REEM-B, New Humanoid Robot Announced 72
Davide writes "There is a quite an interesting human size robot that comes from UAE, REEM-A.
It has some interesting skills as dynamic walking (of course), object recognition, voice recognition, self localization and mapping, long battery life and face recognition. Recently, the development team announced that the second prototype, REEM-B, will be presented in February 2008. The second prototype has many improvements: a fingered hand with 12 motors, the ability to go up and down stairs, additional force sensors on the arms, ultrasonic range finders to avoid obstacles and a completely new look." Or, if you prefer something a bit cheaper, you could go with the $30 DIY Android.
"Skills" (Score:5, Funny)
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ED 209: "You have four seconds to comply."
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Hmm...I'm thinking if this is from the UAE...then it might not give you that much warning. A robotic 'suicide bomber'....the perfect tool for jihad, eh?
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Nope. Suicidal followers are much cheaper.
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But if you put Sony batteries in your suicide robot, you get twice the explosive damage*!
* when compared to leading brands of conventional suicidal followers.
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This might change back again here once 'gender' applies to robots.
CC.
One might think an important 'skill' (Score:2)
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Doyouhavestairsinyourhouse (Score:2)
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Which is where they went wrong with the name. If they would have had just one more "E" in the name, it could have been an anagram for "beer me" which is pretty much the ultimate use for a robot!
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Huh? I thought that was the point of humanoid robotics.
Sure, you can build a warehouse design for wheeled robots, but when you need to send in a 5 million dollar kill bot to flush out insurgents, you don't want that machine to look at the stairs and throw its mechanical arms into the air saying "No got legs!" and then call in an airstrike to level the house.
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*runs*
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Now strap a Minigun on this sucker and send him to Iraq!
REEM-A promotional image (Score:2)
Cylon Mark I Voice
Khaaaaan!!!!! [pal-robotics.com]
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Isn't it spelled ream though?
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Mod Thread Up. (Score:2)
- BSG Cylon Reference (does it come in chrome?)
- Futurama's Bender Reference
- Obligatory "REEM-A" Anal sex joke
I came in here for all of the above, but I didn't expect them all in one thread.
No access (Score:1)
In Other News... (Score:1)
Dr. Jason Bandis referred to the discovery as an "important step" in the search for intelligent alien species, though other members of the scientific community, including University of Michigan's Professor Jonathan Kemp, are not as enthusiastic: "What we're seeing here is a first-of-its-kind discovery, yes. But we need to stay focused on the task at hand. If REBA is representative of what's out there, we might as well stop looking."
NY Times - Alien [imdb.com]
Obligatory... (Score:2)
Nineteen more versions. . . (Score:1)
That's an abbreviated name. (Score:2)
Hi I'm Troy McClure (Score:1)
That robot looks like bender (Score:1)
Pick-up decoy? (Score:3, Funny)
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Name tag (Score:2)
REEM-D"
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Wile E Coyote trying to seduce Bug's female coyote robot decoy while it's buzzing away and smoking (from all the lit fuses)...
Good times...
Paging an Advertising Firm.... (Score:2)
I saw absolutely nothing new or exciting in that video, in fact all of the development shots at the end make it look *less* maneuverable than an Asimo. One version of the Asimo, btw, is capable of actual running, wherein both feet are momentarily
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Hi,
I agree with you that the video should be done by a real advertising firm. :)
About the 3 years of development, it is right, that is avery short time to design something as complex as a humanoid robot with so many features (other robots can JUST walk). Have you seen the videos of REEM-A [pal-robotics.com]? The first prototype was built in 1 YEAR !!!!
Still, it can walk, talk, recognize people, accept voice commands... and play chess
REEM-B = Voynix from Illium/Olympos (Score:1)
The noisy killer (Score:1)
Wow. (Score:2)
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http://www.lifeformz.com/weblog/uploaded_images/cylon-797954.jpg [lifeformz.com]
(Checked out the station in your sig. My EBM station playlist is getting stale, and you came along just in time - thanks!)
!Dynamic walking (Score:5, Insightful)
To be precise, a robot walks dynamically if its center of gravity extends beyond the boundaries of its support polygon [wikipedia.org] while walking. Take a look at the robot I work on [osu.edu] to see dynamic walking. The difference lies in what happens if all the joints suddenly locked up completely while walking. A robot that actually walks dynamically would almost certainly fall over. Asimo and this robot would not. This appears to be the static or quasi-static situation described in the second link.
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obligatory.....transformers quote (Score:1)
But WHY? (Score:4, Interesting)
Does a submarine swim like a fish?
The human form has many characteristics that are less than optimal, especially for particular tasks.
Building something to mimic something else is to build in shortcomings, as well as make the design and implementation harder than it needs to be.
In "The Making of 2001" (IIRC), Arthur Clarke discussed the optimal design for a living thing, with the consideration that aliens would optimize themselves through genetic (or equivalent) engineering. The result was conical, mobile and facile in any direction, sensory organs up top and all the way around, and several other considerations. An optimal general design is just that, living or not, and this would serve as a far bettrer design for a robot. Of course robots with specific purposes should be built for that.
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> already existing technology that is made for human beings. Generally, almost everything
> people come in contact with was made to fit together in some way with the human body.
> You can save a lot of time and money by making a robot that is "backward compatible".
In the short run, yes. In the long run, it'd be cheaper to design and build things that can handle human environments (stairs and keyboards are two
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What good is the ideal solution with an optimal design and the lowest long-term cost if you never have the luxury of achieving that because you disapprove of (and thus never implement) practical intermediate steps?
Of course, the answer invariably is something along the lines of "If we make those compromises now, we'll never go back and fix them later". So the question becomes "Would you rather fail entirely at the optimal solution, or be stuck forever with
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Bender, is that you? (Score:2)
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Next generation (Score:1)
Cool! A Minnie Driver/Anne Hathaway love scene. (Score:1)
Giggity!
REEM-B? (Score:2)