MIT Researchers Develop 'Real Steel' Robot With Human-Like Reflexes 38
MojoKid writes: MIT researchers have developed HERMES, an advanced robot that is capable of manipulating objects and environments in nearly the same way as humans do. But this isn't just a project design of a robot only mimicking the actions of its human controller; it can also learn and make precise movements that weren't possible with prior robots. The HERMES robot is controlled by a human operator who wears a remote controller exoskeleton. Movements carried out by the human operator are directly transferred to the humanoid robot with human-like reflexes and haptic feedback in return to the human. This means that HERMES can successfully perform actions such as picking up objects, delicately pouring coffee into a cup and even punching through walls should the need arise. HERMES was developed to help out in emergency situations that would otherwise be too dangerous for human responders.
no robot (Score:3, Informative)
"... controlled by a human operator who wears a remote controller exoskeleton. "
IOW it's a teleoperated waldo and not a robot.
I know I could read the article, but that would be cheating.
Re: (Score:2)
Yeah, it was pretty forgettable. Their mech-boxers were remote-operated though.
Re: (Score:3)
I thought it was very watchable. Not a movie great, but the CGI was very well implemented, the story was derivative but well constructed and it was a competent professional film.
Boxing is boring. Robot on Robot action I'd tune in for - shit, I watched Robot Wars, which was largely the same thing.
Re: (Score:2)
I immediately saw "HERPES" and therefore approved of the human's exoskeleton for avoiding that virus.
Indeed. I read the headline as "MIT researchers have developed HERPES" and my heart went out to them.
Get with the program! (Score:3)
IOW it's a teleoperated waldo and not a robot.
Haven't you heard?
Anything that can skitter across the table [makershed.com] is a robot.
Anything with eyes and moveable facial parts [mit.edu] is a robot.
Any machine that looks like an arm [wikipedia.org] is a robot.
A robot is anything that looks remotely like it's alive, or a piece of something alive.
Get with the program!
Yes robot (Score:2)
First of all, "teleoperated waldo" is redundant.
Second of all, that's still a type of robot.
How do you define a "robot"? (Score:2)
When I do robot classes and workshops, I define a "robot" as a device which:
1. Can perform different tasks.
2. Uses sensors to control its operation.
These points are pretty common for definitions. One additional requirement that I have seen is "more than three axis of movement".
From these requirements, I would say this is a robot.
It's a waldo, not a robot (Score:3)
FTA: âoeWeâ(TM)ve designed the robot to be stronger than a person so weâ(TM)d imagine that in the future we want to merge some level of autonomous control along with the humanâ(TM)s intelligence.â
We imagine. The summary has been pulled out of someone's ass. The article says nothing like what the summary does.
Specifically, a dupe from yesterday (Score:3)
Specifically, a dupe from yesterday.
http://hardware.slashdot.org/s... [slashdot.org]
Re: (Score:3)
Of course. The robotic exoskeleton mimics the movements of its human controller. Evidently with a latency of one day.
Slashdot. (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
"It's now the web version of "Memento""
But hopefully with a larger SSD.
Re: The Aliens Chick Already Did It 30 Years Ago! (Score:2)
Deja Vu (Score:3)
I think I have seen this somewhere before [slashdot.org]. Editors, lol.
Re: (Score:3)
Wait...that sounds familiar... (Score:2)
...delicately pouring coffee into a cup and even punching through walls should the need arise
So MIT has developed a robotic IT mid-level manager. Companies will love this; they should save on the salaries of those high-priced MBAs
Bet It Can't Limbo (Score:2)
Isn't this (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3)
Human-like, or just human? (Score:2)
If there's a human controlling it, doesn't it just have human reflexes? In fact, isn't just the human who's got any reflexes at all?
In fact... isn't this not a robot?
Careful with that haptic feedback!! (Score:2)