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Resident Robots, Take Two
By Niall McKay
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Though popularized by the Jetsons and Lost in Space, the first
generation of robots failed to live up to expectations. But like
platform shoes and '70s TV shows, robots may soon be back in vogue. With
the aid of PCs and specialized software, a new generation of robots can
be programmed to serve you drinks, set a VCR, even vacuum your
apartment.
Gecko Systems and Rugrover Systems have both developed domestic robots
that are controlled from a PC and communicate over a radio frequency
similar to a cordless phone.
"The beauty of working with robots today is that that all the parts we
are using are used standard consumer electronics devices, so they are
cheap," said Martin Spencer, founder and CEO of Gecko Systems, in
Austin, Texas.
Gecko's creation, CareBot, which costs US$2,595 and stands about 4 feet
tall, is a more sophisticated device than the Rugrover counterpart,
Cye -- a 1.5-foot robot costing US$629. Users need to supply their own
PCs for both the devices, which use the Windows operating system.
Both robots employ artificial intelligence programs to help them build
maps of their environment. For instance, if CareBot runs across an
obstacle in the living room, that information is logged, and the robot
will avoid it in the future. By contrast, Cye needs direction from the
user to navigate its environment via a mouse and a graphical user
interface; the robot stores this information, which helps it learn about
its environment.
A user can direct CareBot by typing a command, such as vacuum, or move
from room one to room two. However, Spencer said that in the near future
users will be able to integrate robot programming language modules and
simply give verbal commands. The software will also allow it to read a
Web page or email, via attached microphones and speakers. Users can add
peripherals -- video cameras, microphones, and TV remote controls -- to
the robots via standard PC ports and telephone jacks.
"The PC is revolutionizing these new robots," said Robert Doerr, a
collector who runs Robots Wanted, a robot hospital and retirement home
in St. Clair Shores, Michigan. "In the past, if you wanted to build a
robot, you had to build everything from scratch -- the navigation
system, motors, voice recognition, and speech syntheses."
High cost and failure to meet expectations hindered the robot market in
the '80s, he said.
"People saw Star Wars and wanted R2-D2, but their hopes were dashed,"
said Doerr. "There was no hardware or software platform to give these
things any intelligence."
Furthermore, a robot class struggle developed, according to Henry
Thorne, founder and CEO of Rugrover Systems, in Pittsburgh,
Pennsylvania.
"University researchers looked on industrial robots as blue collar,
crude welding machines, while the industrial robotics manufacturers
looked on the universities' robots as frilly and useless," he said.
Both Thorne and Spencer hope that by combining blue-collar brawn with
the brains of white-collar development, robots will be the next wave in
PC peripherals.
Both men have spent most of their working lives building industrial
robots for automobile manufacturers, but have turned to computer science
specialists to write their artificial intelligence software.
Robots may also make a comeback as toys and educational aids. After
dinosaurs, robots are the most popular objects of interest to children
under the age of 10, according to a recent study by the Carnegie Science
Center in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
One dentist in St. Clair Shores, Michigan uses robots to talk to
children when they arrive for dental work.
"Often the most difficult thing the dentist has to do is get a child to
sit in the chair," said Doerr. So he sends in the robot and the children
follow it into his office.
In addition to these developments, Swedish vacuum cleaner manufacture
Electrolux is building a vacuuming robot, and Sony is building a robotic
dog for the toy market. Customers are sure to be all ears, waiting for
the digi-dog's first binary bark.
Reproduced from Wired Magazine.24 Sep 1998
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