Smart robots gear up to invade your routine

epa05406547 (18/21) Tourists react as they see Tomomi Ota (R) pushing a cart loaded with her humanoid robot Pepper in Tokyo, Japan, 26 June 2016. Reaching 120cm in height and 28 kilograms in weight, Pepper does not enter in the category of ?portable? robot. But those characteristics don?t stop Tomomi Ota to take Pepper in a cart to stroll in her neighborhood, go shopping or even take the subway. In June 2014, when Pepper was presented for the first time by Japanese telecommunications and Internet corporation Softbank at a press event, Tomomi looked at the presentation via a live broadcast on Ustream. While some people were ?scared? or reluctant by the new humanoid robot, curiosity pushed her to apply to lottery sales for the first lot of 200 Pepper. She was lucky enough to acquire then a ?Developer?s Pepper?, the first models of the robots which need to be programmed by the users. Pepper entered Tomomi?s home in November 2014 and was soon adopted by her parents to become a member of the family. Having degrees in media design and music, Tomomi had to learn programming and her efforts deepened her bonds with her new friend. Capable of reading human emotions and to adapt to his interlocutor, the robot created by Aldebaran Robotics and SoftBank Robotics is now used as customer service in stores and 1000 units are sold out in minutes after being on sale every month. Pepper is making his way to Japanese homes but few can enjoy so much outdoor like Tomomi?s one. Asked if she isn?t worried about damaging her robot friend during her activities, the 30-year-old said that she is taking extra care as she couldn?t imagine being separated two months from Pepper, the average time needed for a repair.  EPA/FRANCK ROBICHON PLEASE REFER TO THE ADVISORY NOTICE (epa05406529) FOR FULL PACKAGE TEXT

 

Jean-Claude Elias / TNS

Once again robots are making the headlines. Whether it is Amazon’s robotic arms sorting out the stock of goods, packing
the clients orders and dispatching them, or Google’s self-driving car, robots are on us, and for good.
Beyond the extraordinary prototypes that always manage to impress the crowd like Honda’s celebrated Asimo, robots working hard in manufacturing facilities have been around for several decades now. Still, Asimo that was first introduced by the Japanese carmaker in 2000 and that keeps being improved, becoming more intelligent, perhaps is the most human looking machine. Besides, Honda calls him humanoid.
A few years ago I visited a fully robotised computer factory in northern Italy. It was run by Olivetti and had an output of one computer every 10 seconds. Robots were practically doing all the work there. There were a total of just five human beings in the huge super-high-tech factory. Their job was only to monitor the robots and to report any eventual malfunction so that a maintenance team would come and fix the robots.
There was a time when robots were purely a matter of science fiction. It is not the case anymore, even if their external physical shape today does not always exactly correspond to what people had in mind in the 20th century or what is usually shown in sci-fi movies like I, Robot (2004, Will Smith) and the like. In most cases they are robotic arms or robotic machine tools.
Apart from those found today in manufacturing, there is little doubt that we’re closer than ever to the real intelligent, “friendly” robot, the companion that would be affordable, that would help us with all the menial tasks at home (house cleaning, ironing, taking out the garbage, etc…). There is also little doubt that this is becoming possible thanks to the progress in computer technology. After all faster, more powerful, more dependable and cheaper computers constitute the backbone of robots, of their future.
The other elements are purely on the mathematical side of artificial intelligence and advanced programming techniques and languages, two critical aspects that still require some work before we can all get a robot like Asimo at home or in our office. Incidentally, the latter has its own website — http://asimo.honda.com.
Beside Honda’s flagship robot there are a few humanoid models on the market and can actually be bought. Whereas Asimo is the undisputed reference and leader, its $2,500,000 price tag makes it beyond reach. The other models are much less expensive but also are significantly more limited in functionality and much smaller in size (Asimo is 130cm tall and weighs 48kg), and therefore should be looked at as high-tech advanced toys. To name only a few: Hovis, by Korean DingBu Robot is $2,000. Robotis OP, by American Virginia Tech’s Robotics and Mechanisms Laboratory, is $10,000. Darwin Mini, by Robotis Mini, is a mere $500. Nao Evolution, by French company Aldebaran Robotics, is $8,000. Pepper, by Aldebaran and Japanese SoftBank, is $2,000.
Curiously what was very much intriguing to me when I was a teenager and started reading about robots was not the ability of the machines to perform this or that task, nor their shape, but the etymology of their very name. Still, learning that it comes from the Czech “robota” and means forced labour did not bring me any valuable scientific information, except that the meaning made perfect sense to me.
The very first programmable, digital machine referred to as robot was used by General Motors back in the early 1960s at one of its automotive manufacturing plants in the USA. Then countless sci-fi movies took it from there and robots, regardless of appearance or ability, became part of our collective unconscious. Soon, very soon, they will be in our homes, as surely as drones are seen and used almost everywhere today and smartphones have invaded us already.

epa05397732 A robot plays soccer at the 20th RoboCup in a hall on the fair grounds in Leipzig, Germany, 29 June 2016. The RoboCup, a competition between intelligent robots, takes place from 30 June until 4 July. 3,500 participants from 45 countries and regions will compete against each other in 17 disciplines.  EPA/SEBASTIAN WILLNOW

epa05222496 A young visitor examines a robot during the Central European finals of the First Lego League international programming contest at the Kolcsey Centre of Debrecen, 226 kms east of Budapest, Hungary, 20 March 2016. The best high school teams from Austria, Germany, Switzerland, The Czech Republic, Romania, Slovakia and Hungary have to build an automatic robot in order to complete a given mission on a plotting board.  EPA/ZSOLT CZEGLEDI HUNGARY OUT

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