February 01, 2012

AnyLobby - A robot staffing service debuts

AnyLobby 1A year ago, Silicon Valley robotics company Anybots started selling their telepresence robot QB. Now they have started a service called "AnyLobby." 

AnyLobby is a staffing service, but instead of sending you a person, they will send you a robot - in this case QB. But it is not just a robot. It comes with a "robot personality" who will be driving the robot from elsewhere, in some cases hundreds of miles away. The robot personality will work as your receptionist or assistant, and a full time robot receptionist will be there for you 40 hours a week for $2,400 a month.

I got to meet Angela Ward, one of the robot personalities, at Anybots last week. She lives in Fort Mill, South Carolina, a suburban town outside of Charlotte, a few time zones away from where Anybots is. I talked to her through the screen/camera/microphone on QB.

AnyLobby 2
"We can do a lot of things," Angela says. QB doesn't have arms, but thanks to digital technology, she doesn't have any trouble scanning the fax and printing documents. The only thing she can't do is provide her signature when a package arrives, but the companies she works for have set up protocols for that  - "Call Bob when there's a package. "

If it's a low traffic lobby, Angela can handle multiple locations at once. Before becoming a robot personality, she used to be a manager at a computer training company. Her background is "helpful but not necessary" in operating the robot. The technology is easy to use, she says. (You can test drive the QB here if you are interested, which is also something Anybots started recently.)

"We can bring different personalities and different expertise to the table through the same robot," says Trevor Blackwell, Founder of Anybots. Since the very beginning of Anybots he had wanted to create a service around his robots. Currently there are 3 companies that have signed up for AnyLobby and one is Elance (which is like the Ebay of services), according to Trevor.

Oftentimes robots are thought as something that can take away jobs, but Angela disagrees. "That is not the case here. It is creating jobs for small towns with high unemployment rates."

But isn't it taking away jobs from people that want to be receptionists in Silicon Valley? No, says Trevor. The main goal of AnyLobby is to provide "virtual employees" to companies that "otherwise would not have hired a receptionist," he says.

Angela has never met the Anybots team in person, but she "feels like she is a significant part of the team." Compared to showing up on a fixed screen, being a robot "makes a lot of difference in how you interact with each other."

AnyLobby 3

(Trevor talking to Angela at Anybots)

November 29, 2011

Controlling a swarm of robots by drawing on your iPad

 Wouldn't it be cool if you drew something on your iPad and then a swarm of robots diligently copied that? Well here you go.

 Keisuke Uto built the hardware and software for an idea contest at his company in Japan. He says the most difficult part was to get the camera to recognize the bar codes on all the robots accurately. And to build everything within a tight budget.

Also he says that he didn't have the time to build an anticollision system, but actually it looks cuter when the robots bump into each other trying to get to the right configuration.

 Here's how he made the system (although it's in Japanese). (The instructions below are in English now!) Could be used as a great attraction at events. Thank you Uto-san!

November 17, 2011

[IREX 2011] FANUC's World's Largest Robot is Eco-Friendly

 FANUC's M-2000iA can now lift 1.35 tons, which makes it the world's largest robot in terms of payload. 

 The robot uses FANUC's patented iRVision technology to handle objects that do not need to be precisely placed. This is done by combining the data from the 2D sensor on the robot's hand and a 3D sensor which is situated nearby apart from the robot.

 This giant robot has another interesting "power regeneration function" shown below. Due to this technology, it is able to use 30% less energy. 

FANUC 2
  The robot can be used to lift cars in auto manufacturing plants. One of the markets that FANUC is focusing on is the energy market. The company is hoping that the robot will be used to construct new hydraulic plants and wind plants worldwide.

FANUC M-2000iA

November 14, 2011

[IREX 2011] Your Co-Worker may be a Robot Soon

 One of the coolest demos at IREX was the humanoid industrial robot NEXTAGE by Kawada Industries.  NEXTAGE, which made its debut during IREX two years ago, was designed specifically to work side by side with humans in the assembly line. Since then, about 10 Japanese companies have already implemented this robot in their manufacturing facilities, according to Takakatsu Isozumi, General Manager of the Mechatronics Systems Division at Kawada.  So for workers at these companies, the future is already here.

NEXTAGE 1

Two of these companies have made public that they are indeed using NEXTAGE to manufacture their products. One is Hitachi, which implemented NEXTAGE into its hard disk manufacturing line. The other is Glory, where NEXTAGE is busy assembling modules for ATM machines. NEXTAGE takes responsibility for repetitive tasks while humans focus on work that need frequent adjustments. 

The video below taken by science writer Kazumichi Moriyama shows NEXTAGE showing off at IREX many of its skills that it learned in the past two years, answering to the various requests from real customers. The fact that NEXTAGE is a real product being used in real life made it stand out from the other humanoids at IREX which are still in the research phase. The basic model of NEXTAGE costs about 7.5 million yen and typically it will cost around 10 to 12 million yen per unit with customized software and peripherals.  

One of the keywords in humanoid robotics these days is Co-X: Developing robots to become Co-Workers, Co-Inhabitants, Co-Defenders, etc. NEXTAGE is one of the first products that realizes this goal.

So far, Kawada is focusing on the Japanese market, but eventually they are planning to sell NEXTAGE abroad too.

Isozumi-san and NEXTAGE - shoulder to shoulder.

NEXTAGE 2

November 09, 2011

[IREX 2011] Yaskawa's new service robot SmartPal 7 plus Kinect

 Industrial robot giant Yaskawa Electric also announced its new version of the service robot SmartPal. Can't find the press release of the new robot as of now, but it's slimmer and smarter than SmartPal 5. (SmartPal 6 never made its debut in public since it was strictly for research.)

 At IREX 2011, it was being controlled using Kinect. The scenario is to place the robot hundreds of kilometers away at your elderly mother's house and you can help her remotely via the robot.

 Photo below is SmartPal 7 being controlled remotely and picking up a toy from the floor.

  SmartPal 1

 Here's what it looks like on the controller side.

SmartPal 2

SmartPal 3