ACME, ARES robotics teams advance to NorCal Championship – The Union of Grass Valley

Every practice begins with a meeting. Tuesday was no exception.

The ARES and ACME robotics teams circled to discuss their plans for the day, what they were trying to improve and how best to prepare for the upcoming tournament.

ARES members discussed the need to install a grabber on their robot. ACME members said they needed to work on their robots software.

But despite the routine, this practice carried a bit more meaning. Thats because both teams are headed to the NorCal Championship in San Jose this weekend the first time two robotics teams will represent Nevada County.

(The season) has been going pretty well for us, said ARES Robotics team member and Ghidotti sophomore Sean Giomi.

The ARES team is only 2 years old. It began last season with the help of ACME members who wanted to expand student interest in robotics. While the team consists of members between grades eight and 10, the group was formed based on friendships and bonds, not by age. Both teams have students from a wide range of Nevada County schools.

Giomi said this year the ARES Robotics team has achieved success, even beating ACME Robotics at a January tournament, in addition to having competed with them at other competitions.

Were going to have really good matchups, said Giomi of the upcoming tournament.

ARES member and Nevada Union sophomore Kenton Boswell spoke of how the team has helped him understand mechanical engineering as much as its helped him manage group dynamics. In order to diffuse potential conflict, Boswell said team members detach themselves from an idea, and try adopting both sides of an argument if a disagreement arises. With this technique in place, the team has high hopes for moving past the state tournament.

I think well do pretty well, said Julia Barbieri, eighth grader at Yuba River Charter School and ARES member.

Despite a slow start to the season, Nevada Union senior and ACME member Ashland Arriaga said the team dominated at a February tournament, qualifying them for the NorCal Championship.

This year, ACMEs robot is entirely customized, said Arriaga, which allows members a distinct feeling of satisfaction, particularly when they brought the robot to life, moving something from imagined conception to physical reality.

Now, Arriaga said the team has a good shot at moving on from the state tournament, but that theres no way of telling what will happen.

The championship in March features the top 56 of over 200 teams in northern California, according to Stephanie Lewis, team mentor to ACME and ARES. The top teams from that championship will qualify for the World Championship in Houston in April.

To contact Staff Writer Sam Corey, email scorey@theunion.com or call 530-477-4219.

Read the original:

ACME, ARES robotics teams advance to NorCal Championship - The Union of Grass Valley

Now, robots to battle COVID-19 – The Hindu

A challenge can also be an opportunity is how the Kerala Startup Mission (KSUM) views the current cycle of COVID-19 infections in Kerala.

The government nodal agency for entrepreneurship and incubation activities has launched two robots developed by startup firm Asimov Robotics to spread awareness about arresting the spread of the virus. One of the robots also distributes face masks, sanitizers and napkins for better cough hygiene.

At the KSUMs Integrated Startup Complex at Kalamassery, the other robot screens detail about the World Health Organisations campaign to contain the pandemic.

Asimov CEO Jayakrishnan T. said a general public apathy towards preventive measures against COVID-19 prompted the solutions-provider company to go for such a drive

.The use of robots in the campaign has invited public attention, also considering the propensity of Coronavirus to spread though human contact, a communication said.

All startups being incubated at KSUM, too, are being given health guidelines in the context of COVID-19, KSUM Chief Executive Officer Saji Gopinath said.

You have reached your limit for free articles this month.

Register to The Hindu for free and get unlimited access for 30 days.

Find mobile-friendly version of articles from the day's newspaper in one easy-to-read list.

Enjoy reading as many articles as you wish without any limitations.

A select list of articles that match your interests and tastes.

Move smoothly between articles as our pages load instantly.

A one-stop-shop for seeing the latest updates, and managing your preferences.

We brief you on the latest and most important developments, three times a day.

Not convinced? Know why you should pay for news.

*Our Digital Subscription plans do not currently include the e-paper ,crossword, iPhone, iPad mobile applications and print. Our plans enhance your reading experience.

See the article here:

Now, robots to battle COVID-19 - The Hindu

First female robotics team in Indiana showcase robot for competition – wlfi.com

LAFAYETTE, Ind. (WLFI)The first female robotics team in Indiana hosted their annual reveal on Saturday. The all girl group call themselves the "Girl Gang Robotics." They showcased their robot for competition season. In just seven weeks the Girl Gang Robotics created their robot.

By promoting integrity, acceptance and teamwork the girls hope to represent women in the STEM field. President of Girl Gang Robotics Liz Jones said this will prepare these young girls for their future education and careers. It will also show that girls can do this too.

"I'm hoping more so that we can get guys to realize that girls are just as capable as boys in STEM," said Jones. "Because I don't want these girls to have to leave their team. I want them to feel comfortable with whatever team they are on."

Their first competition will be in Mishawaka, Indiana next week.

Excerpt from:

First female robotics team in Indiana showcase robot for competition - wlfi.com

Robots Instead Of Forklifts? Fetchs Melonee Wise Debuts Fully Autonomous Ones That Can Carry Up To 1,100 Pounds – Forbes

Fetch Robotics' Melonee Wise with her new fully autonomous bot and cart.

For more than a century, factories and warehouses have depended on forklifts to move heavy objects from one place to another. Roboticist Melonee Wise, founder and chief executive of Fetch Robotics, thinks fully autonomous robots could do a better job. In a conversation with Forbes, she shared a sneak peek of a new version of her giant Freight bots that has the ability to pick up items from one place and drop them off at another with no humans involved.

Fetch intends to debut the new Freight 500, called CartConnect500, which can lug up to 500 kilograms (or 1,100 pounds) at the Modex 2020 trade show in Atlanta on March 9. A fully autonomous version of the Freight 1,500, which can haul up to 1,500 kilograms (or 3,300 pounds), is in development and likely will launch later this year. The robots have attachable, industrial-grade carts that can carry bins and totes for efficiency and organization.

While San Jose, California-based Fetch has offered its Freight lineup of pallet movers since 2017, making them fully autonomous and attaching carts to them is a big step forward. For carts, its completely new for the industry, says Wise. The robot has to find the cart, detect it and pick it up.

As with self-driving cars, these giant robots rely on Lidar sensors, 3D cameras and mapping software to navigate safely around objects and people. Fetch ties its robots together with a software program, called WorkBuilder, that can manage their operations. Fetch typically offers the Freight 500 under a service plan, for $3,500 to $5,000 a month, depending on the robots configuration and accessories.

Wises idea comes at a time when warehouses and factories are increasingly looking to automate in order to operate more efficiently with fewer people, at a time when hundreds of thousands of jobs remain open. It also comes as the forklift industry itself has been shifting to incorporate more automation into its products, as Forbesdetailed in a recent profile of Crown,the countrys largest forklift manufacturer. What weve built is pretty complementary to autonomous forklifts. Most of their value is in lifting things up and putting them down. Its not really in the transit, says Wise. Were talking with some automated forklift manufacturers about bringing our two products together.

Fetch Robotics' robots have detachable carts, which allow them to get right up to the assembly line.

But for some customers, eliminating forklifts is a goal. GE Appliances, one of Fetchs early customers, plans to use Fetchs robots to help it slash the number of forklifts it uses across its nine U.S. factories from some 350 to 175 by the end of 2021. Shifting from forklifts, which require human operators, would cut costs, while also improving safety. The new Fetch robot with its connected cart allows GE Appliances to move items from where theyre stored to the assembly line. We can take things to the line side, which helps us get rid of forklifts, says Harry Chase, GE Appliances director of advanced materials. Nothing going to the assembly lines will have forklifts.

Today, GE Appliances, which started with the smaller Freight 100 robots and helped developed the Freight 500 as a beta customer, has nearly 20 Fetch robots across five plants. It might ultimately roll out a few hundred robots across its facilities, though Bill Good, the companys vice president of supply chain, notes that the company could choose to use a mix of robot manufacturers. Toyota teaches us that inventory is waste, and moving that inventory is waste, Good says. So I want to put people in adding value to the product, and not just moving waste from point A to point B.

Today, Fetch is one of a number of companies that make robots for warehouses, including Amazons Kiva Systems though Wise argues that her robots are very different than Kivas because they can operate with people and dont require extensive changes to a companys existing warehouse space. One of its main competitors in the warehouse market is Mobile Industrial Robots, a Denmark-based industrial robotics company that was acquired by publicly traded industrial giant Teradyne in 2018. Fetch has raised $94 million, at a valuation of $221 million, according to venture-capital database PitchBook.

[Fetch] is a quite impressive player in an increasingly saturated field, which is robotics platforms for logistics and manufacturing, says ABI Research analyst Rian Whitton. Melonee is one of the more charismatic CEOs.

Wise is one of the few high-profile women robotics entrepreneurs. As a child, she wanted to be a photographer, but she also tinkered with building blocks. She studied engineering at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, where she built robots in her spare time, including one called Zippy that Wired described as an autonomous bot that wasnt much more than a few motors tied to a piece of plywood.

She stayed at University of Illinois to study for a Ph.D. in engineering, where she worked on building an autonomous car as part of the DARPA Urban Challenge. After a trip to California as part of that project, she dropped out of her Ph.D. program, and moved west to join Willow Garage, a robotics lab founded by Scott Hassan, as its second employee. It was random in many ways, Wise says. I had no idea [Willow Garage] would become one of the most famous places to do robotics of the past 50 years.

Willow Garage shut down in 2013. Wise founded a short-lived startup, called Unbounded Robotics, then launched Fetch. Her plan: To develop fully autonomous, mobile robots for use in warehouses and logistics operations. The Freight line of robots includes a rolling base that can autonomously follow a warehouse worker. A variety of carryons enable it to be immediately incorporated into a factory line without needing to be reconfigured.

Over time, Wise made her robots and carts larger and larger. What we kept hearing from customers is, Can you just make it bigger? she says. The big challenge going from our small robots to our big robots is that the big ones are closer to the size of a car in terms of their weight so the safety standards are a lot different.

Continue reading here:

Robots Instead Of Forklifts? Fetchs Melonee Wise Debuts Fully Autonomous Ones That Can Carry Up To 1,100 Pounds - Forbes

Robotics team’s win sends them to world competition – Norfolk Daily News

Rebel Robotics wasnt expecting to win, let alone for a second year in a row.

The Norfolk-based robotics team won first place at the Nebraska FIRST Lego League recently, which qualified it to attend the FIRST Robotics world championship on April 28 in Detroit.

Rebel Robotics, which consists of five homeschooled students, also attended the world competition last year after qualifying at the state competition, co-coach Amber Haake said.

We didnt really expect it because we thought it would be hard to qualify again since there were a lot of really good teams, Haake said. We were hoping to do well, but were thrilled.

Its an exciting experience for the kids to go and meet and compete at that level.

Haake and her husband, Rob, coach the robotics team, which includes their son, Emmett. The group has been competing for the past four years. Members range from ages 12 to 15.

My son had an interest in robotics and there was nothing in the area that we could sign him up for, so we decided to start our own team, Haake said. From there, we really reached out to people in our homeschool community (to join).

Rebel Robotics took home the winning trophy out of 56 teams at the state competition Feb. 22. This year was the fourth time the group competed at state, according to a previous Daily News article.

The team also was named the Nebraska nomination for global innovation at the state competition for its research project. Teams can compete in a research component, where they have to come up with a solution to a prompt that changes every year.

This year, the competition prompt is to solve a problem that occurs in cities, Haake said. Members met with the city engineering department to discuss current issues and decided on the topic of roundabouts.

The team created pedestrian mats that address the issue of how pedestrians can navigate roundabouts safely.

The ADA-accessible mats are solar-powered and light up when they are stepped on, which helps increase the safety at a roundabout.

Rebel Robotics was named the Nebraska nomination for this product.

Last year, Rebel Robotics received third place at the world competition for its research project, which was a special cap to address the issue of washing hair in space.

It was obviously a completely new experience and our goal was to learn and have fun, Haake said about the 2019 world competition. When they took third place for their research project, it was pretty exciting.

View original post here:

Robotics team's win sends them to world competition - Norfolk Daily News

Robotics team kicks off Mohegan reading campaign – Shelton Herald

Mohegan School students got to play catch with the Shelton High robotics team's latest creation during a special assembly Monday.

Mohegan School students got to play catch with the Shelton High robotics team's latest creation during a special assembly Monday.

Photo: Brian Gioiele / Hearst Connecticut Media

Mohegan School students got to play catch with the Shelton High robotics team's latest creation during a special assembly Monday.

Mohegan School students got to play catch with the Shelton High robotics team's latest creation during a special assembly Monday.

Robotics team kicks off Mohegan reading campaign

Mohegan School students got quite a boost as they began a month-long reading extravaganza. And what better day to start than Monday, March 2 which also happened to be Read Across America Day and the birthday of the ever-popular Dr. Suess.

Students gathered in the gym and were greeted by Principal Kristen Santilli, who announced the kick off of I Love to Read month with the schools Bolt Into Reading-themed campaign. The program is designed to cultivate an enjoyment of reading by the students.

Among the special guests helping to open the months campaign were Board of Education Chair Kathy Yolish, Board of Education member Amy Romano, the award-winning Shelton High Gaelhawks robotics team and newly appointed school Superintendent Beth Smith.

Santilli said the robotics team, with coaches Michele Piccalo and John Niski, were more than happy to lend a helping hand.

The team brought a robot to demonstrate the importance of reading, science, technology, engineering, and math, said Santilli.

Some of the robotics team remained in the gym with fourth graders to discuss what the team does in its competitions. Other SHS students visited classrooms and read to the younger children.

The books they read were related to STEM, said Santilli, adding that, as part of the reading incentive, all students will read eight books in different genres fiction, nonfiction, fairy tale or fable, biography, poetry, history, science, geography and one free choice.

Students will log their reading on the reading log that is sent home. Book logs will be turned into the Media Center to track their progress. All students who participate will enjoy a reading celebration to culminate the reading incentive.

brian.gioiele@

hearstmediact.com

Read the rest here:

Robotics team kicks off Mohegan reading campaign - Shelton Herald

Gator robotics teams advance to playoff rounds at Great Northern Regional – East Grand Forks Exponent

Holding a controller, Badger Robotics drive team member Kennedy Truscinski focuses in on the action during a match at the 2020 FIRST Robotics Great Northern Regional at the Alerus Center in Grand Forks. (photo by Emily Wicklund)

GMR Robotics human player Olivia Brazier focuses in on the action at the Great Northern Regional, as GMR mentor John Langaas (background) looks on. (photo by Emily Wicklund)

The Badger Robotics team poses for a team photo with its robot named Eclipse at the Great Northern Regional. Pictured are (L-R): Standing: Jandi VonEnde, Jedd VonEnde, Jasmine Christianson, Hannah Rud, Aulona Jasiqi, Lexi Rud, Kennedy Truscinski, Talon Hilligas, Jack Burkel, Jasmyn Rud, Avdyl, Jasiqi, Alex Truscinski, Valerie Truscinski, Bryza Rud, Alan Truscinski, and Olivia Hamann; Kneeling: Brooke VonEnde, Talisha Hamann, Katerina Nubson, and Liesl Aarhus. (submitted photo)

The GMR Robotics team poses for a team photo with its robot at the Great Northern Regional. Pictured are (L-R): Front: Christian Wahl, Elizabeth Gust, Sarah Stanelle, Wyatt Whitchurch, Lauren Kvien, and Piper Sondreal; Middle: Michael Diaz, Ray Tarala, Diana Wang, Max Utter, Olivia Brazier, Ryan Hlucny, Landon Kvien, Paris Sondreal, and Cari Swenson; Back: Mary Anderson, Aaron Kvien, Kyle Stauffenecker, Thor Anderson, Dennis Brazier, John Novacek, John Langaas, Teresa Hlucny, Doug Hlucny, Riley Sovde, Vern Langaas, and Russ Anderson. (submitted photo)

Two Gator Robotics teams, Team #3750 out of Badger High School, and Team #5172 out of Greenbush-Middle River High School, opened their competition seasons at the Great Northern Regional from the Alerus Center in Grand Forks, N.D., February 26-29 a Week One FIRST Robotics event. Both Gator teams would get the opportunity to compete in the playoff rounds, but both fell short of capturing that regional title.

As for the Badger team, after day one of qualification matches, it stood in the second ranked position, climbing to first at the beginning of the first day. The team would remain in this position until the final qualification match of the regional one that the Badger team lost. The Badger team would finish qualification matches which ran February 28 and 29 with an 8-1 record and in the fifth ranked position.

Captain of the fifth ranked alliance heading into playoff rounds, Badger selected Team #5653, the Iron Mosquitoes from Babbit, Minn., and Team #7858, the Warriors from BOLD High School in Olivia, Minn, to form its alliance.

In quarterfinal playoff actiondone in a best-of-three series format the Badger-led alliance would fall to the fourth ranked alliance, made up of Team #2883, F.R.E.D out of Warroad, Minn., Team #3082, Chicken Pot Pie out of Minnetonka, Minn., and Team#2847, The MegaHertz out Fairmont, Minn. The Badger-led alliance lost by scores of 150-132 and 187-129. Although its regional run ended sooner than hoped, Badger Team Coach Val Truscinski was proud of her teams efforts.

The Badger teams next regional event, the Iowa Regional, takes place March 27-28 in Cedar Falls.

The Greenbush-Middle River team would finish the two days of qualification rounds with a 6-3 record and ranked twelfth in the 60-team field, including both students and engineering and technical mentors from North Dakota, Minnesota, Colorado, Wisconsin, South Dakota, and Manitoba, Canada.

Not earning a top eight spot needed to become an alliance captain, the GMR team would accept an offer to join the top-ranked alliance captain, Team #3293, the Otterbots from Fergus Falls, Minn. This alliance also invited Team#4198, Robocats from Waconia, Minn., to join it.The GMR alliance would win its quarterfinal match-up over the eighth ranked alliance made up of Team #8002, The Knack from Hartland, Wisc., Team #3007, the Robotitans from Oakdale, Minn., and Team #5638, LQPV Robotics from Madison, Minn., by scores of 262-162 and 238-80.

Advancing to the semifinals, the GMR alliance defeated the fourth ranked alliance of Team #2883, Team #3082, and Team#2847, by scores of 233-100 and 206-122.

One series win away from a regional title and an automatic trip to the FIRST Robotics World Championshipheld in Detroit, Mich., April 28-May 2 the GMR alliance would take on the second ranked alliance made of Team #1619, Up-A-Creek from Longmont, Colo., Team #876, Thunder Robotics from Hatton-Northwood, N.D., and Team #4593, Rapid Acceleration from Rapid City, S.D.

The GMR alliance would fall short, dropping the best-of-three series by scores of 254-230 and 228-184.

The GMR teams next competition is the 10,000 Lakes Regional held at Williams Arena on the University of Minnesota campus in Minneapolis, March 25-28.

To see the complete story, read the March 4 issue of The Tribune in print or online.

View post:

Gator robotics teams advance to playoff rounds at Great Northern Regional - East Grand Forks Exponent

Fun with robotics at SCA – The Suffolk News-Herald – Suffolk News-Herald

Students at Suffolk Christian Academy were treated to fun Robot Day demonstrations on Feb. 28, and the school also received a donation from SuperDroid Robots Inc.

The demonstrations were given by Aaron Cockrell, who assists in shipping and logistics for SuperDroid Robots Inc., which is based in Fuquay-Varina, N.C. The company specializes in custom robotics and builds robots in-shop for tactical and inspection purposes. According to Susan Payne, owner and chief financial officer of SuperDroid Robots Inc., the company has sold more than 10,000 robots and parts over the past 20 years.

Aaron Cockrell was in SCAs first graduating class in 2010, and his sister and fellow SCA graduate Abby Cockrell teaches STEAM and computer classes at the school. Abby Cockrell spoke to her brother last fall about introducing robotics to the schools newly-formed STEAM class this year, and his company was happy to oblige.

Aaron Cockrell was able to bring a few of their advanced robotics for the demonstrations on Feb. 28. Furthermore, the company donated Tamiya Robot Kits to the school, which will be used by second-through-fifth-graders in STEAM class, Abby Cockrell said.

As the paradigmshiftsto acceptance of more robotic applications in industry and personal use, students need to develop basic skills in manual dexterity and critical thinking, Payne wrote in an email Monday. By donating robot kits to Suffolk Christian Academy, we hope to spark interest in robotic concepts. Donations like this help to secure an educated and trained workforce for the future.

More than 200 SCA students were wowed by the machinations in store for them at the demonstrations throughout the school day.

Students were excited to watch the movements of the arm on an LT2/F Bulldog tactical robot. This one-armed bot carefully grabbed pencils out of their hands, with Aaron Cockrell manning the advanced controller for the machine.

The students were also impressed by the sleek inspection bot, painted silver and black and small enough for crawlspaces and other tight spaces.

They were just super stoked, Abby Cockrell said. You could see it on their faces. They were bright smiles and wide eyes, and super curious.

Aaron Cockrell also had the students draw their own robot designs on pieces of paper. Some of them may have been far-fetched, like a robot that would do their homework, but that creative spark is the start of a lifelong interest in robotics.

It all starts with a creative mind, he said. I think a lot of times people think, I cant do this, but when you are creating you start realizing, Hey, what Im learning in school actually means something.

He said he had a great time coming back to his old Suffolk stomping grounds to show the students at SCA how their STEAM lessons can be applied to an exciting industry thats constantly growing, and his sister was very pleased with her students enthusiasm.

STEAM is all about just exposing kids early to the different parts of STEAM to science, technology, engineering, art and math and how that is incorporated in everyday life, Abby Cockrell said.

Its all about showing them how they can get involved and what they need to do to get there, and lessons like Robot Day are the building blocks for that foundation, Abby Cockrell said.

Its just exposing them to the subject, inspiring them and showing them what could be, she said.

Read this article:

Fun with robotics at SCA - The Suffolk News-Herald - Suffolk News-Herald

Robotics team on to the next contest – Beaverton Valley Times News

The group of more than a dozen Newberg High students has a new challenge before it this year

Hear ye, hear ye all hail the Knights of the Round Cable.

This merry band of engineering whizzes has been working around the clock over the past few months to compete in various robotics competitions and now they are preparing for "super qualifiers" in the next month. In the back rooms of Newberg High School, the group led by senior captain Paul Sperling is preparing for a trip to state competition.

"We've been competing as a program in this league for the last 10 years," he said. "We're given a challenge and try to build a robot to complete it. The last few months since September we've been working on our bots for that challenge."

The challenge sounds simple but requires a deft touch and depth of knowledge when it comes to engineering a robot. It also takes a small army of engineers, machinists and coders to put the device together.

Teams from around the globe all have the same challenge this year: Build a robot that can stack four-inch by eight-inch Lego pieces on top of each other, along with a handful of other feats.

"We build the robot to stack those and there's some other stuff like vision targets that we'll be doing," Sperling said. "So basically we're just stacking Legos."

The Newberg team dubbed the "Knights of the Round Cable" had four competitions in league play during November and December. They followed that up with a strong performance at qualifiers in January, then won the Super Qualifier tournament last week against a field of 25 teams. Now they prepare for state on March 14 and 15 with an eye on making it to the international competition in April.

"The qualifying tournament in January is a lot like a district track meet," Dan Sperling, the team's faculty advisor and Paul's father, said. "With track you have your meets during the season and if you do well at districts you get to move on. That's how this works for us.

"Robotics has a good history here at Newberg High School. There are over 200 teams in the state of Oregon and it's in the thousands internationally. This has been going on for more than 10 years like this locally with a different competition each year."

Between 12 and 15 students are actively involved with this year's team and that's a lower number than usual. Newberg used to have enough participants for four different teams, but participation has dwindled.

Still, this passionate bunch of future engineers is proud of the robot they put together. It has spinning wheels to grab onto the Lego brick, an arm to reach down with a grabber and pick up the brick, and the engineered ability to move around and stack the bricks with ease.

The younger Sperling and many of his teammates have been passionate about robotics for years. Much of the team wants to study some form of engineering in college primarily electrical engineering.

"I've always had a lot of fun tinkering around with stuff," Paul Sperling said. "In seventh or eighth grade I got a 3D printer and started messing around with it. My brother was on the team and it seemed to make sense, so I joined."

Farm Bureau scholarships available

The Yamhill County Farm Bureau will award two separate $2,000 scholarships to students this year.

The scholarships are being offered to students who have finished at least one year of college pursuing a degree related to agriculture.

Those who apply for the scholarships must have a college grade-point average of 2.5 or better and be graduates of a Yamhill County high school, or their family must have lived in the county during their senior year of high school.

Application materials must include an official transcript and two references and more information is available at http://www.OregonFB.org/scholarships.

PNMC offers scholarships

Providence Newberg Medical Center will award six $1,500 scholarships to area high school students this spring and those students are being invited to apply.

Seniors who plan on continuing their education to pursue careers in the healthcare industry can apply by visiting http://www.providence.org/newberg and filling out an application, with the deadline for mailing it to PNMC set for March 22.

Students who live throughout Yamhill and Washington counties are welcome to apply for the scholarships, which have been distributed since 2003.

You count on us to stay informed and we depend on you to fund our efforts.Quality local journalism takes time and money. Please support us to protect the future of community journalism.

Original post:

Robotics team on to the next contest - Beaverton Valley Times News

Conroe ISD robotics teams heading to state finals competition – Chron

By Jamie Swinnerton, Staff writer

From left to right, Diego Zarur, Stone Meng, Mateo Martinez and Lauren Hamel practice driving their robot at The Woodlands High School, Thursday, Feb. 27, 2020. The Woodlands High School will be competing in state finals in Dallas on March 14, 2020.

From left to right, Diego Zarur, Stone Meng, Mateo Martinez and Lauren Hamel practice driving their robot at The Woodlands High School, Thursday, Feb. 27, 2020. The Woodlands High School will be competing in

Photo: Gustavo Huerta, Houston Chronicle / Staff Photographer

From left to right, Diego Zarur, Stone Meng, Mateo Martinez and Lauren Hamel practice driving their robot at The Woodlands High School, Thursday, Feb. 27, 2020. The Woodlands High School will be competing in state finals in Dallas on March 14, 2020.

From left to right, Diego Zarur, Stone Meng, Mateo Martinez and Lauren Hamel practice driving their robot at The Woodlands High School, Thursday, Feb. 27, 2020. The Woodlands High School will be competing in

Conroe ISD robotics teams heading to state finals competition

The future is here, and Conroe ISD students are ready and eager to be a part of it. This year, two robotics teams from the district will be heading to the state competition on March 14 in Dallas and are hoping to work together.

Caney Creek High School and The Woodlands High School robotics teams will both be competing later this month at the FIRST Tech Challenge UIL State Championship competition. What theyre hoping for is the opportunity for an alliance. They spent Wednesday afternoon running through the set task with both robots, learning how the other team works and how they may be bale to work together.

Being able to work together in the competition is not a guarantee, but if they do get paired together theyll be ready.

The Woodlands High School final team is an amalgamation of five different teams that started at the beginning of the school year. Now, the best parts of all teams have come together to form team Rigatoni Pastabots. Come competition day, 15 students will be traveling to Dallas. most of the members are students in the robotics class, but some are just members of the club, or too young to take the class.

This is the first year for the robotics class at TWHS, and the second year for the robotics team on campus. Before forming a campus team interested students used to have to travel to College Park High School to participate in their team.

Its something The Woodlands has always tried to do but we struggled to get kids to do robotics because they had to go somewhere else to do it, said Lauren Hamel, a science teacher at TWHS and the team sponsor. Hamel was the one who lobbied to get the robotics class at TWHS.

Anything above district level competitions gets funding through the district, but before that the team was on their own, raising funds mostly through sponsorships (including a grant from Google).

Ignacio Gonzalez, a senior at TWHS, joined his sophomore year after looking for more activities to get involved with. This year, hes President of the team.

It wasnt a very big club at that point, we had about eight members on a good day, he said. I stayed because I thought the team had potential.

Gonzalez said that some of the design, construction, and coding for the robot they are taking to states is his. But his favorite part is driving. After graduation he wants to major in computer or electrical engineering and plans on continuing to work with robots, a plan solidified by joining the team.

Matthew Kozlowski was one of the main programmers for the team and had been interested in robotics and programming before he joined. He saw the team as a good way to put those skills to the test in a real-world situation. Its a much more involved process than he had been expecting. He estimates that he spends somewhere between 15 and 30 hours a week programming.

I thought it would be very simple, you know, just tell the robot to go forward, he said. Theres a lot of stuff that has to occur at the same time.

Its not just robotics that all competing teams have to work on. along with building a robot, the team has to create presentations and marketing materials for their robot and team. For TWHS, those materials were created by team member Jennifer OConnell. She started working on the robot but transitioned to brand management, and created all of the art for the team.

We needed someone to do the notebook and have art for the team because we couldnt get sponsors without having a good image and a good presence within the community, she said.

Her favorite part is going to the competitions and seeing the whole team come together to work on the robot.

This will be Caney Creeks second time heading to states, their first time being the 2017-18 school year when they came back with second place. This years team is made up of four seniors. For Darren Lindon Kelley, the teams main programmer, this isnt something he plans on quitting anytime soon.

We half joke about just going into the Battlebots thing after this, or just making bots for fun, either one, really, he said.

After graduation he plans on studying computer science. his advice for anyone interested in joining robotics is to get involved before your senior year, unless you join a college team no one will be paying for it after that.

Shemar Allen-Thomas got into robotics because his friends were participating, and like Gonzalez his favorite part is driving the robot.

Its amazing, especially when you get to build it from random parts and see how it works, he said.

While he doesnt plan on going into computer science or engineering after graduation (he wants to become a police officer some day), he can see himself working on robots as a hobby.

This is Caney Creek robotics teacher Angela Crawfords third year with the team. Each year the competition gets tougher, she said, but her team has kept their eye on the prize.

I cant say enough about these guys, she said. We struggled a lot during the regular season but these guys did not let it get the best of them. They kept moving forward.

jamie.swinnerton@chron.com

See the original post:

Conroe ISD robotics teams heading to state finals competition - Chron

Top 10 Robotics Engineering Universities and Courses in 2020 – Analytics Insight

Today, robots as the automated machines, have become a huge part of our lives in an effort to help people in an assortment of settings, from assembling processes to working in complex conditions, unsatisfactory for human life. Moreover, robotics as a field has penetrated a number of industries to accomplish assorted tasks by structuring mechanical devices. The upsurge in technological advancements and demand for robotics professionals in the market has mandated the applicable education of budding tech-enthusiasts. Robotics has been undergoing rapid development, so studying wont be easy as you may think. However, significant universities are offering innovative and all-inclusive robotics programs to train the future of technology.

Here is the list of top 10 robotics engineering courses and universities that are redefining the face of robotics education.

Course: Master of Science in Engineering in Robotics

Department: Mechanical Engineering and Applied Mechanics

Description: The masters program in Robotics is a unique program administered by Penns General Robotics, Automation, Sensing and Perception (GRASP) Laboratory, recognized as one of the nations premier research centers. Multi-disciplinary in scope, the program provides an ideal foundation for what todays experts in robotics and intelligent systems need to know from artificial intelligence, computer vision, control systems, dynamics, and machine learning to design, programming and prototyping of robotic systems.

Course: Master of Science in Robotics Engineering

Department: Robotics Engineering

Description: WPIs MS in Robotics Engineering program is a leading, first-of-its-kind graduate program in the nation and an internationally lauded academic program. And for all the serious research that goes on here, the institute encourages imaginative and creative work with robots. On a campus located in the heart of New Englands robotics industry, youll work on innovative robotics projects from the get-go alongside influential and renowned faculty in its state-of-the-art labs.

Course: Master of Science in Robotics Systems Development

Department: The Robotics Institute

Description: The MRSD curriculum provides a broad education in the sciences and technologies of robotics, reinforces theory through hands-on laboratory projects and exposes students to practical business principles and skills. The unique curriculum allows students to work as a team towards practical system-level robotics development and integration projects. Key business concepts and practices in the curriculum include technology planning, product conceptualization and development, team management, project management, prototyping, production, marketing, and sales.

Course: Mechanical Engineering with Robotics MEng

Department: Engineering and Robotics

Description: The Master of Engineering (MEng) degree lets you specialize your degree with a range of options and provides you with the educational requirements needed to become a Chartered Engineer. On this course, you have the opportunity to develop specific expertise in robotics alongside skills in mechanical engineering; making you employable by various sectors, from robot design and development to autonomous cars, robotics, automation, mechatronics, automotive, aerospace, and renewable energies. The institutes world-class research in robotics, dynamics and control, space systems, sensors, and flexible electronics informs its degrees to give you the best start in your career.

Course: MSc in Engineering Robot Systems (Advanced Robotics Technology/Drones and Autonomous Systems)

Department: Engineering

Description: As an MSc in Engineering in Robot Systems you can take part in the development that occurs within drone- and robot systems. You can, for example, develop robots with artificial intelligence that recognizes different people and adapt to their needs in hospitals, in industry, and in private homes. Or you can work with drones (Unmanned Aerial Systems) which inspects powerlines or buildings, helps in agriculture, delivers blood samples to hospitals or find people who have been injured in natural disasters.

Course: Master of Engineering Sciences in Mechatronics

Department: Faculty of Mechanics

Description: To prepare high qualification graduates with deep comprehensive and up-to-date knowledge in mechatronics including mechanical engineering, information technologies, mechatronic systems, and mathematical modeling. To prepare specialists with analytical, modeling and projection skills in manufacturing and process management of mechatronic systems with their parameters optimization as well as the specialists having mechatronic problem-solving skills applicable to research. To provide students with the knowledge which is required to accomplish not only the tasks of projecting, researching and performing technologic-manufacturing jobs but also needful for executing the expert-consultative or supervisory functions in the mechatronic companies and organizations.

Course: Masters Degree in Robotics

Department: Robotics

Description: This program provides education on the theory, technology, and practice of intelligent robots, such as mobile robots, wearable robots, robotic manipulators, autonomous and brain-interfaced robots. In addition to classes spanning from electromechanical systems to advanced artificial intelligence, the program offers a large set of hands-on activities where students learn by designing, prototyping and validating robotic systems. Both core and optional classes include hands-on exercises aimed at applying theoretical aspects to real systems. In addition, for the semester and interdisciplinary projects, as well as the final masters thesis, students work with researchers on challenging problems within EPFL robotics laboratories or in the industry.

Course: Materials Science and Engineering (M.S.)

Department: Materials Science and Engineering (M.S.)

Description: Materials Science and Engineering (MSE) research is aimed at educating and training the next generation of out-of-the-box thinkers to solve the biggest global challenges. By fostering a multidisciplinary approach, MSE degree programs strive to endow students with the tools to strategically question current design paradigms and drive innovative materials and manufacturing solutions across a diverse range of technological sectors. Motivated by modern materials challenges in energy, computing, transportation, impact protection, robotics, and global health care, MSE programs comprehensive, experiential training is designed to arm graduates with a modernized skillset tailored to confront those challenges head-on.

Course: Master of Science or Doctorate in Robotics

Department: Robotics

Description: Michigan Robotics offers Masters and Ph.D. degrees. Both programs are built on a common set of course requirements, with Ph.D. students also completing research published in leading journals in the field of robotics. The Michigan Robotics program consists of three main technical areas, which converge as students produce functioning robots: Sensing of the environment, external agents, and internal body information to determine state information; Reasoning with that information to make decisions for guidance, control, and localization; and Acting upon the body and environment to produce motion or other outputs that enable the robot to locomote or interact with the environment. Each of these areas may be considered a sub-plan for coursework and research study.

Course: Master of Engineering and Graduate Certificate in Engineering programs

Department: Office of Advanced Engineering Education

Description: As one of the fastest-growing fields within technology and engineering, a graduate degree in robotics offers you career opportunities in diverse industries, including aerospace, manufacturing, defense, and even healthcare. The University of Marylands Master of Engineering and Graduate Certificate in Engineering programs bring together engineering professionals who have a passion for discovering robotics potential to benefit society. The institutes curriculum is designed to build understanding and expertise in robotics design, modeling, control systems, autonomous robotics, machine learning, computer vision, and human-robot interaction.

Original post:

Top 10 Robotics Engineering Universities and Courses in 2020 - Analytics Insight

These companies are spending billions so robots can perform surgery without a doctor in the room – MarketWatch

The same sorts of detection and emergency-braking features that have helped make cars safer may soon be coming to the operating room. These could show surgeons things they cant see with their eyes, such as real-time blood flow, and enable them to avoid tissue damage as they operate.

Advancements in artificial intelligence and sensing technologies are breathing new life into the market for robotic-assisted surgical devices, making it easier for surgeons to navigate small incisions, understand changes to the body and limit strain on joints.

Performing a robotic procedure today can look a bit like playing a video game, but as the technology progresses, some futurists think well reach a day when surgeons wont even need to be in the operating room at all during a procedure.

We want to remove surgeons from doing the fine precision work, which is really about how good you are with your hands, and move them into a more supervisory role of how and where you treat disease, said Michael Yip, an assistant professor of electrical and computer engineering at the University of California, San Diego.

Part of Yips research involves ways for a robot to explore the body and give the doctor several courses of action from which to choose. Once the doctor picks, the robot could execute the procedure while the doctor supervises.

The concept of autonomous robotic surgical machines can seem straight out of science fiction, and theyre admittedly many years from ever becoming reality. But Yip thinks the technology could broaden access to top surgeons and specialists, making it so patients in rural hospitals or on battlefields can get the same treatment as those in big metropolitan areas with a wealth of nearby specialists.

Robotic surgery has long been part of American operating rooms, driven primarily by Intuitive Surgical ISRG, -2.32%, which dominates the market for soft-tissue robotic-assisted devices. But a crop of new entrants that happen to be some of the largest health-care companies in the world Johnson & Johnson JNJ, +0.01%, Medtronic MDT, -1.11% and Stryker SYK, -1.96% are investing billions of dollars into a new wave of surgical robots.

We want to remove surgeons from doing the fine precision work, which is really about how good are you with your hands, and move them into a more supervisory role of how and where you treat disease.

After robotic-assisted devices broke on to the scene with fanfare near the beginning of the millennium, excitement plateaued amid questions about whether machines were actually contributing to better patient outcomes compared with traditional laparoscopies, or minimally invasive procedures.

Now, scientists are excited about the potential for artificial intelligence, improved connectivity, and other technological advancements to make robotic surgery more accurate and accessible, giving a boost to a surgical phenomenon that still makes up a sliver of procedures done today.

In robotic-assisted surgery, doctors sit behind a controller and operate computerized instruments as they perform minimally invasive surgery. The technology is meant to let doctors perform these procedures with more precision and control than they might achieve by standing above a patients body and maneuvering the surgical instruments by hand.

The market for robotic-assisted surgery is $4 billion, according to estimates from Medtronic, already half the size of the market for traditional minimally invasive surgery.

Thats striking because robotic procedures currently only make up about 2% of all procedures, by the companys estimates, while traditional minimally invasive surgery accounts for 30% to 35%. More than 60% of procedures are traditional open surgeries done with larger incisions.

Both [open and traditional minimally invasive surgeries] will be drawn into robotic-assisted surgery, said Robert White, Medtronics executive vice president for minimally invasive therapies, at an investor briefing in September according to a transcript. The company plans to launch a soft-tissue robot soon.

Hospitals tend to view robotic machines as marketing vehicles that can make their facilities stand out from rivals. Yet adoption varies depending on procedure type, and the scientific literature is mixed on whether robots provide benefits over more conventional procedures.

Technological enhancements could help the machines more uniformly bear out their early goals of improvements in patient outcomes and cost.

One key issue the surgical industry is looking to solve is visibility. Doctors can only see so much inside the body under regular white light, but some are upbeat that sensory improvements can help them detect in real time what cant be seen with the naked eye.

Merged with 3-D scans of the body taken before a procedure, this information can help surgeons plot a course of action and adapt as a procedure unfolds.

By converting CT scans into three-dimensional models of the body, Stryker claims it can develop a more precise plan for where to place a knee or hip implant. The companys Mako surgical robot takes that blueprint into account during joint replacements, which can allow a machine to set boundaries at the outset and restrain the saw blade before it hits nearby tendons or ligaments, said Robert Cohen, the chief technology officer for Strykers joint-replacement group.

Preventing damage to surrounding bodily structures is one benefit that orthopedic surgeons say they get from robotics. Patients are experiencing less trauma to their joints and that leads to early recoveries, said Dr. Charles Craven, who conducts hip and knee replacements with the Mako at Novant Health Clemmons Medical Center in North Carolina. He sees patients ditching their crutches and narcotics more quickly.

Intuitive Surgical is also drawing on 3-D scans by enabling doctors to create deeper models based on preoperative CT scans. The company fuses this information with fluorescent vision systems and intraoperative images like ultrasounds to give doctors a better real-time portrait of the body even as matter shifts in the middle of an operation, said Brian Miller, who oversees systems and vision at Intuitive.

The future of surgical visibility is starting to parallel the kinds of safety features that have recently made their way to cars. Side mirrors cant technically reflect a drivers blind spots, but newer models add little lights that indicate when another car is next to yours. They also cause the wheel to vibrate if you accidentally drift out of your lane.

The same type of signals can be applied to surgical robotics, said Todd Usen, the chief executive of Activ Surgical. His Boston-based startups software looks at the reflection of wavelengths to detect where veins, vessels and arteries are without the use of traditional dyes. It can also show things surgeons cant see, such as a real-time portrait of blood flow.

Give these details to a surgical robot and the machine could make precise decisions about how far to push an instrument, taking into account information that didnt show up on a pre-op scan. Get within a millimeter of an unexpected bodily landmine and the surgical instruments could automatically freeze without penetrating any further.

Today, only a doctor can make that decision, Usen said.

Right now, even though robotic arms are doing the cutting, surgeons still sit in the room and control the action. Usen sees a world where robots could eventually be working on one part of a surgery while a human surgeon controls another.

Intuitives Miller, however, is skeptical that surgeons could hand control over to a machine when conducting soft-tissue procedures, meaning those that dont involve joints or bones.

With soft tissue, when things can move around, the surgeon still needs to be in full control and make the final determination, he said. With knees, youve got the site fixed and its immobilized, but in soft tissue its a different story.

Remote surgery is already coming up in conversation as hospitals begin to think about 5G connectivity, said Chris Penrose, an AT&T T, -0.40% executive focused on business applications for the new wireless standard that promises faster data speeds and a quicker lag time between when someone executes a command and sees it actually play out.

Youre going to be able to have that same type of reaction time when youre physically present but be able to do that from afar, said Penrose. As that lag time shortens, doctors may be able to do more things remotely, like monitoring patients after surgery or even conducting procedures from another location.

Intuitive Surgical currently has a lock on the market for soft-tissue robotics. The company counts more than 5,500 da Vinci surgical robots in its installed base of devices and has notched a $70 billion market value by selling its machines, which can cost about $2 million apiece depending on features. Players like Stryker, Smith & Nephew SNN, -2.08% and Zimmer Biomet ZBH, -3.94% operate in the orthopedic-reconstructive space.

The field is about to get more crowded in the coming years, with Medtronic, the No. 1 player in the medical-device market, planning an international product launch that could provide some competition for Intuitives da Vinci. Dow Jones Industrial Average stalwart Johnson & Johnson is stepping up its efforts in the space as well, buying up Auris Health for $3.4 billion last year to gain access to the companys Monarch robot for bronchoscopies. It also took control of a former soft-tissue robotics partnership with Verily, Googles life-sciences arm, that focuses on merging robotics and health information.

The emergence of new players could bring down prices for surgical devices and help break Intuitives monopoly in soft-tissue robotics, said Dr. Conrad Ballecer, a general surgeon at Dignity Health St. Josephs Hospital and Medical Center in Phoenix.

Ballecer helps train surgeons outside the U.S. on how to use the da Vinci machine for hernia repairs, and hes found interest overseas, even if limited financial resources hinder how quickly international medical centers can add robots to their hospitals.

Competition will not only drive costs down but also make it more accessible to surgeons on a global basis, and thats ultimately not just a benefit to surgeons but also to patients, Ballecer said.

While heightened competition may help lower the cost of surgical machines, it wont reduce administrative complexity. For hospitals its tough to manage all the logistics of each of these systems, said Ryan Zimmerman, a former surgical director who now covers medical-technology stocks as an analyst for BTIG.

The ultimate winners, in his view, will be companies that can offer a complete universal system for everything from urology to orthopedics to the ears, nose and throat.

Another raging debate centers on whether robotic surgical machines can be compatible with the growing focus on value-based care in medicine, which says that health systems should deliver better quality care at a lower cost. Its a shift from the fee-for-service model that has dominated American medicine.

Whether the devices actually provide an improvement in patient outcomes is still a contentious topic in scientific literature, though doctors like Novants Craven are optimistic that future research will bear out the positive results theyre seeing anecdotally with their patients.

The second part of the equation is the cost side. Automation usually makes things cheaper, but thats not necessarily the case so far, at least in terms of direct costs, said Zachary Landry, the vice president of orthopedics and sports medicine at Novant Health. He cites the additional scans required for robotic procedures as one reason they could be costlier.

Looking at the broader array of medical costs shows a more complex picture. New research indicates that robotic surgery can lead to shorter hospital stays as a result of lower blood loss and less bodily trauma, factors that make the procedures more economically effective. One recent study found that patients also incurred lower out-of-pocket costs after robotic oncological procedures when compared with traditional laparoscopies.

After years of muted excitement over the robotic-surgery industry, the field looks due for a burst of enthusiasm as new players enter the space and technologists dream up ways to enhance the machines.

Emily Bary is a reporter at MarketWatch.

Read more from the original source:

These companies are spending billions so robots can perform surgery without a doctor in the room - MarketWatch

Wilton robotics team heads to world championships – The Wilton Bulletin

Members of Singularity Technology Wilton Librarys award-winning robotics team are, from left, Navod Jayawardhhane, Alex Cameron, Ria Raniwala, Rishabh Raniwala, Aarushi Agrawal, Christopher McCann, Shayna Wilson-Spiro and Rishab Ohri. Not pictured are Rohit Singhal and Edwin Gregory. Wilton, Conn. Feb. 29, 2020

Members of Singularity Technology Wilton Librarys award-winning robotics team are, from left, Navod Jayawardhhane, Alex Cameron, Ria Raniwala, Rishabh Raniwala, Aarushi Agrawal, Christopher McCann,

Photo: Jeannette Ross / Hearst Connecticut Media

Members of Singularity Technology Wilton Librarys award-winning robotics team are, from left, Navod Jayawardhhane, Alex Cameron, Ria Raniwala, Rishabh Raniwala, Aarushi Agrawal, Christopher McCann, Shayna Wilson-Spiro and Rishab Ohri. Not pictured are Rohit Singhal and Edwin Gregory. Wilton, Conn. Feb. 29, 2020

Members of Singularity Technology Wilton Librarys award-winning robotics team are, from left, Navod Jayawardhhane, Alex Cameron, Ria Raniwala, Rishabh Raniwala, Aarushi Agrawal, Christopher McCann,

Wilton robotics team heads to world championships

WILTON For the past seven years, Wilton Librarys robotics team, Singularity Technology, has inched closer and closer to the FIRST Tech Challenge World Championships and this year the team not only clinched a spot but it came in first at the state competition and will be heading to Detroit next month.

How does it feel? It feels pretty fantastic, Rishabh Raniwala, a Wilton High School senior, said last Friday at the librarys Innovation Station where the group meets regularly.

For the last two years, weve come close. Last year, we came in third and the year before that, we came in fourth, he said of the state competition.

Teammate Alex Cameron noted that each of those years the team got nipped by the rules. When they came in fourth, three teams advanced, and when they came in third, the rules changed to allow only two teams to advance.

But when you come in first, thats it, theres no holding back.

Singularity Technology as a whole won the Inspire Award at the state competition, which is the highest award a team can win, making it the top team in Connecticut.

In the FIRST Tech Challenge, students in grades 7 through 12 compete head to head by designing, building, and programming a robot to compete against other teams.

Another team member, Navod Jayawardhane, explained that when the season starts in September, each team receives a video that explains what the challenge is and how a team may score points by programming its robot to complete certain tasks.

This year, the teams robot had to collect yellow plastic blocks from one end of a 12-foot-square field and then carry and stack them at the other end. Using two smartphones and an Xbox controller, the team was able to direct its robot to collect and stack blocks and place them in the designated area. What team members are working on now is improving the robots performance so they can collect and stack blocks more quickly and efficiently.

We have an intake system, Navod explained that employs spinning wheels that draws the block in. Then a claw mechanism grabs it and can lift it up and deposit it.

That task is known as a driver-controlled challenge. There is also whats known as an autonomous challenge.

In the competition the autonomous challenge involved six stones that were actually plastic blocks. Two of them are specially marked sky stones. The stones are positioned based on the roll of the dice by a referee. The robots phone takes a picture of the layout and then sets out to find the sky stones.

At the state competition the team successfully collected one sky stone and is hoping to collect two for the championship.

The teams robot, which does not have a name, is built from scratch beginning in September. The main builders were Navod and Alex.

We did a redesign Oct. 15, which is not unusual, Rishabh said, and had the basics completed in January.

Of their design, he said, the dual slide system is unique. It goes horizontally and vertically.

They also did something new this year with the panels on the robots drive train. Sacred Heart University allowed them to use its water jet cutter to make a more intricate design.

For the world championships, where some 400 teams will compete from April 29 through May 2, the team is working on installing new wheels that are smoother and grippier. We hope it will move faster and more accurately, Rishabh said. The wheels allow the robot to not only move forward and backward but also from side to side.

They are also making coding changes to the robots internal GPS to help it better determine its position on the field.

To say we are proud of these kids is an understatement, said Susan Lauricella, Makerspace and teen services manager. They meet twice a week throughout the school year, they work together as a team, and some of them have been together for years. Their diligence, tenacity, perseverance and dedication have been evident throughout their time together. Theyve worked really hard for this accomplishment and it has paid off.

The Inspire Award is presented to the team exhibiting dedication and professionalism. The FIRST judges take into account not only the teams technical achievements, such as producing a superb engineering notebook, but it also acknowledges the teams overall development working with other teams, empathy, leadership and respect for others.

That fits into Singularity Technologys mission.

A lot of what we do is community outreach, promoting STEM, Rishabh said. Weve done presentations at the Cider Mill and Middlebrook science fairs. Any group that wants to hear from a robotics team, we would love to do that.

Singularity Technology is made up of two divisions, the main team and the Test and Prototype (TAP) team, which is made up of younger students who will eventually move up to the main team. In fact, last Friday members of the main team spent the afternoon mentoring the younger students on various aspects of robotics.

Wilton Library first formed Singularity Technology in 2013 and to date it is still the only library-based team in the state of Connecticut. This years main team members are seniors Rishabh Raniwala, Rohit Singal, Navod Jayawardhane, and Alex Cameron. Navod, Rishabh and Rohit are seniors who have been on the team together since eighth grade, so this is a particularly special time for them.

The TAP members are Aarushi Agrawal, Edwin Gregory, Chris McCann, Rishab Ohri, Ria Raniwala, and Shayna Wilson-Spiro.

Besides Lauricella, the teams other mentors include Tom Abend, Paul Lauricella and Thomas Kozak, who have been with the team throughout its seven-year development.

The idea of a library robotics team came to fruition when Susans husband, Paul, a software engineer and former commercial pilot, lamented that there isnt a library program for teens who liked engineering nerd stuff.

Singularity Technology will be going to Detroit mainly on the funds raised throughout the year with bake sales and its Destroy Your Hard Drive fundraiser held each November. Anyone wishing to support their effort and spur the team on may send donations payable to Wilton Library to Susan Lauricella at Wilton Library, 137 Old Ridgefield Road, Wilton, CT 06897, marked for robotics team.

See the original post:

Wilton robotics team heads to world championships - The Wilton Bulletin

Minimally Invasive Medical Robotics Market Increasing Demand with Leading Player, Comprehensive Analysis, Forecast to 2026 – News Times

The report on the Minimally Invasive Medical Robotics Market is a compilation of intelligent, broad research studies that will help players and stakeholders to make informed business decisions in future. It offers specific and reliable recommendations for players to better tackle challenges in the Minimally Invasive Medical Robotics market. Furthermore, it comes out as a powerful resource providing up to date and verified information and data on various aspects of the Minimally Invasive Medical Robotics market. Readers will be able to gain deeper understanding of the competitive landscape and its future scenarios, crucial dynamics, and leading segments of the Minimally Invasive Medical Robotics market. Buyers of the report will have access to accurate PESTLE, SWOT, and other types of analysis on the Minimally Invasive Medical Robotics market.

The Global Minimally Invasive Medical Robotics Market is growing at a faster pace with substantial growth rates over the last few years and is estimated that the market will grow significantly in the forecasted period i.e. 2019 to 2026.

Key Players Mentioned in the Minimally Invasive Medical Robotics Market Research Report:

Minimally Invasive Medical Robotics Market: A Competitive Perspective

Competition is a major subject in any market research analysis. With the help of the competitive analysis provided in the report, players can easily study key strategies adopted by leading players of the Minimally Invasive Medical Robotics market. They will also be able to plan counterstrategies to gain a competitive advantage in the Minimally Invasive Medical Robotics market. Major as well as emerging players of the Minimally Invasive Medical Robotics market are closely studied taking into consideration their market share, production, revenue, sales growth, gross margin, product portfolio, and other significant factors. This will help players to become familiar with the moves of their toughest competitors in the Minimally Invasive Medical Robotics market.

Minimally Invasive Medical Robotics Market: Drivers and Limitations

The report section explains the various drivers and controls that have shaped the global market. The detailed analysis of many market drivers enables readers to get a clear overview of the market, including the market environment, government policy, product innovation, development and market risks.

The research report also identifies the creative opportunities, challenges, and challenges of the Minimally Invasive Medical Robotics market. The framework of the information will help the reader identify and plan strategies for the potential. Our obstacles, challenges and market challenges also help readers understand how the company can prevent this.

Minimally Invasive Medical Robotics Market: Segment Analysis

The segmental analysis section of the report includes a thorough research study on key type and application segments of the Minimally Invasive Medical Robotics market. All of the segments considered for the study are analyzed in quite some detail on the basis of market share, growth rate, recent developments, technology, and other critical factors. The segmental analysis provided in the report will help players to identify high-growth segments of the Minimally Invasive Medical Robotics market and clearly understand their growth journey.

Ask for Discount @ https://www.marketresearchintellect.com/ask-for-discount/?rid=166328&utm_source=NT&utm_medium=888

Minimally Invasive Medical Robotics Market: Regional Analysis

This section of the report contains detailed information on the market in different regions. Each region offers a different market size because each state has different government policies and other factors. The regions included in the report are North America, Europe, Asia Pacific, the Middle East and Africa. Information about the different regions helps the reader to better understand the global market.

Table of Content

1 Introduction of Minimally Invasive Medical Robotics Market

1.1 Overview of the Market1.2 Scope of Report1.3 Assumptions

2 Executive Summary

3 Research Methodology of Market Research Intellect

3.1 Data Mining3.2 Validation3.3 Primary Interviews3.4 List of Data Sources

4 Minimally Invasive Medical Robotics Market Outlook

4.1 Overview4.2 Market Dynamics4.2.1 Drivers4.2.2 Restraints4.2.3 Opportunities4.3 Porters Five Force Model4.4 Value Chain Analysis

5 Minimally Invasive Medical Robotics Market , By Deployment Model

5.1 Overview

6 Minimally Invasive Medical Robotics Market , By Solution

6.1 Overview

7 Minimally Invasive Medical Robotics Market , By Vertical

7.1 Overview

8 Minimally Invasive Medical Robotics Market , By Geography

8.1 Overview8.2 North America8.2.1 U.S.8.2.2 Canada8.2.3 Mexico8.3 Europe8.3.1 Germany8.3.2 U.K.8.3.3 France8.3.4 Rest of Europe8.4 Asia Pacific8.4.1 China8.4.2 Japan8.4.3 India8.4.4 Rest of Asia Pacific8.5 Rest of the World8.5.1 Latin America8.5.2 Middle East

9 Minimally Invasive Medical Robotics Market Competitive Landscape

9.1 Overview9.2 Company Market Ranking9.3 Key Development Strategies

10 Company Profiles

10.1.1 Overview10.1.2 Financial Performance10.1.3 Product Outlook10.1.4 Key Developments

11 Appendix

11.1 Related Research

Request Report Customization @ https://www.marketresearchintellect.com/product/global-minimally-invasive-medical-robotics-market-size-forecast/?utm_source=NT&utm_medium=888

About Us:

Market Research Intellect provides syndicated and customized research reports to clients from various industries and organizations with the aim of delivering functional expertise. We provide reports for all industries including Energy, Technology, Manufacturing and Construction, Chemicals and Materials, Food and Beverage and more. These reports deliver an in-depth study of the market with industry analysis, market value for regions and countries and trends that are pertinent to the industry.

Contact Us:

Mr. Steven FernandesMarket Research IntellectNew Jersey ( USA )Tel: +1-650-781-4080

Email: [emailprotected]

TAGS: Minimally Invasive Medical Robotics Market Size, Minimally Invasive Medical Robotics Market Growth, Minimally Invasive Medical Robotics Market Forecast, Minimally Invasive Medical Robotics Market Analysis, Minimally Invasive Medical Robotics Market Trends, Minimally Invasive Medical Robotics Market

More:

Minimally Invasive Medical Robotics Market Increasing Demand with Leading Player, Comprehensive Analysis, Forecast to 2026 - News Times

Challenges and successes of poultry robotics – Poultry World

A review of agricultural robotics research applicable to poultry production has shown there are both challenges and huge potential for the global poultry sector.

The desk research, Agricultural robotics research applicable to poultry production, looked at agricultural robotics research from 24 global universities and 8 commercial robots. It found that most of the published work on agricultural robotics had been in the areas of perception and reasoning. This emphasis had been on the identification of objects, evaluation of product quality, monitoring of animal growth and development, yield production and machine guidance.

Robots, drones and other autonomous tools can be used to better monitor birds. Photo Jan Willem van Vliet

The research also found that there has been limited published work on the task execution and systems integration aspects of agricultural robotics. Among the challenges that need to be addressed are developing robots for specific agricultural tasks. Examples in poultry production include monitoring environmental conditions and chicken health, egg picking and encouraging chicken movement. The approaches to addressing the technical needs have been creating movable machines for us alongside the chickens in the poultry house.

Innovative farming:

Is changing the face of poultry. Find out the latest information on housing innovations, automation and robotics.

Some of the most noticeable results include:

Tibot

Tibot has been listed in EU circles as one of the key start-ups to watch during 2020. Although they have been operating since 2016, their 2 robotics solutions have attracted considerable interest from poultry breeding companies. Spoutnic is an autonomous rechargeable robot designed to increase the technical and economic performance of poultry operations and to improve the breeders work conditions. Sputnic NAV, which uses an indoor navigation system to stimulate the movement of poultry and aerate litter are being used by major players such as Hubbard, Le Helloco, Agrial and Prodavi. The start up is believed to have raised around 4 million to date.

The paper, published in Computers and Electronics in Agriculture, concludes that this trend of research is expected to continue, adding that an emerging emphasis would be the study of interactions of automated tasks to achieve high efficiency in whole poultry house management.

See the original post:

Challenges and successes of poultry robotics - Poultry World

What the Japan Olympics Teaches Us About the Role of Robots – Grit Daily

I departed from Narita airport in Japan last weekwithout seeing an Immigration Officer.

No, this wasnt a Carlos Ghosn type stunt of being smuggled out in a cello case. The departureimmigration was handled via robotic lanes using a scanned passport and facial recognition. Itwas a great feeling. I now know what a fenced-in dog feels like when it comes across an open gate. A feeling of is this really possible, or will I get yelled at the minute I step through the gate?

It went smoothly, nobody yelled, and I was through without facing an immigration official. I have nothing against them as a breed, and Japanese immigration officers are certainly among the nicest. Its just that all immigration staff give me a feeling of standing in court in front of a magistrate. After 30 seconds youre ready to confess to all your transgressions. All right, all right, Ill spill the beans, please go easy on me. I didnt use the cross-walk yesterday when crossing the road!

Japan has always been on the forefront of robotics. But the upcoming Tokyo Olympics promises to take it up a notch with the intent of having visitors experiencelife in a future universal society. Expect tablets worn around the neck to translate Japanese into 10 languages, robots carrying your luggage, and of course self-driving cars.

Japan has a long history of mixing robotics and the Olympics. The 1964 Olympics introduced the bullet train (Shinkansen) to the world. The return of the Olympics to Japan will showcase the possibilities of robotics in the current world. Beyond the examples already mentioned, expect to see robots picking up athletes javelins in the stadium, artificial meteor lightshows,the next generation of maglev trains, hydrogen powered vehicles and use of algae fuel for flights to Japan. And of course, itwouldnt be Japan if we didnt have the future of television with broadcasts in 8K.

All this investment in robotics isnt just showmanship. Prime Minister Abe has pledged to triple spending on Robotics. Theres a strong economic case for investing in robots. Japan has a major workforce challenge due to an ageing population. Not only to replace retiring workers, but also to provide care to the elderly. Add to that the nationalistic rhetoric floating around the world against immigration, and whats left is the strategy of automation. So, Japan is turning this issue into an opportunity to leap into the future. In doing so, its providing us with several lessons about using robots.

Adoption is cultural: Western culture has been fed a diet of scary Terminator robots, whereas Japanese culture (perhaps influenced by Shintoism) has the ability to respect inanimate objects. Is the use of cuddly robots in nursing homes for providingmental stimulation to patients with dementia creepy, or a smart humane idea? This is true in corporate settings too. Familiarity with technology eases adoption issues.

The reality of job losses due to robots is nuanced:Japan and Korea are relying on robotics to replace an ageing workforce. Companies like Foxconn in China who will implement 10,000 to 30,000 Foxbots have a choice to use labor. Or do they? I honestly dont know. Is the use of sweat factories any better?

Robotics usage is spreading faster than most people think: Were lulled into thinking that robots are clunky and not ready because consumer robotics hasnt reached the C3PO level of sophistication. Not true. Robots can be single-function and not be intelligent. If warehouses in Amazon have more single-function robots than humans, then the issue is no longer robotic capability.

Robots are contentious. They can inspire feelings of hope (e.g. nursing home robots), curiosity (e.g. Roomba cleaning robots) or simply aversion (e.g. unrestricted use of facial recognition by some governments). What if reality was nuanced? What if all of the above had some element of truth?

In the meantime, if other countries are looking for feedback on automated immigration lanes, please call me. I have only three words for them. Just do it!

Continue reading here:

What the Japan Olympics Teaches Us About the Role of Robots - Grit Daily

INTERVIEW: Star Wars-themed robotics competition getting underway at the DECC – KBJR 6

DULUTH, MN - KBJR 6's Jessie Slater sat down with Annalise Borman whose the Media Co-Captain of the Duluth East Daredevils robotics team to learn more about a fierce battle getting underway at the DECC.

The FIRST Robotics Regional Competition will be held there this weekend.

Dubbed the ultimate sport for the mind, high school students from all over the area are challenged to raise funds and create an industrial-sized robot to battle other teams on the playing field.

Each team is given six weeks to build up the best bot they can with a trip to the national competition on the line.

The Daredevils coach says this year's Star Wars franchise powers the game, and Disney and Lucasfilms sponsors the game.

The game is Star Wars-themed, and the Daredevils' bot is a female bot named Ashoka, based on a Star Wars character.

For more details on the robotics competition please click here.

Continued here:

INTERVIEW: Star Wars-themed robotics competition getting underway at the DECC - KBJR 6

The robotics tournament returns to the 2020 Kentucky Derby Festival – WHAS11.com

LOUISVILLE, Ky. Get ready to roborumble! The Samtec RoboRumble Regional Robotic Tournament is returning at the 2020 Kentucky Derby Festival.

The robotic tournament challenges students and teams to design, build and compete with robots. The competition begins on March 7 at 9 A.M. at Marion C. Moore High School with the awards ceremony following at 3 P.M.

Samtec is proud to once again sponsor the KDF Foundation RoboRumble Robotic Tournament, said Doug Wathen, Marketing Director. We are committed to supporting programs that encourage STEM to develop the next generation of engineers, programmers, and technicians in our community.

WHAS11

The 32-ft-long Maker Mobile will also be on-site for the students to experience. The mobile maker space brings education to life by using lasers, 3D-printers, CNC equipment, and more. The Maker Mobile exposes traditional maker equipment to kids of all ages to inspire creativity and future innovators.

As a kid, I would have never imagined how amazing robotics could be, said Mike Moore, JCPS Parent. The RoboRumble gives our students the opportunity to show they have the creativity and imagination to do anything!

The 2020 RoboRumble will include five events:

MORE KDF EVENTS:

Make it easy to keep up-to-date with more stories like this. Download the WHAS11 News app now. ForAppleorAndroidusers.

Have a news tip? Emailassign@whas11.com, visit ourFacebook pageorTwitter feed.

Here is the original post:

The robotics tournament returns to the 2020 Kentucky Derby Festival - WHAS11.com

Dexai Robotics Announces Oversubscribed Funding Round to Launch Alfred, a Robotic Sous-chef – Business Wire

BOSTON--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Dexai Robotics, an AI robotics company focused on commercial kitchen automation, announced today that it has raised an oversubscribed $5.5 Mn Seed Round, led by Hyperplane Venture Capital. New investors Rho Capital, Harlem Capital, Contour Venture Partners, and NextView Ventures also participated in this financing round. Vivjan Myrto, a Managing Partner at Hyperplane, joined Dexais board of directors. The company will use the funding to expand its engineering, sales, and product teams, allowing it to serve new cuisines and fuel its growth in the foodservice space.

Dexai was born out of a research collaboration in artificial intelligence for robotics among researchers at The Charles Stark Draper Laboratory, MIT, and Harvard. This work, led by David MS Johnson, Dexais CEO and Co-Founder, resulted in breakthrough software innovations that enabled robots to control, for the first time, deformable materials such as ice cream, sushi-grade tuna, pico de gallo, etc. At the same time, Anthony Tayoun, Dexais CFO and Co-Founder, was pursuing an MBA at Harvard Business School, when he was struck by the huge labor gap in the restaurant industry. Each restaurant operator I spoke with complained that their most difficult challenge is finding, training, and retaining staff, said Tayoun. We founded Dexai to address the 150,000-person labor shortage in the restaurant industry, so that restaurants can focus on hospitality and, by robots handling repetitive tasks, workforce satisfaction.

Alfred is the only robot that works in existing kitchens, and prepares meals from different cuisines faster, safer, and more affordably. US consumers' demand for food prepared outside the home continues to surpass that for food at home, growing at double the rate in the last decade, according to the USDAs Economic Research Service.

The restaurant industry faces an acute labor shortage with operators identifying recruiting and retaining employees as their top challenge, said Michael Kaufman, a Dexai adviser and a past chair of the National Restaurant Associations board. There appear to be no signs of that abating. Alfred is an impressive and thoughtfully designed solution for restaurant operators to consider.

Alfred can be dropped into existing kitchens because its artificial intelligence software recognizes its surroundings and adapts to the task at hand, said Johnson. Because Alfred uses standard utensils, it can make ice cream sundaes for one customer, quinoa bowls for another, and poke for a third. Were teaching robots how to see and identify different objects and foodstuff, and prepare the delicious recipes that people already know and enjoy.

Dexai is leveraging the commoditization of robotics hardware and the advancements in machine learning tools, particularly in vision and path planning, to solve real business problems, said Peter Wurman, Dexai advisor and co-founder of Kiva Systems. A lot of necessary pieces are coming together to make it possible for affordable robots to perform activities in these semi-structured environments.

The Dexai team identified a huge need in the food industry, resulting from shifting eating habits where people eat much more away from the home, and the rise of delivery, evidenced by the rapid growth of ghost kitchens and food ordering platforms, said Myrto. As a firm committed to investing in machine intelligence applications, we are excited to have Dexai bring intelligent robots to an everyday activity that we all enjoy: food.

About Dexai RoboticsDexai automates activities in commercial kitchens and anywhere food is prepared, using flexible robot arms. Dexai currently offers Alfred, a collaborative robot arm that uses utensils to scoop and pick ingredients, exceeding human capabilities in speed and precision. Alfred is a plug-and-play solution for quick service restaurants, and can be used to prepare salads, bowls, etc. without any alteration to a restaurants layout or recipes. Visit dexai.com to learn more about Alfred or join Dexais growing team.

About HyperplaneHyperplane Venture Capital is a seed stage firm based in Boston, Massachusetts. The firm partners with exceptional founders who are harnessing machine intelligence, sensor technology, and cloud computing to design solutions at the nexus of perception, communication, and insight. Hyperplanes portfolio covers a wide array of industries including financial technologies, robotics, digital health, industrial automation, and others.

Excerpt from:

Dexai Robotics Announces Oversubscribed Funding Round to Launch Alfred, a Robotic Sous-chef - Business Wire

Some of the brightest minds in robotics prepare to duel – OrilliaMatters.Com

Some of the best minds in the world of robotics will be coming to Georgian College's Barrie campus this weekend.

It will be an epic battle of robots as the college hosts the fourth annual FirstRobotics competition on Saturday and Sunday, in collaboration with First Robotics Canada.

There will be 29 teams of high school students, including six from Simcoe County, Grey County and Muskoka,who will compete using robots they designed, built, programmed and tested.

The competition includes900 team supporters,100 volunteers, including many Georgian staff and students, as well as numerous dignitaries who will be on hand to take it all in.

The opening ceremonies are set for 11 a.m. on Saturday, with qualification matches to begin to take place from 11:30 a.m. until 1:30 p.m., followed by more qualifiers in the afternoon from 2:30 p.m. until 7 p.m.

Sunday will see elimination matches from 1-4 p.m., followed by the presentation of awards and the closing ceremonies from 4 p.m. until 5:30 p.m.

All of the action takes place in the Athletics Centre at the college, which is located at 1 Georgian Dr.

FirstRobotics Canada, which was started in 2002, has more than 1,000 teams in Canada and now reaches in excess of20,000 Canadian students.

For more information on the robotics competition, click here.

See original here:

Some of the brightest minds in robotics prepare to duel - OrilliaMatters.Com