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Robotics

  • Zugriffe: 6964
    Weblink Die Entwicklung der Roboter
    Veröffentlicht am 26.11.2014

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    Every Wednesday we present a new video, so join us to see the truth laid bare...

    Machines are evolving 10 million times faster than we are. Are you ready for robots that run our homes, watch our neighborhoods and even fight our wars? One day in the not too distant future, robots will travel to the far reaches of the universe, they will be the first to colonise new worlds. Robots will lead the way in the exploration of deep space.

    Robots, machines of our nightmares, or servants of man? In the 1930s film Metropolis the robot was an evil character, it represented our darkest fears. By the 1950s they had become even more sinister and powerful, but over that last few decades our opinions of robots have dramatically changed, they’ve been reinvented as the police force of the future. But can real robots match the exploits of their celluloid cousins?

    While the movies were creating ruthless men of steel, real robots were starting their own painful march into the world. Robots are still basic but over the past few decades they have advanced enormously. Before robots can become the masters of the universe, or even the servants of mankind, they need to accomplish one important thing, they need to move around.

    This 1999 documentary includes interviews with prominent roboticists and artificial intelligence specialists. Beginning with robot locomotion and historical clips of ingenious experiments from MIT's Leg Laboratory, BigDog's ancestors dynamically walk, hop, trot, and perform impressive gymnastics. To find out the best way for a robot to move around the scientists look to nature. There have been many attempts to copy nature, some successful, others less than perfect.

    Some of the robots discussed in this documentary :

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s Genghis II
    Hermes the Hexapod
    Micro-robot Cricket
    Mine Clearer Ariel
    Ambler the Massive Six-legged Planetary Rover
    Adaptive Suspension Vehicle
    Odetics Inc’s Odex 1
    Spring Flamingo Robot
    Honda’s P3 Humanoid Robot
    Xavier from Carnegie Mellon University Robotics
    Cog Project at MIT’s Humanoid Robotics Group
    Mark Tilden's BEAM Robotics
    SPAWAR’s Robart 3
    NASA’s Surveyor 3
    Mars Rover Sojourner
    JPL Robotics’ Rocky 7 Rover
    Nomad Rover Test Vehicle
    Nanorover Technology

  • Zugriffe: 6380
    Weblink Robots that can adapt like animals (Nature cover article)
    Veröffentlicht am 27.05.2015

    The Intelligent Trial and Error Algorithm introduced in the paper 'Robots that can adapt like animals' (Nature, 2015): the video shows two different robots that can adapt to a wide variety of injuries in under two minutes.

    A six-legged robot adapts to keep walking even if two of its legs are broken, and a robotic arm learns how to correctly place an object even with several broken motors.

    Full citation: Cully A, Clune J, Tarapore DT, Mouret J-B. Robots that can adapt like animals. Nature, 2015. 521.7553, (cover article).

  • Zugriffe: 5506
    Weblink Boston Dynamics Introducing Spot
    Veröffentlicht am 09.02.2015

    Spot is a four-legged robot designed for indoor and outdoor operation. It is electrically powered and hydraulically actuated. Spot has a sensor head that helps it navigate and negotiate rough terrain. Spot weighs about 160 lbs.

  • Zugriffe: 7268
    Weblink MIT cheetah robot lands the running jump
    Veröffentlicht am 28.05.2015

    In a leap for robotic development, the MIT researchers who built a robotic cheetah have now trained it to see and jump over hurdles as it runs — making this the first four-legged robot to run and jump over obstacles autonomously. (Learn more: http://bit.ly/1JYy1bD)

    Watch the MIT cheetah run outside: http://youtu.be/XMKQbqnXXhQ

    Video: Haewon Park, Patrick Wensing and Sangbae Kim

  • Zugriffe: 6244
    Weblink Boston Dynamics Military Robots
    Veröffentlicht am 16.08.2014

    Boston Dynamics Military Robots

  • Zugriffe: 6076
    Weblink Boston Dynamics BigDog Overview (Updated March 2010)
    Hochgeladen am 22.04.2010

    BigDog climbs in the woods, keeps its balance when kicked and when slipping on ice, travels through snow and mud, jogs 5 mph, and climbs some rubble.

  • Zugriffe: 5953
    Weblink Robot Evolution
    Veröffentlicht am 08.12.2012
     
    Roboter Evauation & Evolution. Die Entwicklung der Roboter und deren verschiedenen Konstruktionskonzepte.
  • Zugriffe: 4981
    Weblink Dieser Roboter „repariert“ sich innerhalb von 60 Sekunden selbst

    Das alte Problem mit Robotern: Wenn sie kaputt sind, sind sie aufgeschmissen. Verletzt sich zum Beispiel einer der spinnenähnlichen Hexapods ein Bein, ist er trotz seiner fünf verbleibenden, intakten Extremitäten nicht mehr fähig, seinen Weg fortzusetzen. Unfähig und lächerlich dreht er sich fortan im Kreis oder schleppt sich ungelenk in die falsche Richtung.

    Nicht so die Geräte der französischen Forscher Antoine Cully und Jean-Baptiste Touret.

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(c) 2014 Zenhäusern Jean-Marc