April 08, 2009 Robot News from RoboDaily.com RoboDaily Advertising Kit
Japan child robot mimicks infant learning
Suita, Japan (AFP) April 5, 2009
A bald, child-like creature dangles its legs from a chair as its shoulders rise and fall with rythmic breathing and its black eyes follow movements across the room. It's not human - but it is paying attention. Below the soft silicon skin of one of Japan's most sophisticated robots, processors record and evaluate information. The 130-cm (four-foot, four-inch) humanoid is designed to lear ... read more
Subscribe to our email newsletter for free technology news
  

About UsContact Us: Australia 24/7  (61)-448-005-219 or Email
RSS NEWS FEEDS - SPACE : EARTH : WAR : ENERGY : SOLAR : GPS

   
  • RSS FEEDS - SPACE : EARTH : WAR : ENERGY : SOLAR : GPS
  • Engineering A Better Latch
    Memory Foam Mattress Review
    Solar Energy Solutions
  • Tempur-Pedic Mattress Comparison
  • Previous Issues Apr 07 Apr 06 Apr 05 Apr 04 Apr 03
    GeckoSystems Ready For Explosive Growth In Personal Robots
    Conyers GA (SPX) Apr 07, 2009
    GeckoSystems has announced that their multi-tasking personal robot product, the CareBot MSR, satisfies the requirements indicated by ABI Research to penetrate this growing marketplace. The report from ABI Research is predicting that by the year 2015, people will probably be willing to spend as much for a multi-tasking humanoid robot as they would for a new car. "Within six years, the ... more

    Altair Software Helps Students Reshape Their Robots And Their Lives
    Troy MI (SPX) Apr 07, 2009
    Fifteen students at a Seattle-area high school are using Altair Engineering's OptiStruct software to help build robots for the national FIRST Robotics competition; but, to their amazement, the real prizes they have won have been improved social skills, a passion for teamwork and a newfound love of engineering. The team from Jackson High School in Mill Creek, Wash., worked with their career ... more

    First-Time Entrant Captures Rube Goldberg National Title
    West Lafayette IN (SPX) Apr 04, 2009
    A team from St. Olaf College, a private liberal arts school in Northfield, Minn., won the 22nd annual national Rube Goldberg Machine Contest at Purdue University on Saturday (March 28). St. Olaf, with an enrollment of 3,000 students and no engineering program, was competing for the first time in the national contest. The team of science-minded students designed a machine around a "Mad Scie ... more

    Opportunity Brushing and Examining an Outcrop
    Pasadena CA (SPX) Apr 04, 2009
    Opportunity remains positioned on an exposed rock outcrop, continuing an "in situ" (contact) science campaign with the robotic arm (IDD). On Sol 1832 (March 20, 2009), the first part of a rock abrasion tool (RAT) brushing activity was performed. Using a new work-around for the failed RAT Z-encoder, the RAT successfully performed a seek-scan to locate the rock surface. On the next sol ... more

    Study: Technology cannot replace nature
    Seattle, April 2, 2009
    U.S. psychologists say humans might be losers if technological nature - such as robotic dogs or Web cams viewing nature scenes- replaces the real thing. University of Washington psychologist Peter Kahn said technology increasingly is encroaching upon human connections with the natural world and that intrusion might produce one of the central psychological problems of our times. ... more

      robot:
  • New robot 'steered by human thought': Honda

    mars-mers:
  • Mars Rovers Powering On After 5 years

    mars-mers:
  • Opportunity At Outcrop - Endeavour In Sight - Sol 1824-1831
  •  
    Earth News, Earth Sciences, Climate Change, Energy Technology, Environment News  
    British-built robotic fish to detect pollution
    London (AFP) March 19, 2009
    A shoal of robotic fish which can detect pollution in the water are set to released into the sea off Spain, British scientists said Thursday. The fish, which are some 1.5 metres long and resemble carp, will be fitted with detectors which can identify the sources of pollution, such as ship fuel or chemicals in the water. Five of the robots, worth some 20,000 pounds (21,000 euros, 29,000 ... more

    Fashion robot to hit Japan catwalk
    Tsukuba, Japan (AFP) March 16, 2009
    Japanese researchers on Monday showed off a robot that will soon strut her stuff down a Tokyo catwalk. The girlie-faced humanoid with slightly oversized eyes, a tiny nose and shoulder-length hair boasts 42 motion motors programmed to mimic the movements of flesh-and-blood fashion models. "Hello everybody, I am cybernetic human HRP-4C," said the futuristic fashionista, opening her media p ... more

    Alien Safari Part 5: Alien Vs Predator
    Moffet Field CA (SPX) Mar 17, 2009
    Q: There's controversy about the manned exploration of space versus sending robots. What are your feelings about that as we plan exploration over the next several decades? Tori Hoehler: I think the question of manned exploration crystallizes around Mars. That's the one that lies within the realm of feasibility. If you look at what we understand about the potential for life on Mars, NASA ha ... more

    Third Meeting Of ISECG
    Yokohama, Japan (SPX) Mar 17, 2009
    Representatives of ten space agencies from around the world met under the banner of the International Space Exploration Coordination Group (ISECG)1. They adopted for further study three scenarios for conducting internationally coordinated robotic and human exploration activities on the Moon. This was one of several results arising from a meeting held on March 10-12, 2009, in Yokohama Japan. ... more

    Turning The Tide To Energy
    Pasadena CA (SPX) Mar 13, 2009
    NASA researchers who developed a new way to power robotic underwater vehicles believe a spin-off technology could help convert ocean energy into electrical energy on a much larger scale. The researchers hope that clean, renewable energy produced from the motion of the ocean and rivers could potentially meet an important part of the world's demand for electricity. Many different methods alr ... more

      miltech:
  • LM Unveils Exoskeleton Technology

    robot:
  • Tokyo school to host first robot teacher

    robot:
  • Aurora Wins Contract For Multi-Robot Planetary Exploration

    lunar:
  • Study Shows Robots Could Prepare Lunar Landing Pad
  •  
    Energy News - Technology - Business - Environment  
    Keeping Unmanned Security Vehicles On Track
    Middletown RI (SPX) Feb 26, 2009
    Securing large areas like airport perimeters and container yards is an increasingly dangerous task, and companies like Frontline Robotics are working to make it safer for human security personnel by designing unmanned vehicles to patrol these spaces. For Frontline's GRUNT Autonomous Unmanned Ground Vehicles (AUGVs) to carry out their assigned tasks, it is critical that they know precisely ... more

    Robots Remove UXO From Training Ranges
    Washington DC (SPX) Feb 26, 2009
    Robotic technologies were used to detect and remove unexploded ordnance from training ranges at Fort Bliss, Texas, Feb. 10 in a demonstration sponsored by the U.S. Army Environmental Command. Experts from the Army's Environmental Command joined bloggers for a special roundtable discussion on how the demonstration went and how robotics could improve safety, efficiency, and provide ... more

    Adept Technology To Showcase Solar Cell Handling System
    Pleasanton CA (SPX) Feb 26, 2009
    Adept Technology has announced its solar cell handling system will be showcased at the 2nd International Photovoltaic Power Generation Expo in Tokyo, Japan. The application workcell is a high-speed solar cell handling system with integrated inline inspection and features the Adept Quattro s650 a four arm parallel robot. This will be the first time the Adept Quattro and the solar cell handl ... more

    Chemists Create Two-Armed Nanorobotic Device
    New York NY (SPX) Feb 19, 2009
    Chemists at New York University and China's Nanjing University have developed a two-armed nanorobotic device that can manipulate molecules within a device built from DNA. The device is described in the latest issue of the journal Nature Nanotechnology. "The aim of nanotechnology is to put specific atomic and molecular species where we want them and when we want them there," said NYU ... more

    U.S., Chinese scientists build nanorobot
    New York (UPI) Feb 16, 2009
    U.S. and Chinese scientists say they've created a two-armed nanorobot that can manipulate molecules within a device built from DNA. Researchers at New York University and China's Nanjing University said the programmable unit allows researchers to capture and maneuver patterns on a scale that is unprecedented. New York University Professor Nadrian Seeman, one of the study's ... more

    24/7 news coverage of Your world at War.  
      gps:
  • First Robotic Greens Mower For The Golf Industry

    miltech:
  • QinetiQ's New Talon Meets Bomb Detection Challenges

    milspace:
  • NGC's Land Navigation System Selected For FCS Development Contract

    energy-tech:
  • Eickhoff Mining Machinery Gains CSIRO Automation
  •  
    Previous Issues Apr 07 Apr 06 Apr 05 Apr 04 Apr 03

    The contents herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2007 - SpaceDaily. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement, agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy statement