About close to 15 years ago, I remember hospitals having those older robot systems. Though there weren't any markings on the floor, they were always on a fixed path which sent clinical supplies from one of the wards to the clinic in the basement. Lifts were Kone TMS, and one lift would always be in a special mode just for these robot trolleys. After the lifts were modernised I never went back, not sure if the robot systems have been upgraded
Can someone who speaks Swedish do a proper translation of what it's saying? All I understood was "I'm starting/turning", I want to know if it complained about getting surfed on And yeah, the human faced robots are just garbage gimmicks, I can only really imagine that robot faces would be relevant in stuntwork (as in, actor gets hit by car or such dangerous activities, and video with the actor's face is put on before filming) or sex
Robots with human like faces just annoy me. It is the most unnecessary thing to put on a robot. They don't see with their eyes, they us LIDAR (usually located near the floor), and they don't speak with the mouth (they use a speaker). Robots only have faces so that they conform to a stereotype of what robots are like in sci-fi fiction. I don't like how technology shows (both on TV and UA-cam) focus on robots where the presenter is like "wow that is an amazing futuristic AI [add buzzwords] amazing piece of the future to come", and they rarely mention more realistic and practical forms of robots.
humans are very very good at doing two-armed, one-headed biped things, so robots trying to do things the same way humans do have a lot of catching up to do and will likely be less effective and reliable than humans for a long time to come. robots that do things in straightforward, mechanically reliable ways that may require a certain extent of specialized spaces and equipment can do a lot of very important things much more effectively.
Lets say the idea of having a robot that makes beds in a hotel. The stereotypical design would be a robot with two arms and hands that has a creepy looking face, and the robot is maid to look like a stereotype of a hotel maid from the 1900s, and it is programmed to go into rooms and use its arms to make the bed. This is a terrible idea and is very complicated to do, and the robot would constantly be getting stuck. However, are far more effective and practical idea is for a robot similar to the ones in my video to come into the room and carry away the bed and take it to the basement. In the basement a machine takes the mattress off the bed and strips it, and then it rolls the mattress into the replacement bedding. This machine would be large and have loads of rollers to roll the mattress and bedding into the correct position, then the first robot takes the assembled bed (although, not necessarily the same bed) back to the hotel room. With this idea the bed, mattress, and bedding would have to be specially designed so that it is easier for the rollers of the bed making machine to take it apart and put it together. This idea is physically possible, but is very different to how people would think a robot would work. In the hospitals in Copenhagen, the beds actually work similar to this. The beds are made up in the basements and wheeled to where they are needed. There are rows of hundreds of beds, ready made, with protective plastic covers over then to keep it fresh, ready to be wheeled to the next patient. While not as robotic as human labor is used to do this, it is much more efficient than how NHS hospitals do this.
Can Robots be as effective as us humans. Can robots do multiple tasks as much as humans can do. Do you think that Robots have the capability of doing pretty much everything that humans have accomplished. If robots are to take over humans then they would struggle.
One of the best things with these robots is once the system is set up, you can keep on adding more robots at not much extra cost. This means that more things can be moved around more easily. In UK hospitals things are done in a way to minimize things having to be constantly moved, as moving stuff takes effort and people have to be paid to do the job. With robots you can have things constantly moved all the time as it becomes a zero effort task. This means that the hospital can be reconfigured to have centralized hubs where set tasks happen (e.g. a bed making area, a tools destitution area, a supplies dissolution area, a central storage area, etc.) which would work better than having loads of small repeated areas for these things all over the hospital. This means that things will constantly have to be transported, but this is no longer an issue. The problem is that UK hospitals do not have compatible layouts for robots, as they need large easy to navigate basement tunnels with not many people about, and they need lots of lifts. UK hospitals are not built like this, and they usually have nowhere near enough lifts. In UK hospitals a lot of large things have to wait until night time to be moved due to having to use the same corridors that people walk down. For example, only at night time will large things be moved like bins, machinery, large equipment and dead bodies.
About close to 15 years ago, I remember hospitals having those older robot systems. Though there weren't any markings on the floor, they were always on a fixed path which sent clinical supplies from one of the wards to the clinic in the basement. Lifts were Kone TMS, and one lift would always be in a special mode just for these robot trolleys. After the lifts were modernised I never went back, not sure if the robot systems have been upgraded
I’m just happy that he is uploading
Beno is in sweden for a third time!
I think that robots could do a good job especially at hospitals. Hospitals do need robots to keep hospitals clean and safe.
Those are fantastic.
"I've no idea where I'm off to." 🙂
And I like the big bike on the wall.
surfing lifts ❌
surfing robots ✅
Can someone who speaks Swedish do a proper translation of what it's saying? All I understood was "I'm starting/turning", I want to know if it complained about getting surfed on
And yeah, the human faced robots are just garbage gimmicks, I can only really imagine that robot faces would be relevant in stuntwork (as in, actor gets hit by car or such dangerous activities, and video with the actor's face is put on before filming) or sex
Sometimes when it moves, it will alert others and say ”Se upp, jag är i rörelse” which means ”Watch out, i am in motion”
Yo beno i have a good question
In your history of riding lifts, what's your favourite?
New beno post 🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥 Viewer from Aberdeen, Scotland, UK
I've never heard of robot surfing before.
World's most expensive skateboard?
Didn’t you find some other hospital that had a lift just for these?
Cologne hospital
Swedistan capital
Nice video Beno
soylent green
Hopefully they dont fall down the stairs, escalator, or get stuck in lift doors doing nudge
Was there any Kone M series in the hospital?
Yes
hey austin this is guys
3:08 say oop
"Look out, I'm moving"
the other one is "Look out, I'm starting"
Interesting video, thanks
I wonder what it keeps saying in English
@@0liver0verson9 probably to move away
it seems to say "watch out" followed by some information like "i'm in motion" "i'm changing directions" "i'm stopping" etc
watch out im moving, watch out im starting
I don’t think futuristic bots are THAT bad right?
Robots with human like faces just annoy me. It is the most unnecessary thing to put on a robot. They don't see with their eyes, they us LIDAR (usually located near the floor), and they don't speak with the mouth (they use a speaker). Robots only have faces so that they conform to a stereotype of what robots are like in sci-fi fiction. I don't like how technology shows (both on TV and UA-cam) focus on robots where the presenter is like "wow that is an amazing futuristic AI [add buzzwords] amazing piece of the future to come", and they rarely mention more realistic and practical forms of robots.
@@benolifts fair enough, you have a good point
humans are very very good at doing two-armed, one-headed biped things, so robots trying to do things the same way humans do have a lot of catching up to do and will likely be less effective and reliable than humans for a long time to come. robots that do things in straightforward, mechanically reliable ways that may require a certain extent of specialized spaces and equipment can do a lot of very important things much more effectively.
Lets say the idea of having a robot that makes beds in a hotel. The stereotypical design would be a robot with two arms and hands that has a creepy looking face, and the robot is maid to look like a stereotype of a hotel maid from the 1900s, and it is programmed to go into rooms and use its arms to make the bed. This is a terrible idea and is very complicated to do, and the robot would constantly be getting stuck.
However, are far more effective and practical idea is for a robot similar to the ones in my video to come into the room and carry away the bed and take it to the basement. In the basement a machine takes the mattress off the bed and strips it, and then it rolls the mattress into the replacement bedding. This machine would be large and have loads of rollers to roll the mattress and bedding into the correct position, then the first robot takes the assembled bed (although, not necessarily the same bed) back to the hotel room. With this idea the bed, mattress, and bedding would have to be specially designed so that it is easier for the rollers of the bed making machine to take it apart and put it together. This idea is physically possible, but is very different to how people would think a robot would work.
In the hospitals in Copenhagen, the beds actually work similar to this. The beds are made up in the basements and wheeled to where they are needed. There are rows of hundreds of beds, ready made, with protective plastic covers over then to keep it fresh, ready to be wheeled to the next patient. While not as robotic as human labor is used to do this, it is much more efficient than how NHS hospitals do this.
i want to surf that as well.
co op robot
Can Robots be as effective as us humans. Can robots do multiple tasks as much as humans can do. Do you think that Robots have the capability of doing pretty much everything that humans have accomplished. If robots are to take over humans then they would struggle.
One of the best things with these robots is once the system is set up, you can keep on adding more robots at not much extra cost. This means that more things can be moved around more easily. In UK hospitals things are done in a way to minimize things having to be constantly moved, as moving stuff takes effort and people have to be paid to do the job. With robots you can have things constantly moved all the time as it becomes a zero effort task. This means that the hospital can be reconfigured to have centralized hubs where set tasks happen (e.g. a bed making area, a tools destitution area, a supplies dissolution area, a central storage area, etc.) which would work better than having loads of small repeated areas for these things all over the hospital. This means that things will constantly have to be transported, but this is no longer an issue. The problem is that UK hospitals do not have compatible layouts for robots, as they need large easy to navigate basement tunnels with not many people about, and they need lots of lifts. UK hospitals are not built like this, and they usually have nowhere near enough lifts. In UK hospitals a lot of large things have to wait until night time to be moved due to having to use the same corridors that people walk down. For example, only at night time will large things be moved like bins, machinery, large equipment and dead bodies.
I think you are right. Thanks for the interesting input. 👍