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The Swirling Brain's Robot, AI & Sci-Fi Upcoming Movie List!
Well, it's time yet again for The Swirling Brain's upcoming Robot, AI, & Sci-Fi movie news! I've noticed a few more swirling brain type movies and I thought we should show them a little love. Or at least, these are a few movies I'd love to see.
Videos and swirling brain comments after the jump...
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The latest episode of the Robots podcast interviews Kristinn R. Thórisson from Reykjavik University on some of the great advances, but also some of the disappointments of artificial intelligence, and where he thinks AI will be used in the future. In the second part of this interview, we conclude our quest for a definition of the word "robot" with a definition by Prof. Wendelin Reich from the Swedish Collegium for Advanced Study at Uppsala University, Sweden. He defines a robot as an artificial, physically embodied ‘agent tool’ - and gives some good reasons for this definition. For details as well as a list of other definitions have a look at the Robots website.
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Joey Daoud is working on a video documentary, called Bots High, about high school teams participating in the BattleBots competition and he needs your help. Joey writes,
I'm working on a documentary on high school BattleBots. I've been following multiple teams around since August, leading up to the National Championship. I'm trying to raise funds to film the championship with a multi camera crew, as well as travel to San Francisco to interview the BattleBot creators and builders.
For those who don't remember, Robot Wars (1998-2004) and BattleBots (1999-2002), were much-hyped game/reality television shows featuring competitions between remote-controlled vehicles designed to look like robots. Contests consisted of massive machines that destroyed each other in entertaining ways. The hype eventually died and the shows were cancelled. What you may not know is that BattleBots spun off a high school league known as BOTSIQ which still exists and attempts to add an educational aspect to the competition. The BOTSIQ championship will be held April 14-18 in Miami, Florida.
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Dvice.com
reports about a mysterious Robotic Shuttle that will be launched
April 19th. This is the first time I've even heard of such a shuttle
replacement. I mean, I thought NASA dumped the idea of a shuttle
completely and went for the super Apollo type mission to go to the Moon
or Mars?
So at a time when mothballing
the old Space Shuttle debate is going ballistic, what happens?
Well, it looks like the Air Force pulled a fast one and went ahead and
had it's own space shuttle secretly built by Boeing Phantom Works. The
new autonomous robotic Space Shuttle is dubbed the X37B.
Revealing a new Space Shuttle at this time is probably not going to
help the Obama administration with all the harsh
Space
Agency criticism they've been getting lately. In my opinion it shames
the Obama Administration and NASA because neither came up with this
dreamy vehicle, the Air Force had to. One could argue that NASA has
limited funds or how NASA and the Air Force is sort of two
sides of the same coin, yada yada. It probably shames the Air Force too
for not informing Obama they had a secret space shuttle.
Anyway, the Air Force didn't commission just any space shuttle to be
made, they had made a small, efficient, robotic,
autonomous space shuttle. It can go up, deploy some secret
payload, and come down and land
all on it's own the article says!
OK, well, details are sketchy so it's probably not completely autonomous
but it appears to be just as much autonomously controlled by robotic
equipment as the original shuttle was controlled by humans in the
cockpit. That's very impressive. Awesome. So... now that such a robotic
shuttle is
made public and known to exist, I wonder if the Air Force will let NASA
use it
for non-military missions? Naw, probably not.
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To encourage small businesses to invest in equipment, stimulus bills over the last couple of years have offered the "Section 179" rules. This allows a business to accelerate depreciation on equipment which deducts from their income and therefore reduces their tax burden. Rick Heflin of the 17-employee Custom Electronics Company of Maryland was faced with the question when his tax bill came up and decided to go for a new pick-and-place system. The robot can place 4000 parts per hour and improves the firm's throughput.
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Red Ring of Death victim Jasper Stevens decided to take an interesting tactic with his dead Xbox 360. He dissected the system harvesting the wires, RF shields, heat sinks, connectors and such to construct an inspiring bipedal robot sculpture that would make any hardcore gamer drool over.
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The ABE (Autonomous Benthic Explorer) has used its on-board acoustic transponders and five thrusters to scan the seafloor for over 15 years - locating, mapping, and photographing hydrothermal vents, volcanoes, and other features of the great deep. Marked with "NCC1701" due to its resemblance to Captain Kirk's ship, ABE has performed more than 200 missions collecting valuable data for researchers worldwide. But something went wrong last Friday on an expedition off the coast of Chile and ABE just stopped - nothing was ever heard again. No word yet on whether ABE can be located or recovered.
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Steven Hawking chimes in on the debate about whether to spend valuable resources sending humans on planetary exploration missions, or to use robots. After all, it's a lot cheaper to send a machine that doesn't need oxygen, isn't sensitive to radiation, and doesn't need to be returned to their family at the end of the mission. But there are some legitimate scientific reasons to send humans including real-time tweaking of the chemistry experiments looking for life, and to initiate unplanned tests based on unexpected observation. Also, the tax-paying public gets more emotionally invested in human missions and would possibly be more willing to continue funding. The ultimate answer is likely a mixture of the two, but exactly what that mixture will be is still being hotly debated.
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Popular Science and Google have partnered to scan and published 137
years of magazines full of inventions, interviews, and
science news from around the globe.
Oh, and don't forget those cool ads!.
I'm not sure the search feature is 100% yet but I did find a few older
articles that might be of interest to robotics enthusiast:
Sept 85 - Robot Sentries Patrol Prisons and Factories
Sept 62 - Teachable Robot Can Remember 200 Commands
June 83 - Computerized Personal Robots
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The latest episode of the Robots podcast interviews Dr. Alvar Saenz-Otero from MIT on the SPHERES project. SPHERES (Synchronized Position Hold Engage and Reorient Experimental Satellites) are basketball-sized satellites able to fly in and maintain formation at nanometer precision. In the second part of this episode we continue our quest for a good definition of a robot by looking at a well-known definition dating back to 1979. Read on or tune in!
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The Black Eyed Peas have released a new mash-up video for their songs, "Imma be" and "Rock that Body" featuring an assortment of robots; friendly robots, evil robots, big robots, small robots. You also get to see a robot junk yard, teleporting band members, a hover car, futuristic dance guns, Taboo missing the bottom half of his body and Fergie sporting futuristic silver Louboutin heels and some sort of sexy cyborg leotard. For more on the story behind the video, see the Imma Be Wikipedia article.
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Robots.net is the oldest robot blog on the planet, right? Sorry. Believe it or not, when robots.net started in early 2001, there were other robot blogs and websites already around. The oldest surviving robot news blog that I'm aware of (and I'm sure someone will correct me here if I'm wrong) is GoRobotics.net. GoRobotics is celebrating their 10th anniversary this year. What's even cooler is that they're celebrating by giving away great robot prizes to their readers every month this year. It's not too late to get in on February's prizes - just check out the GoRobotics Feb prize giveaway posting for all the details on how you can enter and win. Meanwhile, the editors at Robots.net would like to pass along our best wishes to William Cox for a job well done. Trust us, we know how hard it is to keep the robot news rolling for years on end!
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Aaron Saenz over at Singularity Hub put together a short list of videos showing robots doing their stuff on the factory floor. These machines work tirelessly doing highly repetitive, and sometimes highly dangerous jobs, hour after hour, day after day. Included are a few clips from automotive assembly lines where robots have reduced human labor requirements to around 24 hours. Clips showing sorting, pick-and-place, and even a pancake stacker application are also shown.
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Should you take your next vacation in Robot Land? Reader cjang noticed a wired story about this Korean robot theme park. Attractions include "robot adventure", funny town, cyber zoo, robot flower island, and "big gyration". The Swirling Brain spotted a Gizmodo video showing an automated laser called the "Death Star" that can blast mosquitos out of the air. Lionel Castle writes to tell us about a company called Evolution Model Technology, "My university just bought a set of these track modules. Amazing quality and super knowledgeable in robotics. They have a load of new products being released and offer the coolest stuff I've seen lately. Just wanted to share." Norri Kageki of the GetRobo blog writes, "GetRobo now has a guest author! I hope you enjoy his first article, on multi-legged robots". Know any other robot news, gossip, or amazing facts we should report? Send 'em our way please. And don't forget to follow us on twitter.
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