Segway-Based Robot Opens Doors 158
Roland Piquepaille writes "In this short article, Technology Review tells us that Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) researchers have built a new robot, named Cardea, which is able to push open doors and has the bottom half of a Segway scooter. Cardea will be five feet tall with a torso, three arms, a variety of sensors, and a human-like head with expressive features and vision, and mounted on a Segway base. More details and references are contained in this review which also includes several pictures. For even more details, go to the Cardea Project homepage."
Johnny 5 is Alive! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Johnny 5 is Alive! (Score:2)
Battery life? (Score:3, Insightful)
How long do the batteries last, anyway? It's not much good if they run out in, say, five minutes.
A recent article in SciAm described small robots that can be thrown through windows and will run around and map the area. I wonder if this robot could do the same? But what if it runs into stairs?
Just some thoughts.
Re:Battery life? (Score:4, Funny)
Ah, the most fearsome killing machine in the universe, foiled by a staircase.
Well, at least this robot can thank its lucky stars it isn't made by gluing tennis ball halves all over the outside of an upsidedown dustbin.
KFG
Re:Battery life? (Score:1)
Re:Battery life? (Score:2)
No, tribbles.
For those not aware, Daleks can actually climb stairs. First shown on screen in 1987.
Re:Battery life? (Score:1)
Re:Battery life? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Battery life? (Score:1)
Re:Battery life? (Score:4, Interesting)
You know it's going to be said... (Score:2)
You know it's going to be said sooner or later so I'll get it out of the way:
Balance? (Score:5, Interesting)
So my question is, does this robot have some sort of balancing algorithm programmed into it so it doesn't fall flat on its face?
Re:Balance? (Score:2, Interesting)
That's why you can lean forward on a Segway and still stay up.
Re:Balance? (Score:2)
Nope, the segway works by using a gyroscope to detect balance, then driving the wheels forwards or backwards to keep balance. (Think; those guys in the circus who have those long poles with plates/etc on their heads and run backwards and forwards to keep the poles balanced).
Re:Balance? (Score:3, Funny)
Rus
Re:Balance? (Score:1)
Since that already have balancing techniques etc built into it, it might be even easier to use it.
That's the genious! (Score:5, Insightful)
Now, the genious part. You robot only has to shift its weight in order to move about. You've eliminated a lot of relatively hard problems by piggybacking on the segway.
It's really kinda like using a library instead of implementing everything from scratch.
Re:That's the genious! (Score:2)
It's sort of like how motorcycle riders twitch left before leaning into a right turn.
The iBot wheelchair (which is what the Segway technology spun off from) uses this to good effect -- the rider doesn't have to move his body at all -- he can command the wheelchair left/right back/forward with
Re:That's the genious! (Score:1)
Tom
Re:That's the genious! (Score:2)
Robot that can open doors. (Score:4, Funny)
This is such a good thing, as somehow nobody has ever been able to invent a door that opens on its own. But now Johnny 5 comes to the rescue!
Re:Robot that can open doors. (Score:1)
Two wheels (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Two wheels (Score:1)
What else can it do ? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:What else can it do ? (Score:2)
It's an experiment, not a product.
what about me? (Score:1)
Think tank... (Score:3, Funny)
- 3 arms
- a variety of sensors
- mounted on a segway base
Oh and let's throw in a human-like head so that people can feel at home with it rolling around...
Innovation I tells ya!
Predictable (Score:3, Insightful)
I personally welcome our segway based robot overlords.
Seriously though this is an intresting hack/use of segway technology. It'd be interesting to learn how it copes with some of the limitations of the technology. What happens when the batteries run out? That could be an expensive crash. How does it cope with moving over larger obstacles that a segway rider might just be able to cope with. I guess I really don't know enough about how Segway+Human works to think about possible solutions. Anyhow, well done MIT!Re:Predictable (Score:1)
Halloween (Score:2, Funny)
Simon.
Re:Halloween (Score:2)
Do you mean "Gives me the creeps!" scary, or "It's gonna fall on me!" scary?
stupid robot-joke (Score:5, Funny)
Segway RMP (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Segway RMP (Score:2)
From the he existence of this development platform it seems that this outcome is b
Re:Segway RMP (Score:2)
In fact, Segway is an innovation, a product innovation, to be exact. It is also an invention. Check the definitions.
As for the usefulness, give it some time and then judge it. Kamen might have made a mistake estimating the adoption rate (or rather he and the investors made a bet), but that doesn't mean the product is bad. Many people bought it, many people use it, I haven't saw a lot of negative comments from the
Re:Segway RMP (Score:1)
http://www.darpa.mil/ipto/programs/mars/rmp.htm [darpa.mil]
Mr. Spleen
It should have been called Marvin (Score:2, Funny)
Re:It should have been called Marvin (Score:1)
And when will we have a floating robot like Colin? Especially one that can take the weight of an average human and save him from falling from a 30+ story highrise building of a publishing company.
DRACO-
Third arm? (Score:4, Funny)
Dare I ask where the placement of that third arm is?
Third arm? (Can't you feel it?) (Score:4, Funny)
what a waste (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:what a waste (Score:2)
That's why it's important that any general purpose robot has a built in minigun, rocket launcher or chainsaw, as a solution for any problems it encounters which cannot be solved by technological means.
Minsky was right (Score:2, Insightful)
"The worst fad has been these stupid little robots," said Minsky. "Graduate students are wasting 3 years of their lives soldering and repairing robots, instead of making them smart. It's really shocking."
http://www.wired.com/news/technology/0,1282,587
Re:Minsky was right (Score:1, Troll)
comments. In fact, all the hard work of real engineering in this "door-opening robot" was done by the Segway people in designing the inertial feedback control systems that stabilize the thing. The Hackers seem to have used this as the basis for a glorified Lego MindStorms project. Even the referenced article in MIT's Tech Review concedes that the really clever bit is in the Segway's "
Re:Minsky was right (Score:1)
There's plenty of problems to solve in this area, I don't see much use for throwing stones. Unless, of course, it's to inflate your own ego enough that you have to confidence to show us your robot.
Re:Minsky was right (Score:2)
So it is able to ride a Segway... (Score:1, Insightful)
Segway? (Score:1)
Oh, it's explained in the review. (Score:1)
And replying to one's own comments is stupid.
Re:Oh, it's explained in the review. (Score:2)
By extending that argument, wouldn't evolution optimize animals and people to have low center of gravity?
I think there's a lot to be said for dynamic stability. I'm not saying the Segway is the *right* approach. But it's the first mass-produced dynamically-stabilized mobile platform.
I personally think a more compact version of the iBot whee
Well (Score:1)
Run upstairs! (Score:3, Funny)
Distressed damsel: Help, help! These new door opening robots have gained self-awareness and are trying to take over the world!
Hero: Quick, run upstairs!
Re:Run upstairs! (Score:1)
Hero: Quick, run upstairs!
[Damsel and hero are at the top of the stairs, watching the robots]
Damsel: What are they doing? They're whispering...
Hero: Plotting some foul deed, no doubt.
Damsel: Oh no! They're opening all the doors, letting in a nasty cold draft!
Hero: Those evil fiends! We have to do something quick!
Damsel: There's only one man who can save us now! Mild-mann
This truly is an age of wonders. (Score:2)
Cool just when I got this email (Score:1)
link [tlb.org]
Opens Doors? (Score:2)
Maybe this computer could have learnt something from my cat?
Can it open revolving doors... (Score:5, Funny)
it is a pitty ... (Score:1)
The Jetsons (Score:2, Interesting)
If don't remember, check it here:
http://www.cybercomm.nl/~ivo/photo_ROSIE.h
or
http://www.jeffbots.com/rosie.html
Legged vs. Wheeled (Score:1)
Open Source (Score:2)
The Terrible Secret of Space! (Score:3, Funny)
does it have a cheerful and sunny disposition? (Score:1, Funny)
thank you, the marketing division of the sirius cybernetics corporation!
Robot with legs (Score:1)
I've always been impressed with this Sony robot project. Kinda strange it's never been mentioned on
Now, it may not be the fastest robot you've seen, but it sure isn't the slowest (and they are constantly developing it, so I bet it will become faster over time), and the variety of movements and its capability of balancing is quite stunning. I wonder how hard it would be to implement a comparatively simple seeming feature such as opening doors.
Push/ Pull (Score:1)
A Segway-powered robot? (Score:1)
"Warning! Warning! Battery Low. Batte..."
Creeeeeeeaaaaaaaaaaak. Thump.
Bzzzt.
Johnny Five! (Score:2)
At least it's not ... (Score:1, Funny)
Over-engineered, underwhelming (Score:1)
Choose building a robot that opens doors. Choose not to tell anyone why. Choose a flailing arm that hits door handles. Choose mounting this arm on the top half of the robot for maximum lever-instability-badness. Choose a two-wheeled inherently unstable platform. Choose compensating for bad design with electronic gadgetry. Choose a kick stand kludge for when the robot inevitably keels over.
Try designing a better door.
Or if you really need a robo-butler at least give it tracks and a low center of gravity.
Solutions (Score:1)
Meet George Jetson...... (Score:1)
Re:Meet George Jetson...... (Score:2)
As long as it doesn't look like Rosie O'Donnell.
could be useful... (Score:1)
I imagine a robot on a segway can move alot faster than a robot on treads or wheels, and is probably alot more maneuverable at higher speeds... i see a robot moving around cubicles or something to deliver a memo at the speed of a person running.
but like i said before, there's already practical solutions for this and none of them have caught o
I can deliver memos faster (Score:2, Insightful)
I can deliver a memo to everyone in the office on multiple floors and even in offices around the world in seconds (or minutes at worst).
I don't need a friggin robot zooming around the office delivering 'memos' and waiting to run me down as I pop-out of my cubicle to replenish my caffeine supply.
Now give me one that can fetch my coffee and then we're talking.
What's next, human batteries? (Score:1)
Need I say more?
The importance of being overly geeky (Score:2, Funny)
If you don't already look suffiently dorky riding around on a Segway, now you can have a matching robot servant to open doors so you don't have to EVER dismount.
Wow! (Score:1)
It can push an already open door open, by putting a metal stick on the door and extending it.
What if the door is closed?
And what's the thing with MIT and these kinds of fakey "news"?
Already done (Score:1)
Segway soccer isn't new.
You don't need arms to play soccer; all you need is a "kicker". CMU already has a segway robot to play soccer: http://www-2.cs.cmu.edu/~robosoccer/segway/
The point is that people on segways can play robots on segways. I'm not sure how adding arms and a head would help...
Also, you will notice this research group lacks vision
http://www.ai.mit.edu/projects/cardea/te
The Motie in the Doorway... (Score:2)
Wow... (Score:1, Funny)
A $10,000+ creation that opens doors. It won't stand a chance when I release my $20,000+ robot that digs holes and fills them back in.
At last... (Score:2)
But... (Score:1)
I don't suppose this new machine is going to have a chronically depressed mood is it?
Life, don't talk to me about life...
Can some one explain why... (Score:1)
a human-like head with expressive features
I think if robot designers would just quit trying to make robots look like people, real people would just get used to it. What is the value in spending so much time makeing robots look/act human? It seems like a real waste to me. Wouldn't it be better to spend more time making the robot do something useful. Sheesh if you want a friend, go to a bar or join some sort of club but for christ sakes stop trying to build one.
The only
Inevitable Simpsons Reference (Score:2)
"FA-THER! Give me legs!"
[/metallic voice]
Stefan
Rosie, fetch me my slippers (Score:2)
Rosie, fetch me my Uggs.
LoB
Homeless door opening robots? (Score:2)
X-Doorminator 3000 (Score:1)
Of course, the goal is to also make the robot able "to safely interact with humans at eye level" (Technology Review) - which I doubt interests the military much...Unless they are curious about how safe it would be around other soldiers with a giant gun strapped to its back.
Though, a gun-toting Doorman Robot would probably make people move through doorways faster. Perhaps the Robot Doorman would also have the ability to shoot ter
Why not have it do something useful? (Score:1)
Sure, this whole thing is ment to be a lesson in robotics, but I don't think they are going to get a better complemnt than "That's a cute trick."
The real question... (Score:1)
This seems a little more interesting (Score:1)
NASA's is way cooler... (Score:1)
Robonaut + Segway = Really, really cool! And in response to the question I know will be asked (what's with those huge braces in all the photos), the reason those are there is this: just in case, for some reason, the thing falls down, they don't want it to hit the ground. The Segway RMP part is worth about $5000, but the Robonaut torso is worth either $250,000 or $750,000 (I can't remember which), and it banging into the ground would be a ve
Schwarzenegger (Score:1)
Perfect sex toy (Score:2)
The Honda "Asimo" (Score:2)
Honda has been developing a robot for awhile now. It was originally codenamed P1, but it's been publicly announced with the name Asimo, an unabiguous homage to "I, Robot" author Isaac Asimov.
Asimo is intended to become a household robot, so it has legs instead of wheels. It's pretty adept and can already climb stairs. It doesn't approach the dexterity of Hollywood robots by any stretch. Last I knew Asimo was unable to figure out the height of s
Re:The big question is ... (Score:3, Informative)
Rus
Re:It looks pretty cool but.. (Score:2)
Re:It looks pretty cool but.. (Score:2)
Re:Segway - Opening Doors to new levels of fat (Score:1)
Has humanity
Re:Segway - Opening Doors to new levels of fat (Score:1)