed of as children. Flash forward 20 years and all we have are sorry, non-robotic pieces of supposedly innovative crap, such as “hybrid cars,� “iPods,� and “hope for the AIDs vaccine.� Consider the below list a sort of report card, so modern scientists can see exactly how far they are from fulfilling the promises of our childhood.

lisa
Who could forget Lisa in Weird Science 

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Zonbu $99 Linux-Based Computer (Well, $250 actually)

Monday, May 7th, 2007
zonbu_

From Gizmodo

There’s a cheap computer on the way that undercuts them all, the $99 Zonbu, due this summer in a silent-running form factor that’s about the size of a paperback book. It has 4GB of flash memory on board, and automatically backs up a copy of your data online. Besides that $99 purchase price, you’ll also pay $12.95 a month (for 25GB,scales up to 100GB for more money) to store its data on the Zonbu servers, giving you the ability to compute anywhere with this tiny device, or access your data from other PCs. If you don’t commit to a service plan, the little PC costs $250.

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DIY A/C Zone Control

Wednesday, May 2nd, 2007

There’s so many things people are doing with servos nowadays! I never though for a second to use servos to control the dampers in my house though.

Control Your Dampers

Compare: in existing zoning systems, the cost per room is anywhere between $600 and $1300, in this case, it is approximately $10 for a servo, and approximately $3 for a sensor, which makes it less than $20, if you count the price for all those small things in there.

Impressive, isn’t it?

Initially, there were concerns about the longevity of this device – all in all, neither of the original components (the stock registers and the stock R/C servos) were intended to be used in “always on” mode…

Pretty ingenious if you ask me!
via Make, Sourceforge

SixAxis as Tilt-Sensing Robot Controller? Cool!

Tuesday, May 1st, 2007

This video speaks for itself, for the most part, so I’ll let it speak.

They’re using a stock SixAxis controller, a PS3 (in hypervisor mode) with Linux installed, and a Gumstix controller w/ built-in Bluetooth to drive the six servos. You’re probably thinking, “Gee wiz, this sure is an awfully convoluted way to control a few servos!” Well… it is; but it’s unique, it works, and it’s a great proof of concept that will undoubtedly lead to more practical applications. With some more complex kinematic algorithms, this could be adapted to control the position of the gripper on a manipulator arm, the control surfaces of a UAV, the orientation of a wireless security camera, the motion and posture of a multi-legged robot, or any number of other cool motion control-related projects. The interactive art community should be all over this, as well.

I don’t know about you, but I love to see accelerometer-equipped game controllers used for novel purposes such as this; mostly because game designers have so far failed to use these devices to their full potential.

www.pabr.org/sixlinux

Via Engadget