Ride Along with RoboSimian
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- Опубліковано 9 чер 2015
- This video shows the robot's-eye view from JPL's RoboSimian on the DARPA Robotics Challenge Finals course on June 5, 2015. Video speed is enhanced.
The RoboSimian team at JPL is collaborating with partners at the University of California, Santa Barbara, and the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena. Caltech manages JPL for NASA.
Additional information about RoboSimian can be found at www.jpl.nasa.gov/news/news.php...
Additional footage provided by DARPA. For more information about the DARPA Robotics Challenge, visit theroboticschallenge.org - Наука та технологія
#DARPADRC #RoboSimian #omgrobots
Drive, drill and roll with RoboSimian through the DARPA Robotics Challenge course. go.nasa.gov/1cMjVwy
Robótic future
Thank you ..top of UNIVERSE ..AUM
How amazing! And on my birthday, too! To see this in my lifetime is just awesome! Thanks for this post!
James Davis 😯 You don't say... say you? Don't really say say you but... You don't say... Say you?
It's how the government will take your vehicle at 80 on the freeway, and then apparently send you on a beautiful all expenses paid trip to a place called the Fema islands "known for their famous exotic camp style condominiums" they won't pit you because it's your safety that's their number one priority, they will just unleash "Darpa - Don't ask Rodgers principle again". They already have the Terminator "Judgment day TM" in their organization, this is one of it's inventions not ours , our robots aren't so advanced. Our most advanced line of robot today is called the hover round scooter and the easy chairlift that even works in a power outage. Some day though we will save livestock and have sky net, it will be in what we will call the cloud & everyone on this planet will use it in a social network called book of the face.
Embrace your future!
Compared to the competition, this looked really impressive.
He's so G, driving from the passenger seat LOL. Also, i love it's idle arms possition, it's like "wheeeeee !!!!" all the time.
In the year 2525.........
i love your robot!
Friggin' badass!
wauuu que avance tecnico este robot es muy bueno
0:57 "Here's Johnny!"
What happened at the staircase?
Pete Kuhns Yeah. It's like the final shot of "The Sopranos."
I have just enough imagination to realize what this could lead to, what it's setting the stage for.
Cinematically speaking, though, the film technique I'm seeing here says: "Gumby 2015."
was Simian the only one to leave the rover by itself ?
YES!!! Its open a hole!!
Bender?I's that you ?
Science Focus Magazine brought me here xD
Who made this song?
Dear NASA, can you please send some wheels for my bottom.
Why do our robots still move so slow, in 2015? :(
I know we have cpus more than capable of the nessisary calculations for much faster movement.
jiberish001 Slower is easier to control. For the same reason the mars rovers are slow. We have made fast moving wheeled vehicles for hundreds of years but they are still hard to control.
Hene193 Most of the ROBOT's movements are autonomous, with supervision. For the most part it controls itself.
Your comparison to wheeled vehicle control, is (I'm sorry) stupid. The only thing that this robot has in common with a wheeled vehicle, it that they both have wheels.
My question still stands. Our current CPU tech is more than capable of much faster control. Easily and safely.
jiberish001 I'm no expert on any of this, but I think the hardest problem for any autonomous robot is to make sense of what it sees.
It takes you a fraction of a second to understand that you're seeing a power-tool or a lever and from memory you instantly know how to use it. This is a little harder for a robot and depends entirely on the capability of the software and has nothing to do with CPU speed.
A lot of the actions those robots on the DARPA challenge made were remote controlled via software.
If you look at robots in factories; they are very very fast and efficient in what they do, but they are stupid and only capable of doing the one thing over and over again.
I think you're severely underestimating what our modern software is capable of doing.
I've seen a robot arm calculate and catch things thrown into the air with really high accuracy and speed, on the fly, not dependent on programing memory. And this was many years ago. Obviously THIS robot lacks the necessary computing power, but I KNOW that computing power exists. I just very rarely ever see it being utilized.
jiberish001 I think you overestimate the catching robot's abilities. It too is specialized for a certain task. It could never recognize a tool and find out how to use it.
I've seen object recognition software in action and it's nowhere near being able to walk around town and recognizing things and their functions. I have no doubt that it's getting better, but a human does a ton of things intuitively that software has a very hard time with.
Instead of sending people to space, why not robots like that one can do pretty much anything a human can do by the looks of it....
It's funny and ugly at the same time. Nothing else. Therefore, funny and ugly the way humans (mass media) treat this idea - to build a perfect mechanical helper (it has to be exactly perfect, otherwise why do we need it?).
Still so long way to go...