Evolving the Wireless Robot 118
An anonymous reader writes "This article is one of the first to discuss wireless robotics from an integrated approach. It explains the ins and outs of wireless robots: their components, their shortcomings, and how they can interact in a competitive or cooperative team within professional environments. Learn how smarter robots can relieve us of the most tedious -- and dangerous -- tasks."
Tedious Tasks (Score:5, Funny)
think a wireless robot... (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Think of a Beowulf Cluster of these things! (Score:1)
-uso.
The atricle gives a clue... (Score:2)
Pitfall 4: Security. Hackers can exploit a robot's vulnerabilities and turn it into a weapon or completely disable it. Solution: Install safeguards to counter these vulnerabilities.
Pitfall 6: Viruses. PCs that are wirelessly communicating with robots might contain viruses. Solution: Install anti-virus programs and present security awareness programs for programmers and users.
In general, I think the article isn't worth much, I mean, w
For all tasks (Score:5, Funny)
I tell you, if I had a wireless robot, I would never have to use my hand again. Hands. I meant plural. For typing.
Re:For all tasks (Score:2)
Re:For all tasks (Score:1)
I think its flattering for us, thanks!
Dangerous Tasks? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Dangerous Tasks? (Score:1)
ok, if they want my money here's how: (Score:5, Funny)
If they're under $100, I'll buy more than one. Under $50, I'll buy a lot. Under $10, I'll buy tons.
Ok time to stop dreaming.
Re:ok, if they want my money here's how: (Score:3, Funny)
I think I heard of a guy you should talk to... something about ocean-front property in arizona, or somesuch thing.
hey (Score:1)
Re:ok, if they want my money here's how: (Score:4, Interesting)
Sounds inevitable. Give it time.
tiny cars (Score:3, Insightful)
If someone had said five years ago they collected radio control cars that are the size of the Hot Wheels I used to push around in the dirt thirty years ago, I'd have thought they were nuts.
All good points However: (Score:1)
For example, once it was clear that a dot matrix color printer was "the thing". HP and others created a superior solution in a matter of years.
I would suggest that a printer is no more a complicated project than a useful robot such as irobots vacuum cleaner.
But it seems to me that robots are so task specific that it's difficult to create economies of scale - a computer on the other
Re:All good points However: (Score:2)
You wrote:
It will kill. So there goes Asimov's 3 laws of robotics.Been around for years (Score:5, Insightful)
Sure the first generation cruise missiles and guided missiles were dumb, pointed in a direction or steered by a wire but ever since Sidewinder they've gotten pretty danged smart.
DARPA and the DoD came very close to a roaming missile in the Tacit Rainbow program in the 1980s and theres been work on missiles which carrier smaller missiles.
I understand that this piece is focused on ground robots but alot of what the writer is talking about has already been done with missiles.
Air to Air and Surface to Air seem to be the most advanced when it comes to fuzzy logic and self-guidence in a variety of situations.
Re:Been around for years (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Been around for years (Score:1)
Re:Been around for years (Score:4, Informative)
Sure the first generation cruise missiles and guided missiles were dumb, pointed in a direction or steered by a wire
Um...one of the first cruise missles(the AGM-86) used radar-based terrain profile matching. It was neither "dumb", "pointed in a direction" or "steered by a wire". Think that last one through-how the hell do you guide a cruise missile(speeds 500+ mph, range, 1000's of miles) by WIRE?(answer: you don't. Some TORPEDOES have wire-guidance.) The system was incredibly accurate, and capable of flying VERY low and VERY fast, making the missile virtually impossible to stop.
The standard cruise missile was later upgraded to include inertial navigation and self-correcting features(missle could correct its flightpath mid-flight based on available data), and then GPS was added very recently. For the last 10 years or so, it's been the Tomahawk we all know and love, great for reining shit down on your enemy from thousands of miles away, even from underwater. Nah, that's not cowardly at all :-)
Re:Been around for years (Score:4, Informative)
Then we had things like Snark, Navaho and Regulus which had star trackers and spark-plug guidence systems but which were also dumb.
The AGM-86 series of GLCM. SLCM and ALCM were smarter, but they are not autonomous but they do have some logic built in when you get to the BGM 109 Tomahawk TASM.
The Tomahawk is about the third or fourth generation of cruise missile the US has produced.
The first Nazi anti-ship missiles were wire guided as are the TOW series of American missiles, the Sagger Russian missiles and the HOT European weapons.
Wire Guided Missiles (Score:3, Interesting)
BGM-71 / M-220 Tube-launched, Optically tracked, Wire-guided missile (TOW) was the standard US helicopter mounted anti-tank weapon from the early 1970s through the 1990s for the Marine Corps and through the mid to late 80s for the Army. It is still the standard truck or tank mounted ATGM for the Army and Marines. It carries 3700 meters of control wire for command input.
Euromissile
Security (Score:4, Funny)
Brilliant, I say.
Kallahar
Re:Security (Score:2)
Re:Security (Score:2)
I've always wondered why IT people don't just do this to stop hackers.
Fluff piece (Score:4, Insightful)
If American Cinema has tought me anything... (Score:3, Funny)
expectations (Score:3, Insightful)
User Expectations. The double-edged sword
Radio Shack (Score:1, Funny)
I have never read such crap in my life (Score:5, Insightful)
Since when is vibration a big problem? Printers, scanners and all sorts of other devices have vibrating motors and can still work accurately at over 1000dpi. They can also be damn quiet.
Uh!?? You have to be a moron to make a robot that can't handle underutilization. Come on! Is this article a spoof?
Use Ada? This isn't for real. Here's news for you: your OS was probably written in C and does it blow up all the time. Even XP is stable these days and it has millions of lines of C. What in heaven's name are you talking about?
You must be one of those overpaid consultants. We're under threat from terrorism. Hey! Easy! Just install safeguards doh!
Er? Is this a robotics problem? Sounds like a marketing problem to me.
See 4 above.
And a keyboard lets you type only at a certain speed. Solution: invent a faster input method. Wow! Can I get paid to write articles like this.
Batteries can run out? You don't say. And the way to deal with it is do design the robot so the battery lasts longer? Wow! Never thought of that one!
Now you're really making stuff up. I'm not even going to comment. I think a 5 year old wrote this
Re:I have never read such crap in my life (Score:1)
I thought it waas great! (Score:2)
Thanks Slashdot!!!
P.S. Does anyone read these submissions, or is it done by wireless robots?
I couldn't agree more (Score:1)
It had less depth than even a newspaper article on the subject might.
IT is crap.. however... (Score:1)
Re:I have never read such crap in my life (Score:2, Funny)
1) Yes, you can spot the obvious
2) Yes, you know better than him/her yet you're paid a lot less (?) or not paid at all.
3) Yes, you spent 5 minutes of your life realizing all of that, writing it down and giving in out for free to slashdot, which is proof prooved you're not slimy so you can't be a consultant (or not slimy enough, given today standard of BSitting)
Re:I have never read such crap in my life (Score:2)
(2) I'm paid a lot more than him/her, I'm pretty sure of that
, but I have to work for my money (3) Cut and paste, silly. I didn't actually type much myself.
rotation (Score:2)
And a keyboard lets you type only at a certain speed. Solution: invent a faster input method. Wow! Can I get paid to write articles like this.
Actually, this is a problem that should have been solved by now. Yes, ball mice can only do two axis - but "camera mice" today cost what.. 2
Re:rotation (Score:1)
camera mice (Score:2)
Re:I have never read such crap in my life (Score:1)
the most tedious -- and dangerous -- tasks (Score:5, Funny)
Ode to C (Score:1, Funny)
May your signals all trap
...
May your references be bounded
All memory aligned
Floats to ints rounded
Remember
Non-zero is true
++ adds one \
Arrays start with zero and,
NULL is for none
For octal, use zero
0x means hex
= will set
This tells me nothing (Score:4, Interesting)
The article could easily have been written by an undergrad just finishing an introductory course in artificial intelligence or robotics. I'm a bit dissapointed that it was posted on Slashdot at all.
If by undergrad you mean.... (Score:1)
Yes!
Robot Pitfalls (Score:3, Funny)
-Don
Article Text (Score:5, Funny)
Facts:
1. robots are mammals.
2. robots fight ALL the time.
3. The purpose of the robot is to flip out and kill people.
Testimonial:
robots can kill anyone they want! robots cut off heads ALL the time and don't even think twice about it. These guys are so crazy and awesome that they flip out ALL the time. I heard that there was this robot who was eating at a diner. And when some dude dropped a spoon the robot killed the whole town. My friend Mark said that he saw a robot totally uppercut some kid just because the kid opened a window.
And that's what I call REAL Ultimate Power!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
If you don't believe that robots have REAL Ultimate Power you better get a life right now or they will chop your head off!!! It's an easy choice, if you ask me.
robots are sooooooooooo sweet that I want to crap my pants. I can't believe it sometimes, but I feel it inside my heart. These guys are totally awesome and that's a fact. robots are fast, smooth, cool, strong, powerful, and sweet. I can't wait to start yoga next year. I love robots with all of my body (including my pee pee).
Q and A:.
Q: Why is everyone so obsessed about robots?
A: robots are the ultimate paradox. On the one hand they don't give a crap, but on the other hand, robots are very careful and precise.
Q: I heard that robots are always cruel or mean. What's their problem?
A: Whoever told you that is a total liar. Just like other mammals, robots can be mean OR totally awesome.
Q: What do robots do when they're not cutting off heads or flipping out?
A: Most of their free time is spent flying, but sometime they stab. (Ask Mark if you don't believe me.)
It's close enough to the article text - trust me.
Re:Article Text (Score:1)
Best troll ever (Score:1, Offtopic)
original? (Score:2)
Re:original? (Score:2)
I have a wireless robot. (Score:4, Funny)
Autonomous Robots (Score:2, Informative)
This could be fun. (Score:1)
Say It Ain't So (Score:1)
So do bomb sqad unions claim... (Score:3, Funny)
I seen the prezza (Score:1)
Its a good article and it is definatly worth reading, but if you want to know it just points out that SCO are whores. If you want proof read the article!
Tedious, marketing article (Score:1)
Wireless!
Do you want to hear me say "wireless" again? Because "robot" and "wireless" are really cool words!
Did you notice that specific products of IBM and associates were mentioned several times as potential solutions? I hardly think that w
Pitfall: The walkthrough and strategy guide (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Pitfall: The walkthrough and strategy guide (Score:1)
I have been watching some smart guys at MIT work for a couple of years now at just trying to make a group of wireless robots 'look' at something. You can see the MIT Robot stuff off a link from this page:
http://www.appliedembeddedlinux.net/linux_appli
Yeah sound's easy (Score:5, Funny)
If it were truly that easy, there would be no hackers. It sounds like a movie solution.
"The bad guy is hacking us!"
"Enable safeguards!"
"He's backing out sir! It's working!"
Article is All Fluff! (Score:2)
Interrupt that wireless robot! RTOS (Score:1)
I am actively working toward the completion of several autonomous systems.
RTEMS (by OAR) [rtems.com] is available as well as RTLinux (by FSMLabs) [fsmlabs.com] for those interested in developing robotics software using GPL. Big boys buy vxWorks or something from WindRiver [windriver.com] (Asimo by Honda).
Beware: Flawed, incomplete article (Score:1, Interesting)