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Power Line Inspecting Robots Can Get Around Obstacles

Writing by Evan Ackerman on Tuesday, 17 of August , 2010 at 1:44 am

Inspecting power lines is a perfect job for a robot, if for no other reason than it’s a nearly (nearly) impossible job for a human to do, especially when the lines are live, which they need to be for me to be writing this post. One of the issues with robot line inspectors, however, is that power lines tend to be held up by towery things and festooned with all manner of objects to keep wayward pilots from getting tangled up in them. In other words, there are obstacles to what would otherwise be one unbroken and extremely robot-friendly cable.

So, the obvious solution is to design a robot that’s able to get around said obstacles in a creative manner. The above video, about Hydro-Québec’s LineScout, is one of those PR puff pieces that is unfortunately pretty lame, with 6 minutes of talking heads restating over and over how fabulous the robot is without actually discussing what (in the technological sense) makes it so cool. If you watch closely, you do get to see how LineScout can traverse obstacles by detaching part of itself from the power line, moving around the obstacle, and grabbing back on. It can also operate while the lines are energized, making it minimally invasive on existing infrastructure.

Here’s another approach to the problem by the HiBot Expliner, which uses its own body as a counterweight:

It’s great that they’ve got robots inspecting power lines now, although the old way was kinda way, way cooler. Sorry robots, I love you, but sometimes progress is takes a little bit of the magic out of life.

[ HiBot Expliner ] AND [ Hydro-Québec LineScout ] VIA [ IEEE ]

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Category: Industrial

Robot With Big Head Serves Ice Cream

Writing by Evan Ackerman on Tuesday, 17 of August , 2010 at 1:24 am

Well, it’s nothing BotJunkie readers haven’t seen before… A Motoman robot, serving ice cream. Only this time, he’s got a big head. Yay? Um, sure, yay! And if you liked that, here’s a Motoman robot with a smaller head (but sunglasses) wielding a golden shovel (and using those new Robotiq grippers that we tweeted about last week:

For the record, that’s Dexter helping out with the groundbreaking with the new headquarters of Motoman North America in Ohio. Anyway, more yay! Or something.

VIA [ CrunchGear ] AND [ Dayton Daily News ]

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Category: General

Robots With Guns: Potentially Dangerous Since 1932

Writing by Evan Ackerman on Monday, 16 of August , 2010 at 2:08 am

When we wrote about Alpha the robot back in March, we mentioned that it wasn’t exactly the safest machine to be around:

“Once it fired its pistol without warning, blasting the skin off [its creator's] arm from wrist to elbow. Another time it lowered its arm unexpectedly, struck an assistant on the shoulder, bruised him so badly that he was hospitalized.”

Anyway, the article in the picture above (from 1932) is a contemporary account of the incident, and although it seems as though the author probably embraced his creative license a bit more than a newspaper reporter perhaps should have, it’s an interesting peek into how people reacted to some of the very first humanoid robots. You can read the whole article in PDF format here.

On a side note (which is inevitably going to become the focus of this post, so here we go), it’s sort of amazing how similar that headline is to the type of things we read and hear when robots (for whatever reason) cause injuries to humans in the present. Irrespective of what actually happened, the robot is always given some kind of malicious motive, which obviously it doesn’t possess… Because of how they’re constructed, robots are always (always) doing what you tell them to do. If they screw something up, it’s because you (or some other human) screwed it up first, either in terms of the hardware or the software.

Also, I would just like to point out that this story, rather than illustrating the potential dangers of armed robots, should actually serve as an example of why a robot with a gun isn’t necessarily any more or any less dangerous than a human with a gun. I mean, this is gun safety 101: if someone (or something) has a loaded weapon, you don’t stand in front of it. Yes, robots can occasionally be unpredictable. So can humans. The difference is, when a robot shoots you when you didn’t intend it to, you can rip it apart, figure out what happened, and fix it so that it (or that particular issue, anyway) doesn’t happen again.

[ Jess Nevins ] VIA [ io9 ]

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Category: General

Kevin Warwick On Cyborgs

Writing by Evan Ackerman on Friday, 13 of August , 2010 at 1:45 am

Kevin Warwick was arguably* the world’s first cyborg in 1998 when he got an RFID chip implanted into his arm that allowed him to interact with computer systems using a part of his body. In this interview, he talks about the present and future of cybernetics.

The first part of the interview is pretty tame (except for the big about the brain cell controlled robots, which is very interesting), but then Kevin starts talking about how he had his nervous system hooked up to his wife’s nervous system and things get a little freaky. Good stuff.

[ Motherboard ] VIA [ BB ]

*If you choose to define a cyborg as a person who has some form of technology integrated into their bodies to enable them to interact with the world in a different way, as opposed to (and this may be more generalized) a human with electronic enhancements, in which case the first person with a pacemaker (a guy named Arne Larsson) might have been the first cyborg back in 1958.

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Category: Cybernetics

Norwegian Mailbox Drone

Writing by Evan Ackerman on Thursday, 12 of August , 2010 at 12:53 am

I guess it’s cold enough up thar in Norway that even UAVs need their own little comfy modernist Scandinavian drone huts that look rather a lot like mailboxes. They’re part of Scandicraft’s ScanCam perimeter security system, and the idea is that the huts act as base stations for roving semi-autonomous quadrotors that are controlled remotely. The quadrotors can launch, recover, and recharge themselves at their huts (or “hangars” I guess), and when it snows (which I hear it doesn’t do once or twice a year), the bots can stay snug at home, enjoying their stylish furnishings which you can find at your friendly neighborhood IKEA as part of the new Röböüüüt collection.

[ Scandicraft ]

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Category: Security

Robot To Explore Last Chamber Of Great Pyramid, Release Curse Of Brendan Frasier

Writing by Evan Ackerman on Thursday, 12 of August , 2010 at 12:25 am

Somehow, although it’s been some 4500 years, there’s still a little bit of the Great Pyramid that’s entirely unexplored. From the two chambers inside the pyramid (the King’s Chamber and Queen’s Chamber), there are small shafts (about the size of a breadbox) leading away towards the exterior. These passages are blocked by stone doors with copper handles built into them, and a previous expedition found that behind was of the doors was… Another door. So this time, a team sponsored by Leeds University and supported by Dassault Systems has built a robot designed to find out what’s behind that next door. It’s totally tricked out, with:

· A micro “snake camera” that can fit through small spaces and see round corners like an endoscope
· A miniaturized ultrasonic device that can tap on walls and listen to the response to help determine the thickness and condition of the stone
· A miniature ‘beetle’ robot that can fit through a hole 20mm diameter for further exploration in confined spaces
· Precision compass and inclinometer to measure the orientation of the shafts
· A coring drill that can penetrate the second blocking stone (if necessary and feasible) while removing the minimum amount of material necessary

This is actually the third robot that’s been sent down this particular shaft; the second was an iRobot project in cooperation with National Geographic:

My guess as to what’s down there? A THIRD DOOR. Followed by a fourth door, and fifth door, and then some hieroglyphs saying “sucker.”

[ Djedi Robot ] VIA [ Independent ]

Comments (5)

Category: Research

Robotic Paintball Turret

Writing by Evan Ackerman on Wednesday, 11 of August , 2010 at 12:56 am

This, kids, is yet another reason why you should start teaching yourself robotics. Plus, you can tell your parents (or your significant other, if you’re a big kid) that you “need a new paintball gun for your science project” (or something). Instead of a Tippman, though, I’d have to suggest something way better; something like an AKALMP Excalibur (otherwise known as the greatest paintball gun ever made).

Anyway, wouldn’t it be cool if you could somehow buy this turret setup as a kit or something? Yeah it would.

[ Alter Robotics ]

Comments (5)

Category: DIY,Hobby

Google Buys Microdrone, Imaginations Run Wild

Writing by Evan Ackerman on Tuesday, 10 of August , 2010 at 12:31 am

If you were Google, what would you do with an autonomous, camera-equipped quadrotor? Google, who is Google, must have a pretty good idea (or ideas), since they’ve bought their own Microdrone, which (last time we checked) costs somewhere in the neighborhood of $60k. According to the German publication Wirtschaftswoche, Microdrones GmbH says that their UAVs “are superbly suited to deliver more up-to-date recordings for mapping service Google Earth,” although that may just be a potential use that they’re suggesting as opposed to what Google is actually planning. Still, it’s kinda fun to think about… Like, it might be possible for Google to deliver a live version of Google Earth, at least over a small area, using a Microdrone (or a network of microdrones!) and a georeferenced live video network link.

Or they could be doing something entirely different.

The point is, I guess, that the Microdrone offers a way to collect data that is pretty much limited only by the imagination of the user, and Google has proven to be pretty creative when it comes to collecting and deploying imagery. So now that they have one, the sky’s the limit. Or rather, it isn’t.

[ Microdrones GmbH ] VIA [ Blogoscoped ]

Comments (1)

Category: Consumer

What A Robot Needs

Writing by Evan Ackerman on Monday, 9 of August , 2010 at 1:30 am

“Vacuum living room” is where “sex” would be on the human version Maslow’s hierarchy of needs. It doesn’t strike me as quite the same, but who knows… Maybe, to a Roomba, it is.

Man, that’s deep.

[ Lunchbreath ]

Thanks TheophileEscargot!

Comments (9)

Category: Humor

Autonomous Quadrotor Is Watching You

Writing by Evan Ackerman on Monday, 9 of August , 2010 at 1:20 am

As soon as they figure out how to get quadrotors to operate outside of a motion capture environment as well (or nearly as well) as they do inside, surveillance could very well be their first major application, the appeal being that in addition to being highly mobile, quadrotors can set themselves down and provide static surveillance without wasting energy staying aloft. This isn’t a capability that most currently fielded UAV systems possess, despite some extremely cool research into fixed-wing perching.

Although it may not be the greatest thing, from a moral standpoint, that militaryish applications are driving robot development, there’s a pronounced trickle-down effect as eventually all that military hardware (or components thereof) becomes available to normal people who just want to do cool stuff with robots.

[ GRASP @ UPenn ]

Comments (11)

Category: Research,Security

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From the folks who brought you OhGizmo.com, BotJunkie obsessively chronicles Man's inevitable descent into cybernetic slavery.

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