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The HRP-3 Promet Mk-II, a blue-collar android tough enough to trudge through heavy rains, carry out disaster relief operations and work in environments hazardous to humans, demonstrated its blue-collar skills at a June 21 press conference at Kawada Industries headquarters in Tochigi prefecture.
The 1.6 meter (5 ft 3 in) tall, 68 kilogram (150 lb) robot, sometimes lovingly referred to as “Ma-kun,” is the latest fruit of a 5-year joint effort by Kawada Industries, Kawasaki Heavy Industries and Japan’s National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology (AIST) to develop a humanoid robot with sufficient skills to enter the workforce. This latest HRP incarnation features tougher hardware to make it more suitable for work in adverse environments, as well as improved balance and the ability to move its body parts in a more complex, coordinated fashion.
SOURCE:
Pink Tentacle
Originally posted by yuefo
Asimov is going to wind up looking like a prophet.
Originally posted by johnsky
Being in Robotics engineering, I have observed how slow the marketing of engineering can be. And marketing is really what holds it all back.
We really do want to go as fast as we possibly can with technology, and we actually do experiment with this stuff on our own time, but in the corporate world... they don't want to work with it until they can figure out exactly how to bill you for it.
A new technology in Japan could let you control electronic devices without lifting a finger simply by reading brain activity.
The "brain-machine interface" developed by Hitachi Inc. analyzes slight changes in the brain's blood flow and translates brain motion into electric signals.