Wednesday, February 25, 2009

Trippy

Tuesday, June 10, 2008

Who Invented The Robot?

Wednesday, April 23, 2008

I highly doubt crackheads would be doing that.




"There are children in our neighborhood that use that day care center," he says. "People are coming on private property, they're defecating, they're throwing crack needles, sometimes they're throwing crack rocks."

Robotic vigilante: Homemade 'Bum Bot' patrols in Atlanta

Labels: , ,

Wednesday, November 28, 2007

Tu n'est pas de robot.



'A dentistry student peers into the mouth of a new patient – a humanoid practice robot with a complete set of pearly white teeth.

Japan showed off its cutting-edge robots Wednesday at the country's largest robotics convention, a dazzling display of the technologies that make it a world leader in both service and industrial robotics.

The dental training robot, dubbed Simroid for "simulator humanoid," has realistic skin, eyes, and a mouth fitted with replica teeth that students practice drilling on. A sensor fitted where the nerve endings would be raises the alert when they drill too close – triggering a yelp from the robot.'

Robots dazzle at Japanese exhibit

Labels: , ,

Wednesday, November 07, 2007

Tu n'est pas de Robot!

Labels: , , ,

Monday, October 15, 2007

I-am-not-a-robot.

Labels: , ,

Monday, October 08, 2007

It's cool and all.....



but I'd hate to be in a hurry with this thing.

Nissan Pivo 2

Labels: , ,

Wednesday, October 03, 2007

Today In - 'People are freaks, yo.'



Roombas fill an emotional vacuum for owners

Some have named them, dressed them — even introduced them to parents

'ATLANTA - They give them nicknames, worry when they signal for help and sometimes even treat them like a trusted pet.

A new study shows how deeply some Roomba owners become attached to the robotic vacuum and suggests there's a measure of public readiness to accept robots in the house — even flawed ones.

"They're more willing to work with a robot that does have issues because they really, really like it," said Beki Grinter, an associate professor at Georgia Tech's College of Computing. "It sort of begins to address more concerns: If we can design things that are somewhat emotionally engaging, it doesn't have to be as reliable."

Grinter decided to study the devices after she saw online pictures of people dressing up their Roombas, the disc-shaped, self-directed vacuums made by Burlington, Mass-based iRobot Corp.

"This sort of notion that someone would dress a vacuum cleaner seemed strange," she said. "A lot more was going on."

She enlisted Ph.D. student Ja Young Sung, who studies "emotional design" — the theory that certain types of design can influence consumers to become emotionally attached.

The Roomba seems to have earned quite a following. More than 2 million of the robots have been sold, although some earlier versions suffered from motor failure and other problems after intensive use. The company says its latest model — the fifth generation — has been "reinvented" for improved performance.

The first phase of the project, which involved monitoring an online forum devoted to the site, revealed people who named their Roombas, traveled with them and one owner who introduced the machine to his parents.

Others reported their efforts to "Roomba-ize" their homes so the robot can roam the floors more easily. Some bought new rugs, pre-cleaned the floors to clear the robot's route and purchased new refrigerators with a higher clearance so the machines can clean under them easier.

"I was blown away," said Young Sung. "Some Roombas break a lot, they still have functional problems. But people are willing to make that effort because they love their robot enough."

The next part, which studied 30 committed Roomba users, revealed 21 of them gave their robots names. And another 16 talked about the robot as a "he," arbitrarily assigning the robot a gender.

The third phase of the study, presented last week at the Ubiquitous Computing Conference in Austria, focused on more traditional users. Polling 379 U.S. users, it found that some would pre-clean their homes before using the machine, and that it seemed to make males more excited about the chore of vacuuming.

"The female of the house says, 'You take care of it — it's your toy,'" said Young Sung.'

Labels: , , , ,

Friday, September 28, 2007

Rise, robots, rise!

Labels: , ,

Friday, August 10, 2007

Whua?



I keep getting hits from web searches on 'robot pick up lines'.

Are people trying to hit on robots?

Or is there some pimp robot out there with game?

Labels: , ,

Wednesday, August 08, 2007

Kraftwerk - 'The Robots'

Labels: , , ,

Tuesday, July 17, 2007

?



I keep getting hits from searches on 'robot pick-up lines'.

Who's trying to pick up robots?

Labels: ,

Friday, May 25, 2007

Robot Insurance



'They eat old people's medicine for fuel.'

Labels: , , ,

Tuesday, March 27, 2007

Look ma! A robot!

'Having been forced to abandon his grand plans for LeprechaunWorld and Wet N' Wild: Bahrain because of a tragic lack of imagination on the part of his host nations, Michael Jackson is seeking to set up shop in the only place where no vision is deemed too ambitious to be realized: Las Vegas.

Jackson is reportedly mulling both a Vegas show and the only kind of monument that can adequately celebrate his current levels of crazy: a 50-foot robot. With lasers!

50-Foot Jackson To Terrorize Las Vegas


Labels: ,

Thursday, March 22, 2007

Daft Punk, where are you?

'Technologic' [Check out the creepy robot-baby]


Labels: ,

Wednesday, February 28, 2007

Robots!

The Polecats - 'Make A Circuit With Me'

Labels:



Today.com