Feb 16

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Forget controlling your dreams — after all, isn’t the idea of having a mechanical buddy act out whatever your off-kilter brain thought up last night much more appealing? In an interesting endeavor, Fernando Orellana and Brendan Burns have teamed up to design a humanoid that actually takes sophisticated dream interpretation results (garnered by analyzing data from a variety of sensors) and acts out whatever was going on in one’s mind. Quite frankly, we’re not even sure we’d like to remember some of those overnight journeys — let alone see some bot play it back — but if you glanced this headline and immediately crossed your fingers for a video, head on past the jump to get just that.Continue reading Humanoid acts out your dreams, encourages insomnia

 

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Source: Darren Murph

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Dec 11

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We’re not getting too hopeful about all of this just yet, but reportedly, Honda has worked a new series of “cutting-edge intelligence technologies” into ASIMO. Apparently aimed to keep the poor humanoid from tumbling down stairs, the improvements will supposedly enable it to “operate autonomously with people and other ASIMOs,” essentially making it more suitable for real world use. More specifically, the new technologies include a “new system that enables multiple ASIMO humanoid robots to share tasks and work together to provide uninterrupted service to people,” an automatic charging function, intelligence to avoid obstacles by stepping back or yielding to oncoming objects and the ability to “perform tasks such as carrying a tray and pushing a trolley.” That sound you hear? Yeah, that’s the collective grumbling of butlers / maids the world over.

 

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Office Depot Featured Gadget: Xbox 360 Platinum System Packs the power to bring games to life!

Source: Darren Murph

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Aug 10

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If no one’s complaining when the Rock-afire Explosion busts out a Bubba Sparxxx jam, we doubt the future alien population of this here planet will have any beef with an android cousin doing the Tango. In a bizarre feat of preservation, a team from the University of Tokyo, Japan has used “video motion-capture systems to record the movement of a dancer performing a Japanese folk routine called the Aizu-Bandaisan.” Rather than just filing it on a DVD, however, they are teaching Kawada Industries’ HRP-2 to mimic the moves, which could open the door (wider) for robotic dance teachers of the future. If you think it sounds weird, just wait ’til you catch the thing on video.

[Thanks, Eileen]

 

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Office Depot Featured Gadget: Xbox 360 Platinum System Packs the power to bring games to life!

Source: Darren Murph

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