Bakable Robots Are the Next Logical Step, Say MIT Researchers

MIT Bakable Robots

Scientists from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology demonstrated how exposing specially designed, 3D printed self-folding components to uniform heat, in a process quite similar to baking, results in working robot parts.

The key to this innovation is represented by new algorithms and electronic components that makes possible the self-assembly of 3D printed robots. While the Terminator won’t be coming anytime soon off a baking sheet while wearing a “He is Risen” apron, this is an important step in the evolution of robotics.

Daniela Rus, professor of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science at MIT, pointed out that “We have this big dream of the hardware compiler, where you can specify, ‘I want a robot that will play with my cat,’ or ‘I want a robot that will clean the floor,’ and from this high-level specification, you actually generate a working device.”

The two papers that Rus wrote along with several other MIT researchers detail how self-folding plastics can be used for creating a computer-generated 3D shape, and how the electronic components have to be laid out so that the robot is functional after being exposed to uniform heat.

Everything needs to be calculated very accurately, and any mistake in the folding angles might result in the bakable robot not being functional.

Rus and her co-workers will unveil this innovative take on building robots at the IEEE International Conference on Robotics and Automation that will take place next week. As mentioned before, the type of robots that can be created using this method are not overly complex, but the current results are based on previous research conducted by Rus and other MIT scientists. There is no doubt that the current research will represent the basis for future developments and so on.

The following video exemplifies how some of the components used for making bakable robots work:

Personally, I don’t know which fact is more exciting: that we’ll have bakable robots in the not so distant future, or that Rus, a Romanian-born roboticist made it big by becoming Director of the Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory (CSAIL), Co-Director of the CSAIL Center for Robotics, and Director of the CSAIL Distributed Robotics Lab at MIT.

All in all, it’s great to see origami-resembling robots that come together in a way that was possible only in animation movies until now.

Be social! Follow Walyou on Facebook and Twitter, and read more related stories about the OutRunner RC running robot and the latest version of Honda’s ASIMO robot.

Oh, the places you’ll go… with this shoulder-mounted telepresence robot (video)

Image

In what's likely to be good news for mothers that just can't seem to cut the cord, a team of Japanese engineers from Yamagata University have crafted a tiny telepresence robot that mounts to your shoulder. Part of this year's IEEE International Conference on Robotics and Automation, the unsettling cyborg companion, dubbed MH-2 for miniature humanoid, is designed to act like a virtual chaperon or comrade, all depending on the person remotely piloting it. Using a combination of flexible joints, the wee avatar can somewhat mimic its users movements, even going so far as to simulate breathing. At the moment, the tech's not really ready for primetime, seeing as how the backpack required to power this creation contains about 22 servos -- not exactly the most portable of inventions. Still, as with all things cybernetic, this project will only evolve in time, growing more efficient, lightweight and effective at transporting your family and friends wherever you may roam, whether you like it or not. Skip past the break for some en vivo video action.

Continue reading Oh, the places you'll go... with this shoulder-mounted telepresence robot (video)

Oh, the places you'll go... with this shoulder-mounted telepresence robot (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 30 May 2012 01:25:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Gizmodo  |  sourceIEEE Spectrum  | Email this | Comments

Chiba University’s one-armed robot juggles balls, is not a Juggalo (video)

Image

Two balls, one hand? In this case, that's a definite yes, although the end result is much more appropriate for all ages. Furthering our slow creep towards engineering's Uncanny Valley, comes a cybernetic effort out of Japan's Chiba University that's made to mock our most precious clown-past time: juggling. The one-armed, three-fingered robot, shown off at the 2012 IEEE International Conference on Robotics and Automation, utilizes a high-speed camera to track a ball's flight at 500fps and help coordinate its repetitive movements with eerie precision. The current setup's not without hitches, though, considering the bot's fixed shoulder joint can only carry out successful catches on a 2D plane before, quite literally, dropping the ball. Refinements are apparently on the way to expand the cyborg limb's range of motion which, of course, will only serve to defeat us in the end. Robot apocalypse, we're looking at you.

Continue reading Chiba University's one-armed robot juggles balls, is not a Juggalo (video)

Chiba University's one-armed robot juggles balls, is not a Juggalo (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 17 May 2012 06:27:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceIEEE Spectrum  | Email this | Comments