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4 posts from September 2009

September 27, 2009

ROBO-ONE Champion Robot - OmniZero.9 - Truly amazing!

 The 16th ROBO-ONE competition was held this weekend in Toyoma, Japan. And the champion belt went to OmniZero.9 .  A great video by respected journalist and popular blogger Kazumichi Moriyama of the robot doing a demonstration. Takeshi Maeda, the creator of the OmniZero series, gets on his newest robot. It is AMAZING what the ROBO-ONE participants continue to accomplish!! And it's not like they can spend millions of dollars in R&D like the Hondas and Toyotas of the world.

September 24, 2009

France’s humanoid robot Romeo – Big but not dangerous

Project Romeo is an ambitious undertaking by a coalition of companies and national labs in France to develop by the end of 2011 a functional prototype of a humanoid robot that can assist the elderly and visually-challenged people at home. The goal is to develop a 1.2-1.5 meter (47-59 inches) high bipedal robot that humans can communicate with by voice and gesture and which can help a person get up in case of a fall.

 

The organizing company in this project is Aldebaran Robotics, which develops and sells the smaller humanoid robot Nao. GetRobo talked about the goal and challenges of this 10 million Euro (\1.3 billion, $14 million) project with Rodolphe Gelin, Head of Cooperative Projects at Aldebaran, who is the leader of this project. The following is an edited version of the phone interview and first appeared on Robot Watch in Japanese. (Photo: Rodolphe Gelin with Nao)

 

RG_Nao

First of all, can you give us a brief overview of Project Romeo?

 

The idea of Project Romeo was born in March 2008 and the project actually started in January 2009. The goal of the project is to develop a functional prototype of a personal assistant humanoid robot by the end of 2011. The robot is meant to be helpful for elderly people that may have cognitive problems. Also we will be working closely with the Vision Institute (Institut de la Vision) and it’s patients so that Romeo will be able to assist visually-challenged people.

Romeo will be able to assist these people when they are alone at home. It will be able to fetch objects in another room and also assist a person to walk or get up from a chair.

The project is led by the French Cap Digital, which is a coalition of companies, labs and institutions in Paris and the surrounding Ile-de-France region, set up to cooperate in leading innovation and building a competitive industry. There are 13 partners participating in Project Romeo - 5 companies, 7 national labs and the Vision Institute.

 

The Ile-de-France region, the city of Paris and the DGCIS, which is a department within the Ministry of Economy, will fund about half of the 10 million Euros. The rest will be provided by the partners in the form of investment and human capital .

We plan to come out with our first prototype by the end of 2010. Right now we are in the specification phase. Four engineers are currently working with me at Aldebaran and I would say one at each of our partners.


How did this project come about?

 

Bruno Maisonnier, founder and CEO of Aldebaran, had the idea that France can be a leading country in robotics. He wanted to build a human-sized robot as a demonstration of what France is capable to do. And to accomplish that he thought it was very important to bring together people in robotics from different organizations. So he teamed up with Cap Digital to come up with this huge project and was able to secure funding from the public sector.

 

We think that combining the experience and technology that Aldebaran has accumulated to develop Nao with the expertise of the other partners, we will be able to accomplish our goal.

 

By the way, “Romeo” does not mean anything. It sounds like a person’s name and makes the robot more lovable. Names that end in “-eo” are popular in France these days. It sounds new and high-tech.

 

Continue reading "France’s humanoid robot Romeo – Big but not dangerous" »

September 09, 2009

Bye-bye Gundam

 Dismantlement of the real-size Gundam. Summer 2009 comes to an end.......

September 01, 2009

RODEM - Mountable Electric Wheelchair

 If you have ever assisted someone in moving from the bed to a wheelchair, you will appreciate this new invention. The  VEDA International Robot R&D Center based in Fukuoka Japan announced a new concept vehicle called RODEM, which is basically a new type of electric wheelchair. Instead of sitting on it, you will be mounting on it, which will make it easier for certain types of patients to move from the bed to the wheelchair and vice versa. You won't need to turn around.   

RODEM3 

( Photo of RODEM : By the way the woman in the photo next to the vehicle is NOT HRP-4C.)

 Fumi Seto, who is a robotics researcher at fuRo and writes a popular blog, had the chance to test drive the RODEM. (She was kind enough to send me some photos including the one above. Thank you!)

 You can check out Seto-san on RODEM in a YouTube video.      

 According to her trial run report, steering with the joystick is intuitive and the ride was pretty smooth. Right now you have to be 50 kg (110 pounds) or under to get on it but the weight restriction could be removed by using larger motors. She points out some design issues - such as the location of the armrest and wheels - that need to be overcome for the vehicle to be more comfortable and commercially viable.

 At the end she compares it with the RIBA, the robot that carries the patient from one place to another. Would you rather be carried away like a princess by RIBA or mount briskly on the RODEM and ride away like a prince? Either way, I'm sure we'll be seeing lots more robots coming out in this area.