House-Sitting Robot Hits Store Shelves in Japan 140
Eh-Wire writes "Roborior, a house-sitting robot armed with a digital camera, infrared sensors, and a videophone is on sale in select Japanese department stores. The house-sitting robot can detect break-ins with its infrared sensors and then call the owners cell phone and stream video to the tiny screen. At $2600 each the Roborior is not cheap. For those that require something a little more substantial, Tmusk, the manufacturer of Roborior, has produced a four legged version called Banryu. This one is the size of a large dog and sells for around $18,000. It's not supposed to shed hair or sleep on the furniture which could make it quite popular."
is $2600 cheaper than.... (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:is $2600 cheaper than.... (Score:2)
Re:is $2600 cheaper than.... (Score:2)
Re:is $2600 cheaper than.... (Score:2)
Er. (Score:5, Funny)
On another note, the thing is portable. And bloody expensive. So just tack on another $2600 in value to whatever the robbers steal.
Re:Er. (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Er. (Score:1)
Anyway, the obvious answer is that you should have a chance to decide whether or not it's a false alarm. In Japan, you probably left your door unlocked and it's just your neighbor moving your laundry out of the rain.
Re: Er. (Score:2)
> Anyway, the obvious answer is that you should have a chance to decide whether or not it's a false alarm. In Japan, you probably left your door unlocked and it's just your neighbor moving your laundry out of the rain.
Or your furniture out of the den...
Life in Japan (Score:3, Informative)
Actually, I suppose it's closer to a deep thought to note that many Japanese are very security minded even though crime is so rare here. A few weeks ago the police were handing out flyers in the station to warn people about a "crime wave". Something like 30 burlaries in a month for a large district was rea
Re:Life in Japan (Score:2)
Re:Life in Japan (Score:1)
Re:Life in Japan (Score:2)
Re:Er. (Score:1)
Re:Er. (Score:3, Interesting)
In Seattle, the police will come if your alarm goes off and your alarm company cannot get ahold of you. If it is a false alarm, they fine you $100. Regardless, you have to pay $40/year to the city if you have an alarm system that calls the police.
Re:Er. (Score:1)
Re:Er. (Score:5, Funny)
Robber1: What the hell is it...
Robber0: I Dunno... But it looks expensive... Grab it!
Oh the Irony
Re:Er. (Score:1)
Re:Er. (Score:1)
Re:Er. (Score:3, Interesting)
I really don't see the market for this in the states, but maybe some strange social forces exist in Japan that make this worthwhile. They are in love with robots after all over there. Usually in my area if someone worries about someone breaking into their house over an extended period of time, they hire a house-sitter; a highschool or college student who gets some independen
Re:Er. (Score:2)
Can I recommend this robot, only $2600, in order to personally keep an eye on the house-sitter?
hell it might not cost ANYTHING (Score:2)
College student coming home for summer break, offer a free place to live (but they have to pay for food) in return for watching the place over the summer.
Lord knows I would have jumped at it; my parents gave me a 10 PM curfew when I came home after my first year of college. Yes, you read that right - 10 PM. Assholes.
No need to call the police first in Japan (Score:3, Interesting)
If it is determined that a crime is happening, then the police can be called. The crimes are recorded and the criminals can be captured. Eventually the robot makers will figure out that the recordings of the crimes should not be stored in the robot itself since the criminals will be destroying
Great! (Score:5, Funny)
> The house-sitting robot can detect break-ins with it's infrared sensors and then call the owners cell phone and stream video to the tiny screen.
Now you can watch your treasures being cleaned out as it happens, rather than having to wait and rewind the security camera tapes when you get home.
Re:Great! (Score:2, Funny)
19 Lay not up for yourselves treasures upon earth, where moth and rust doth corrupt, and where thieves break through and steal:
20 But lay up for yourselves treasures in heaven, where neither moth nor rust doth corrupt, and where thieves do not break through nor steal:
21 For where your treasure is, there will your heart be also.
Re:Great! (Score:2)
Lines used for centuries by corrupt priests to dupe gullible people out of their family fortunes.
Re:Great! (Score:2)
Yes, even this robot can be used for evil! Just think about the evilness of placing one of these in a girls' locker room, and then waiting unti... no wait, that's not evil, just a good opportunity.
Re:Great! (Score:2)
I would much prefer that to waiting until the police had reviewed hours of security tapes, especially if the only things the thieves left were my toothbrush and my camera.
Heh (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Heh (Score:3)
Brinks won't call the police first. If so, they'd be shutdown by the city due to fines for excessive false alarms. Brinks sends a car to your house with a non-police security officer. If that officer decides that the police are needed, then Brinks calls the police.
There are penalties for presenting non-emergency situations as emergencies to the police. Usually the police are lenient in enforcing these, but if you have a company creating hundreds to thousands o
Re:Heh (Score:2)
We made the mistake of going with a low bid for the security system at my small business. The alarm went off several times in the middle of the night for various reasons as they worked the bugs out of the system. Each time, the alarm company cal
Re:Heh (Score:2)
Re:Heh (Score:2)
Brinks won't call the police first.
Correct, that's why he originally said this, "a person calls me and they are ready to call the police."
And yes, fire companies don't have a problem with automated systems, because 1.) unless the system is malfunctioning, there's usually something that set off the system, which has a good chance of being something that at least one fireperson should respond to, but even if that's not the case: 2.) they'll generally charge you a fee (I've seen between $200-300) for comin
had to do it.. (Score:1, Funny)
Camera robots? Bah (Score:2, Funny)
I take it you haven't seen... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Camera robots? Bah (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Camera robots? Bah (Score:1)
Re:Camera robots? Bah (Score:1)
Re:Camera robots? Bah (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Camera robots? Bah (Score:5, Funny)
1) Install security cameras and hook them up to an image analysis system and your TV set.
2) When the software detects an intruder, turn on the TV set with an IR blaster and bring up a picture of the room and the intruder.
3) Overlay two circles with cross-hairs and flash the text "MISSILE DEFENCE SYSTEM - ACQUIRING LOCK". Move the cross-hairs around like they do in the movies.
4) Eventually bring the cross-hairs together over the intruder, make a nice loud chime sound and flash "LOCK ACQUIRED - FIRE WHEN READY" in big letters.
5) If the crims are still in the house at this point they deserve to have your stuff.
Re:Camera robots? Bah (Score:2)
Re:Camera robots? Bah (Score:1)
Then he'll gaze into our collective human-sheep eyes with a calculatedly innocent robo-expression and say, "Now what about those orbiting brain lasers?"
We're doomed [seanbaby.com].
My grandma's house (Score:2)
And best of all... the thieves can't STEAL IT. (like they could with the robot)
The robot's COOL and all but... I don't see the point.
Re:My grandma's house (Score:2)
Re:My grandma's house (Score:2)
Re:My grandma's house (Score:2)
Maybe.
GTRacer
- My wife graduated from PAK CHOOIE UNF
Re:My grandma's house (Score:2)
"Sokath, his eyes open"
Video Link (Score:1)
Pretty interesting, but for some reason I couldnt watch this without constantly being reminded about the superiority of mobile phones and service in pretty much every developed country other than the US.
Humanoid robots in manga (Score:3, Interesting)
Someone else mentioned putting cameras in every room, and the reality is that's already trivial. You can even use free software to detect image changes that might be burglars and send those images to a safe remote location.
Re:Humanoid robots in manga (Score:1)
At that price it would be the most... (Score:2, Interesting)
The bot should be targeted at those who can't afford this kind of system, which would mean it should NOT be the most valuable thing in the house. With that kind of price tag however, anyone who breaks in will most certainly steal the bot first. I know I would If I decided to rob a place which employed one.
Re:Only if the criminal is stupid... (Score:2)
I would disagree. Unless the criminal is stupid...
Well since the bot has cell phone technology, as soon as you turn it on they can track you through the EMS service. That and there are third party technologies than can track your location based of the speed of your relay signal to one cell tower compared to another even though its a slight difference of a few milliseconds. (that's triangulating for you)
If you w
That thing would attract me to break in... (Score:2)
I would steal the robot (Score:3, Funny)
Or, I could start a new fad by mailing the owners pictures of the robot vacationing in other countries.
Wait, it could take it's own damned pictures!
Does it clean too? (Score:2, Funny)
For the American market... (Score:1, Funny)
Re:For the American market... (Score:1)
Robots everywhere (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Robots everywhere (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Robots everywhere (Score:1)
The most robotic thing we seem to make are vintage juke boxes.
Re:Robots everywhere (Score:1)
Re:Robots everywhere (Score:2)
You say you want a McRevolution... (Score:2)
What sort of fucked-up economics does it take for people to buy $2600 guard dog robots, yet I'm still shouting my fucking lunch order to a person whose sole job it is to type it into a cash register?
In demo mode at the mall... (Score:2, Funny)
Haiku (Score:3, Funny)
No gun or sharp knives to kill?
Expensive door stop
robot dog? (Score:1)
Roborior? (Score:2, Insightful)
Robuard sounds much better!
Robe Warrior? (Score:2)
Yeah, this title just kept making me think of this guy [snk-universe.com]...
Those weird Japanese... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Those weird Japanese... (Score:2)
Re:Those weird Japanese... (Score:2)
While I am aware of why many economists think saving money is a bad thing, I still find such a mindset somewhat disgusting. It used to be considered a virtue to "save for a rainy day," and now in the US, saving is practically considered a sin to the point where most people are expected, if not required, to be in debt. After all, you only need the Protestant work ethic if you have bills to pay...
Re:Those weird Japanese... (Score:2)
FYI, 1 out of every 2 robots is in Japan, so a trickle down from industry to the home seems reasonable.
Also, Japanese are obsessed with electronic gadgets. I had a Japanese friend who came to visit and he and his girlfriend had these electronic pedometers that were kind of like pets to them. I never knew the why camera phones existed until I saw a TV clip of Avril Lavine in Japan and all you could see were phones in
The Japanese are miles ahead of the US (Score:1)
We need to try to be more like them.
awesom-o (Score:1)
Banryu web site with images (Score:2)
http://www.banryu.jp/index_e.html [banryu.jp]
Images:
http://www.banryu.jp/press/index_e.html [banryu.jp]
I don't need one... (Score:1)
Re:I don't need one... (Score:2)
Perhaps a robot can become that friend. Imagine sitting at school all alone, and your robot calls you up just to chat (about someone breaking into your hoe). Life could suddenly become more fullfilling.
You could even get one of those Roombas to keep your sercurity robot company. I bet the three of you could have some great times!
It's all fun and games till the robots turn evil. (Score:2)
To serve mankind, indeed.
New Scientist... (Score:3, Informative)
http://www.newscientist.com/article.ns?id=dn3061 [newscientist.com]
Robots? Pfff (Score:2, Funny)
Now that would be awesome!
Mutated, ill tempered sea bass would do if we can't get the sharks though.
Cool! (Score:1)
But does it run Linux?? (Score:1)
Only then would it be worth spending the $2600 to secure my home.
ATTENTION EDITORS (Score:1, Troll)
Your job, for which you get paid is to edit submissions. This means, just as it does in any other journal, that you are not obliged to accept the submission of a reporter in its raw form. Please learn, understand and enforce the difference between possessive "its" and the contraction "it's".
That is all. You may now return to searching for goat porn or whatever it is that you actually do all day.
Re:ATTENTION EDITORS (Score:2)
I mean, most people don't even use the word "please", and certainly don't provide rationalization based on logical premises which are founded in fact.
It's a flaw in slashcode that there's not a appropriate forum for "meta-issues", meaning that the only method of talking about articles is to clutter up the commentary with thousands of requests for spellchecking, proper grammar, duplicate filtering, and everything else that has nothing to do with
Re:ATTENTION EDITORS (Score:1)
Prime Minister (Score:1)
Re: (Score:1)
Hmm... (Score:1)
I'll be impressed... (Score:1)
Call me back when it can also... (Score:2)
until then, it's just a glorified burglar alarm...
link to "the dog" (Score:1)
Break in scenario (Score:3, Funny)
Burglar: drops gun.
Robot: 17... 16... 15...
credit where it's due (Score:2)
what about pets? (Score:1)
Doesn't shed or sleep on the sofa but (Score:3, Funny)
my guard-robot is named "Gort" (Score:2)
Great for those obnoxiuos dog-walkers always poo-ing on my lawn.
"Come into my house and meet Gort".
"Hey Gort, why are you lifting your visor? This is a friend."
"Gort, why are turing your head at me?"
"Close it!" "Turn off that lase beam!" "Klatu barada nictu!"
(muffled screams, the smell of burnt flesh
Does it ... (Score:2)
(Considering the articles are next to each other, it had to be asked!)
... I sense a convergence of technologies ... (Score:2)
So, what you'd get is a female android robot with sensitive skin and a comfy lap to rest your head on, that can sense intruders and fires when you're away, put out the fires and shoot the intruders (maybe with pepperballs?),
Does it Bark and Bite? (Score:2)
If it is controlled by Windows, I would not enter my own house without making sure the "dog" had not turned into a wild trojan horse.
Popular because it doesn't shed hair? (Score:2)
He not only requires less maintenance, but is also a lot smarter than any robot, has emotions, is nicer to pat, can go places that a robot dog never will (let's see a robot dog run up a steep hill, go for a swim or chase a rabbit through thick scrub) and does a lot better job keeping b