Tokyo Toy Show 2008 – CScoutJapan.com
Sega rolled out creepy insect-dog “Mio”:

From WASEDA University Sugano Laboratory, the research organization that brought you the robot that could handle and crack an egg, comes “Twendy-One” the uniquely dexterous robot that can gently make toast, carry your stuff, and even pick you up and hold you.
Seven years and several million dollars has produced one of the most complex robots ever constructed. Twendy-One has 241 pressure sensors in each hand, can speak Japanese, and has voice recognition. Like most awesome electronic systems, battery-life kills the buzz with a max charge of only 15 minutes (when the pack doesn’t overheat).
While it’s still in the concept phase, you can see from these videos that Twendy-One represents remarkable progress in multiple systems integration. The videos show Twendy making toast, getting ketchup, carrying a tray, helping a man out of bed, and having some terse conversation.
Based on their current success, researchers hope to have a commercially viable robot by 2015.
Source: ABC News
I was digging around the forums for posts on robot animals and I found that we’ve had quite a few. After all, who can resist the winning combination of machines that move, look, even eat in rudimentary facsimile to their inexpensive, fully functional counterparts?
Let’s visit the Robot Menagerie!
Necoro (left) is a freaky looking robot cat from Japan. It looks like it’s programmed to kill you then assume control of your appliances and await further instruction.
Here is a promotional video that does little to assuage my suspicions…it is downright spooky! http://www.necoro.com/theater/broad/vp.mov
Also on the creepy side are a variety of insect-powered robots that literally eat bugs for power. This is obviously an early scale test for giant, backhoe-sized robots that will certainly be powered by human meat.
Behold, SlugBot! He isn’t much to look at but he can track down, capture, and eat slugs!! According to the research website, SlugBot can also eat sausages which vaguely resemble slugs.
Visit the SlugBot home page. It hasn’t been updated since 2001 when SlugBot went berserk and ate the researchers.
The University of South Florida is also in on the robots-that-eat craze and have introduced us to the term “gastrobot.” They even scored themselves gastrobots.com where you can learn about Chew-Chew the cute little train that eats sugar cubes. Eating sugar cubes is cute! It’s not scary like eating slugs! I’m guessing they chose sugar cubes because no one would question the development of such a cute robot… awwww it eats sugar cubes!!! Of course it isn’t a big leap to go from sugar cubes to human meat. Chew-Chew doesn’t look too cute either. Despite the kid-friendly colors and the wagons, there is something sinister about that collection of tubes and processing equipment.
For vegan roboticists, here is a related and interesting article about a solid state “spinach sandwich” power chip that may someday power our mobile devices: http://www.physorg.com/news1181.html
The Boston Dynamics BigDog (aka Robot Mule) is really an engineering marvel. They have a four-legged walking robot that has an uncanny, realistic gait. Watch as catches itself from falling!!
Everyone’s heard of AIBO (and if not, you’ve already missed the party). Sony, if only you hadn’t squandered your money on the overpriced and overly complicated PS3…you wouldn’t have had to cancel AIBO!!!! I do have one question: What was with the evil, Terminator AIBO model?
Because Sony abandoned AIBO, the Robocup Soccer Initiative has had to switch from cute robo-dogs to less cute, bipedal robots.
Anyway, back to robot animals. I recently saw Salamandra Robotica (Ecole Polytechnique Federale De Lausanne) at the Wired Nextfest. I took some video of the little critter in action:
At Stanford University, scientists are working on a gecko robot that can climb walls.
Stickybot uses tiny polymer threads and the principles van der Waals force (intermolecular attraction) to climb up flat surfaces.
Watch a video of the action: Stickybot 24MB mov
NASA is working on Snakebot to explore and to do some digging in space. Engineers are obviously coming up with these names. (No offense engineers, you know it’s true) This is a good quote from one of the developers:
A snakebot is not as good at some jobs as other robots, but you get a lot more robot for the weight and the money…
Snakebot will apparently be sold by the pound (or by the kilo in the metricness of space).
Carnegie Mellon University is working on their own snakebots with names like “Breadstick” and “Pepperoni.” Their snakebots are being developed for emergency rescue operations and in off hours, drain snaking.
Read more: Snakebots Slither to the Rescue
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