Coming Soon — Cyborg Farmers 172
palegray.net writes Robots.net covers an article about robotic exoskeletons for Japanese farmers. These exoskeletons would provide increased strength and support for manual labor intensive tasks. More information can also be found at robots-dreams.com. 'The robotic suit relies on ultrasonic motors along with various sensors and wireless networking gear. [...] The mass-produced version of the suit is expected to weigh in at 8 kilograms and cost about 200,000 yen.'"
Where is mine (Score:2)
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And in other currencies... (Score:3, Informative)
950 UK Pounds
1250 Euros
44850 Rubles
72300 Rupees
13400 Yuan
20150 Mexican Pesos
HAL.
Wait a second. (Score:5, Funny)
WTF are "Ultrasonic Motors?" (Score:2, Funny)
Re:WTF are "Ultrasonic Motors?" (Score:5, Informative)
Oh my! (Score:2)
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A decent explaination about how these things work.
http://www.tky.3web.ne.jp/~usrmotor/English/html/principlesandStructure.html [3web.ne.jp]
NASA JPL image of a robot arm assembly using a ultrasonic rotor (should help with visualizing what TFA is about)
http://www-robotics.jpl.nasa.gov/tasks/taskImage.cfm?TaskID=140&tdaID=800006&Image=319 [nasa.gov]
NASA JPL article with a good illustration of the "travelling w
Re:WTF are "Ultrasonic Motors?" (Score:4, Funny)
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Without reading the article, I would guess that what they meant was "harmonic drive [wikipedia.org]" transmissions.. that's the only relation to something that sounds like "sonic" that I can think of.
Harmonic drives can provide incredible output torque and extreme precision (i.e. no backlash).
Aikon-
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They have been in use for years in professional-grade (and now even consumer-grade) autofocus camera lenses.
See the Canon USM lenses and the Nikon Silent Wave (S) series lenses.
And they'll be sold by Jawas... (Score:2)
Nifty advances (Score:3, Informative)
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¥200,000 = $1834.55 (Score:3, Insightful)
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Re:¥200,000 = $1834.55 (Score:5, Funny)
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I fond it hard to believe that an exoskeleton would cost as much as a car. The Indians are putting a CAR out for about that price.
I want one like in The Matrix. Those exoskeletons would cost a bit more than $2k I think!
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Batteries Not Included.
Click here to add a Mr Fusion [gizmodo.com] to your order.
Re:¥200,000 = $1834.55 (Score:5, Informative)
the software behind it isn't anything radical, and since then motors don't apply force, just resistance, most of the work is done with very little power. (power is needed to turn on and off the motor, but not to actually move limbs, so it;s kind of like assisted breaking, or power steering, but for the body.)
It's a lot more simple than people think to make it out. Many of the componenets are slight upgrades to common hobby gear... the sensors are where the real magic is, allowing the suit to move fluidly with the wearer and sense when to support and when to assist. Other than that, it's not more than a fancy mechanical brace. $2000 USD is completely beievable.
Also, misprint in the article states 8KG. It's 18KG (about 40 lbs).
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Coming soon: The OEPC project...?
how long before.... (Score:2)
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There's way too much Anthropomorphism [wikipedia.org] in robotics IMO, especially Japanese robotics.
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Actually, the grandparent is correct in using the word training. If you have a self learning algorithm, you program it into a computer. After that is done you train it for a specific task by feeding it data.
Programming is also often used when talking about living organisms. Specifically when dealing with brainwashing and conditioned responses. The main difference in meaning seems to be that training is used when the result is more fluid, while programming is more strict and focused. When they can be i
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48 years early (Score:2)
Get away from her... (Score:3, Funny)
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Wow, bad misread. (Score:2)
I read it: "The mass-produced version of the weapon is expected"
Scary.
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Would be fun to have a fight in those things, too, I think. Just one blow that's not blocked properly and you're dead meat, ready for consumption.
I hope... (Score:5, Funny)
I, for one, welcome our cybernetic illegal immigrant overlords.
um... I mean... I, para uno, dan la bienvenida a nuestros overlords inmigrantes ilegales cibernéticos.
(thanks babelfish)
Comment removed (Score:5, Funny)
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(thanks, babelfish)
Robot *what*? (Score:3, Funny)
Don't I seem to recall something else Japanese farmers are famous for?
Oh, that's right. Ninjas.
Nothing but awesome can come from this.
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There is only one possible response to this development. Genetically engineered monkey-pirates. If that's not enough they've always got zombie-monkey-pirates in reserve.
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LeChuck, is that you?
8kg? Might be a misprint (Score:2)
8kg is ridulously light for an exoskeleton that can increase the strength of its wearer significantly. The power source alone would have to be much heavier (its designed to work outdoors, so no wired power). For comparison, the Apollo space suits weighed about 80kg.
Or it could be an indication this is BS...
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Your sig: oh, the irony! (Score:2)
If we can put a man on the moon, why can't we shoot people for Apollo-related non-sequiturs?
Don't shoot yourself, suicide is still illegal.
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Bonus: it can even be used to ward off alien invaders from another dimension, or smash crates.
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My guess is that they're estimating based on a carbon-composite frame (cheap and light), soon-to-be-developed lightweight motors and no batteries. Manufacturers do this crap all the time, especially in the auto industry. It seems that MPG estimates always move after those darn EPA regulations are taken into consideration.
As far as the batteries go, you could have an autonomou
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HAL (Score:2)
Rice-planters Better Than Rice Lifters (Score:3, Insightful)
Robots aren't strong (Score:3)
ER/EI (Score:2, Interesting)
Given the average farm hand needs 2000 calories to maintain homeostasis and at least that much for accoutrement (clothing, etc.), the machine has to run on less than 4000 calories a day of energy, including its energy investment as an object.
I'm not saying one way or the other, but the analysis needs to be made before we can welcome
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So, how much energy does a cyber farm hand embody in its mining, construction, operation and maintenance, as opposed to a human and how many calories of food can it generate?
Well, this can't be too hard. Rather than calories, let's use something that we already do universal conversions between (time, calories, effort, etc.). We'll call it money. Apparently, $2000 is enough to cover the cost of extracting, refining, and forming the exoskeleton, setting up the framework for powering it, building the sensors that help control it, and designing the software to help control it. This assumes that number isn't subsidised one way or another. (In other words, no one really needs to
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Example: let's say you have a car that gets 30 mpg. You are out in the desert and have 1 gallon of gas. The next gas station is 100 miles away. All The Money In The World isn't going to buy you a gallon of gas when you run out. You're going to have to push the car. If you push it 3 miles a day, you might get there in a month. So, now you know the Energy Value of one gallon of gas: one month of hard labour pushing a car 100 miles.
Another example: carting
Sounds familiar (Score:5, Funny)
A sad testiment to Japan's birth rate. (Score:2, Insightful)
It's all well and good for the current generation but who'll tend the fields when the Cyborg's dead and buried?
Just great! (Score:2)
Of course over the next couple of hundred years we will evolve into nothing more than a brain and some nerve endings that will activate the exo-skeleton's. Wonder when they will start making them look like Daleks. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dalek [wikipedia.org]
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Everyone knows Daleks have this ridiculous useless sink plunger on the front. Dalek rayguns only point forward so you're safe if you keep behind them because they can't turn fast. And above all, Daleks can't climb the stairs.
Yeah. [mininova.org] Everyone knows that.
(Some of them _prefer_ not to climb the stairs, find
Better Check My Policy. (Score:3, Funny)
much needed (Score:3, Interesting)
The reason for this stupidity according to my friend: Japan (as admittedly a lot of countries do) has protectionist policies in place forcing rice and other crops to have to be produced in Japan. The cost of japanese rice versus the average is 7 times, but they have to produce it. Apparently it is cheaper to ruin the backs of people in a first world country then to risk not having control of your food supply - because you buy it from the close third world countries - in the advent of a war. Admittedly if I was like Japan and had crazies for neighbours (North Korea/China, government not the people) whom I recently pissed off by invading I might be worried about war preparedness as well.
Ob quote (Score:2)
One major hurdle (Score:2)
Labor Macros (Score:2)
Harvest Moon (Score:2)
Aging farmers (Score:2)
Of course the real robotic farmer that can plant rice by himself? I dunno, the Emperor does that himself you know, can the robot really plant delicious rice? Rice has a spiritual place in Japanese religion too.
But my guess is this would be an excellent way to really test robots in the field especially when you ar
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Dunno about that (Score:2)
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Re:BS (Score:5, Informative)
What country do you think Japan is in?
This is not China or India. They do not have "cheap child labour". This is the country with the highest per-capita wages in the world. This is where labour is at its most expensive. This is also the country where children go to school 10 hours a day, 6 or 7 days a week, from the age when they can hold a pencil until they go to university. There's no child labour at all, let alone cheap.
Re:Japan's not the highest GDP per capita (Score:2)
Japan's GINI index is 38.1
GINI is a measure of inequality of income distribution or inequality of wealth distribution. The lower, the more equally GDP is distributed.
In Japan 127,433,494 people are packed in 374,744 sq km. Compare that to the US, in which 301,139,947 people are spread over 9,161,923 sq km.
Housing in Japan costs 3-5 times more than it costs in US. Japanese compensate by living in tiny apartments.
US's GDP per capita is GDP $43,800 (2006 est.)
US's
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*gets a recursive atlas*
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I'd rather you kill yourself than someone else.
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A $2000 one-time capital investment is not very much. It wouldn't take long even for 'cheap' labor to eat up that much in wages. Also I bet that Japan is like the USA and there are regulations, paperwork, insurance, and various other hidden costs when it comes to hiring workers. 'Cheap' labor is never cheap in 1st world countries unless you cheat and pay undocumented workers under the table. Also, FYI, the Japanese version of the IRS is famous for being
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Two thousand dollars would get you about one month's wages for cheap labour in England. Maybe six weeks. You'd have to hire illegals to get much cheaper. Japan's even more expensive than that.
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Moisture Vaporators? (Score:2)
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Oh yeah - resistance is futile. You will be assimilated.
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Re:Tractors (Score:4, Informative)
In America they grow mostly maize and wheat, which can be easily automated by dragging heavy machinery across the top of the soil. In Japan they grow mostly fruit and vegetables, which have to be carefully picked from the plants. Tractors are just not that useful to them, which is why they don't really use them. Harvesting is mostly done by hand because the land of genius automation has not been able to find a way to automate it - until now (maybe).
Here's a hint at the problems they have to deal with: the Japanese radish (one of their staple vegetables) is a foot long and about three inches wide. It takes a lot of careful pulling to get something that size out of the ground without damaging it.
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Tell that to the Japanese. They have this ultranerd complex that makes them want robots where robots aren't needed. The Sirius Cybernetics Corporation [wikipedia.org] is surely a Japanese company. "the Sirius Cybernetics Corporation defines a robot as 'your plastic pal who's fun to be with'."
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Re:Tractors (Score:4, Insightful)
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In an indirect fashion, this exoskeleton does have "muscles" and is indirectly tied into the wearers CNS.