Pogo-Style Robot Legs Allow 9-Foot Bounces 42
destinyland writes "A new pogo stick jumps nine feet using legs developed for running robots. (It replaces the stick's spring with a fiber-reinforced 'bow' that was developed at Carnegie Mellon's Robotics institute.) One scientist even suggests robots could use its 'BowGo' technology in the low-gravity environment of the moon. 'Hopping many meters above ground level, the robot would have an excellent view of the terrain.'"
Make A Great Xmas Gift (Score:3, Funny)
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The neighbours kids make great fertilizer for the lawn. you just need to pulverize the bones sufficiently. The way that a fall from a great enough height would do.
I need to order 4 sets and about 3 sq.m of new turf.
"Damned kids, get into my lawn!"
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I, for one, welcome our new moshing-pogo-robot overlords.
How would a robot do this? (Score:2)
Since this is powered by your GPE, the robots will have to be pretty heavy to start but where would the downward force come from?
Would the central shaft be hydraulic to provide the initial compression?
How does a robot become a dead weight?
Give this a 1080 camera like the high speed hand [hizook.com] and you could have a robot that knows exactly where to go, which direction to shift its weight.
We could have high speed robot sports. I have something called straight spine so is likely to be painful for me. Trampolines do t
On the moon (Score:1)
Spoilers (Score:1)
Fiberglass (Score:3, Funny)
TFA says it's basically a fiberglass bow.
Over time, fiberglass will crack and weaken (severely accelerated by moisture).
Some kid will be coming down from his 9 foot jump, the bow will fail, and he'll break his legs.
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Doctors?
So you're suggesting that doctors like it when people get injured?
Welcome to cynicism, terminal stage. It won't be long now till you're finished.
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Relax you guys (Score:2)
The summary makes clear only that the pogo stick jumps nine feet. It says nothing about the rider.
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Whereas the ARTICLE clearly states they expect extreme pogo athletes to go 9 or 9.5 feet on the thing.
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Just think: when it does break like this, it might go off like a bomb and spray fragments all over the place. How many toys can you buy that provide for friendly fire mass casualties?
Yeah, I think that needs to go in the sales pitch. "Bowgo: so awesome it kills your friends!"
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9 feet is only 2.74 metres. Hardly 'many'.
On my reading of the article they've only attained a height of 42 inches so far--the 9 or 9 1/2 feet is speculation. /.: news that's wrong, stuff that's false.
beaten by other CMU tech unveiled this week (Score:2)
A 9-foot vertical won't be enough to clear the university's new 40-foot [wpxi.com] artificial geyser [cmu.edu].
Good job... (Score:2)
We've invented a mechanical flea!
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Slashvertisement? (Score:3, Insightful)
80% of the article seem to be centering around promoting some event called pogopalooza6. I would have been curious to see more videos about the BowGo and its scientific possibilities. All I got was 5 minute promotional video with traditional pogo-sticks and 10 seconds of someone bouncing on the BowGo.
This is bizarre. I feel confused.
Bad Title (Score:2)
Clearing a 9-foot bar with your whole body (and presumably landing on your back on a mat or something) != != != != != a pogo stick bouncing 9 feet. The signal to noise ratio on Slashdot is becoming increasingly bad in my opinion. Thi