Disney’s Pixelbots Form Colorful Swarms You Can Interact With

Disney Pixelbots

ETH Zurich and Disney partnered up to create the Pixelbots, a bunch of colorful robots that have a mind of their own. These two-wheeled robots can easily glide across a surface and create a beautiful animation, all at the same time.

Disney Research Zurich and the Autonomous Systems Lab collaborated with ETH Zurich to develop some two-inch discs with a flat wheelbase. The Pixelbots are equipped with magnetic wheels, which means that they can move on any flat surface, regardless of the angle. In other words, these could make some excellent lighting fixtures if you got a few hundreds of them and attached them to a metallic ceiling. Imagine that for a second! Animated light that moves as it pleases! Now that would definitely make your home unique. However, Disney imagined these swarms of tiny bots as some sort of display that could have a future in theme parks.

According to project lead Dr. Paul Beardsley and doctoral candidate Javier Alonso-Mora, the Pixelbots represent an art form that brings together robotics and graphics. Beardsley explained why the miniature robots are attractive, despite their low resolution: “HD screens and projections are impressive, but they are so familiar that they have lost the ability to generate excitement and attraction. Our experience has been that there is a fascination factor, and people will ask why certain robots go in a certain direction as though the robots are alive.”

What guides these robots and prevents them from bumping into one another are called optimal reciprocal collision avoidance algorithms. This could leave people with the impression that the Pixelbots have a mind of their own. If a pixelated robot is removed from a formation, the remaining Pixelbots will adapt and recreate the formation at a lower DPI, while maintaining the symmetry and an equal distance between them. Should the removed Pixelbot be added to the formation again, it will occupy a free spot and will be assigned a color that is in concordance with the rest of the picture.

Regarding the future applications of the Pixelbots, Beardsley claimed that “People had earlier demonstrated swarm robots making abstract shapes and motions, but no one had previously used robots to make representational images. What motivated our work is that we wanted to make a display that really grabs the attention.”

The above videos should give you an idea about how these Pixelbots look and work in real life.

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Heroes in a half shell: autonomous robot sea turtles in development

Heroes in a half shell autonomous robot sea turtles in development

Sure you could have a robot assist you around the home, or even one that'll make factories friendlier, but we'll opt for a robot sea turtle any day of the week. The Swiss folks over at ETH Zurich are working on making that a reality with the Naro-Tartaruga, a turtle-inspired machine that would swim efficiently while carrying cargo in its shell. It's currently a cylindrical aluminum vessel with a couple of flippers, but concept designs include that totally bad-ass bot in the image above. The turtle-bot has a top speed of over 7 knots, so it'll handily beat any real sea turtle in a race, and the big torso has enough space for battery and sensors that are necessary for autonomous function. The fins on the turtle have a fully three-dimensional mechanism -- there are three actuators per fin, and each actuate the fin axle independently. The end goal is for the development of underwater autonomous vehicles, which will hopefully bring us one step closer to SeaQuest DSV. In the meantime, we'd like one just so we can freak the hell out of our cats.

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Heroes in a half shell: autonomous robot sea turtles in development originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 05 Oct 2012 00:37:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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IBM creates consistent electron spin inside semiconductors, takes spintronics one twirl closer

IBM creates consistent electron spin inside of a chip, takes spintronics one twirl closer

A fundamental challenge of developing spintronics, or computing where the rotation of electrons carries instructions and other data rather than the charge, has been getting the electrons to spin for long enough to shuttle data to its destination in the first place. IBM and ETH Zurich claim to be the first achieving that feat by getting the electrons to dance to the same tune. Basing a semiconductor material on gallium arsenide and bringing the temperature to an extremely low -387F, the research duo have created a persistent spin helix that keeps the spin going for the 1.1 nanoseconds it would take a normal 1GHz processor to run through its full cycle, or 30 times longer than before. As impressive as it can be to stretch atomic physics that far, just remember that the theory is some distance from practice: unless you're really keen on running a computer at temperatures just a few hops away from absolute zero, there's work to be done on producing transistors (let alone processors) that safely run in the climate of the family den. Assuming that's within the realm of possibility, though, we could eventually see computers that wring much more performance per watt out of one of the most basic elements of nature.

Continue reading IBM creates consistent electron spin inside semiconductors, takes spintronics one twirl closer

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IBM creates consistent electron spin inside semiconductors, takes spintronics one twirl closer originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 13 Aug 2012 14:41:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Robot uses glue gun to make tools, hopes to ace Survival Skills 101

Robot uses glue gun to make tools, hopes to ace Survival Skills 101

Looking through Engadget's annals of robotic achievements, we see droids juggling, dabbling in competitive sailing and even manning prisons. Cool as they are, those functions aren't going to mean a thing when Mr. Automaton is lost in the wilderness, damaged and without a helping human hand in sight. Researchers at ETH Zurich are working to change that scenario, as they're currently developing a "self-reconfigurable" device that packs a glue gun for creating the tools it needs on the fly. It might not be the quickest method -- as you'll see in the video below, making a glue cup takes a good hour -- but it's effective enough for transporting and pouring water. That's not to say that the prototype is ready to fend for itself; it built the cup, but only under human direction. The researchers' next step is adding in autonomous capabilities so the bots can repair things -- and even build other robots -- without being told to do so. A sea of self-regenerating droids? Sounds harmless to us.

Continue reading Robot uses glue gun to make tools, hopes to ace Survival Skills 101

Robot uses glue gun to make tools, hopes to ace Survival Skills 101 originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 19 May 2012 14:16:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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