Students learn critical thinking, problem solving during PLCC Robotics Camp – Suburbanite

Carolynn Mostyn TheSuburbanite.com correspondent

Middleschoolers Owen Garee,of Green,and Dylan Snyder,ofLake,were working together to make the final adjustments to their robot for competition at Portage Lakes Career Center during the VEX Robotics Camp.

Two camps ran July 24 through 28 at the school. The first was a beginner camp and the second an advanced camp. Many of the campers attend both camps.

The team of Garee and Snyder found after programming the robot and making a trial run that the robot's wheels were not steady and were"whacky and wiggly," they said. They then tightened all of the bolts and nuts to keep the robot going in straight lines and staying on the course.

The camp instructors are high school teachers and college students working with IST (Integrated Systems Technology).

Michael James, atech teacher at Elgin High School near Marion,said they put competition into the days at camp.

"Anytime a kid can have competition they will learn and do better," he said.

Jamessaid critical thinking, problem solving and working as a team are important lessons the campers learn.

"If you look at any engineering or any project, you have to work as a team. It is not just 'hey I can do it all myself,' " he said.

James added they do, sometimes, match kids up as teams but for the most partthe kids just sit down and start working together.

"It is amazing how few problems you have with that," Jamessaid. "A lot of them are kids from different schools and they don't know anyone. They start making friends."

The team of instructors travel all over the state doing camps throughout the summer.

Jarrett Taylor and Ben Casper were working to program code their robot to follow the course and pick up a cone and place it on top of another one. The boys explained that instructors are keeping score of each team's progress of different tasks to earn a ranking within the 12 teams.

The students at camp were from various school districts in the area and are going into sixth through ninth grade. This is the fourth year the robotics camp has been held at the career center.

Maria Schlenk, programming and software development instructor for PLCC, said on the first day the kids worked from an instruction book and parts and pieces to build their robots. Once they completed the robots, they use a game controller to drive them around and play with them. The second day, they competed going through mazes and picking things up.

"That was fun for the kids," she said.

Students also began programming the robots, writing a program in a language calledRobotics C, whichtells the robot how to move and what to do. Robots then areoperated autonomously (without a human controlling them).

The STEM camp is primarily engineering and the students are hands-on inbuilding the robots and using their creativity. During the programming or coding, logic, thinking step-by-step and control comes in to play.

"It is thinking logically, critically and problem solving," said Schlenk.

She said the students sometimes want to hurry and get the robot together so they can play with it. That is when they find out that the wheels might fall off and parts don't work. But they learn, Schlenk.

"The more work you put in ahead of time the better the first results," she said. "Take time to do it right the first time and you won't have to redo it. They also learn interpersonal skills. You have to model teamwork and teach teamwork."

The last day of camp parents are invited to watch the competition between the teams.

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Students learn critical thinking, problem solving during PLCC Robotics Camp - Suburbanite

Robots can now heal themselves – Wired.co.uk

Science Museum / Heritage Lottery Fund

Roboticists have designed soft robots that can heal themselves.

Cutting your hand or tearing a muscle are both injuries that heal over time for living organisms. But what if robots could heal too? New research published in the Science Robotics Journal suggests this may be the case in our near future.

Researchers at the Vrije Universiteit Brussel (VUB) have extended this self-healing property specifically to soft robots. These are robots constructed from flexible materials that enable them to be used to grab delicate objects in the food industry or in minimally invasive surgery. They play an important role in rehabilitation and arm prostheses.

Bram Vanderborght

"A robot is very complex and difficult to repair. And the soft robots are particularly susceptible to sharp objects and high pressure" explains professor Bram Vanderborght of VUB, one of the five researchers behind the project. "This research is the first step in introducing self-healing materials in soft robotics, which we think will start a whole new research field of self-healing robotics," Vanderborght continues.

During their experiments, the team built soft robots made entirely from rubbery polymers. When damaged, these materials first recovered their original shape and then healed completely. "This principle was tested on three self-healing robotic components: a gripper used for robots to pick up items, a robot hand, and an artificial muscle," he continues. "Realistic damage could be healed completely without leaving any weak spot. The prototypes were able to fully resume their tasks."

Once a soft robot is damaged, the material is able to heal after being heated for 40 minutes at 80C. After 24 hours at 25C, the damaged robot's strength and flexibility would also be restored.

The polymer material used does this because it consists of a network of cross links that allow the Diels-Alder reaction to take place. This reaction allows new bonds to be made by the molecules. "By applying heat, those cross-links will break, which gives the polymer material more mobility. This mobility allows the molecules to close the gap made by the damage. When healed the material has to be cooled down, during which the initial properties are almost completely regained," explains Vanderborght.

The team, which has backing from the European Research Council, also has big hopes for the impact of this research. "We hope that humans will develop a new kind of trust in robots, knowing that their functional performance is not depending on the human detection and repair of damages," the team said in a statement.

Indeed, the gap in this field of industry makes this research particularly exciting. "The inability to heal is one of the major shortcomings of our mechanical systems versus their biological counterparts," confirms electrical engineering expert, professor Russell Tedrake of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. "Suitable progress in this direction could substantially improve the robustness of our machines." However, Tedrake questions the extent to which this technology is completely groundbreaking, noting that we already have self-healing tyres.

But Fumiya Iida, soft robotic researcher at the University of Cambridge, argues the research is a major step-forward for the field. "Self-healing soft robot technology is a significant breakthrough. Self-recovery makes the entire mechanical system cheaper and safer in a human-oriented environment".

More immediately, the VUB team is hoping to work towards adding a sensor network to detect the health status of robots and even new materials.

Updated 17.08.17, 12:50: This article was amended to correct the spelling of Fumiya Iida's name and clarify a statement given by Russell Tedrake.

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Robots can now heal themselves - Wired.co.uk

Matrix Design, LLC – Robotics Online (press release)

Matrix Design, LLC Posted 08/17/2017

New Modular Robotic Deburr Demo Cell Includes interchangeable stations and FANUC robot

South Elgin, IL - Matrix Design, LLC will be exhibiting at Gear Expo 2017 from October 24-26 in Columbus, OH. Thousands of gear industry professionals are expected to attend the event to discover cost-effective solutions and new technologies.

Gear Expo, owned by the American Gear Manufacturers Association, offers learning opportunities and educational options designed to give technology professionals and those that serve the industry tools to succeed in the future. This event takes place at the Greater Columbus Convention Center where attendees will get a one-stop shopping experience that covers all their manufacturing needs including automation, forgings, bearings, heat treating, inspection, and more than 75 other product categories.

Matrix will exhibit in booth #422, a 20 x 20 space, and will feature their brand new Deburr Demo cell. Here, attendees will have the opportunity to see live advanced robotic deburring technologies. This modular-designed automation system includes four interchangeable stations arranged in a quadrant formation around a single M-20iA35M FANUC robot, each featuring various deburring solutions that address the unique challenges associated with deburring.

We are very excited to unveil our new robotic deburring applications system, says Jeff Bennett, Vice President of Sales and Marketing. This new system will allow us to demonstrate our automated deburring technologies to manufacturers as well as qualify new potential deburring applications. Matrixs staff will be on hand to present, answer questions, and to help end users understand how manufacturers operations can benefit from increased productivity, improved safety and work environment, decreased costs, and consolidation of processes.

About Matrix Design Matrix works closely with end users to develop, build, and install robotic automation systems. Specializing in machine tending, deburring, and a range of material handling systems, Matrix has built a reputation for designing and delivering the most optimal and robust industrial automation systems to manufacturers worldwide.

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Matrix Design, LLC - Robotics Online (press release)

Making the Grade: Robotics comes full circle; student becomes teacher – Atlanta Journal Constitution

In 2005, Jon Welsch was president of the robotics club in his Forsyth County high school. We made little Erector Set robots and entered robotics competitions where wed build huge ones, he recalls. Every January, wed compete with different schools. Thats what got me going on this track.

That track wasnt being an engineer or designer. Instead, Welsch so enjoyed working on the team projects that he earned a degree in career and technical education from UGA in 2012 an immediately went into the classroom. I knew I wanted to come back and work with the next generation of students, he said.

In 2013, Welsch started teaching at Forsyths STEM academy, and three years ago, he became the engineering and tech teacher at North Forsyth Middle. Neither of those jobs would have been possibilities before he joined the robotics team, something Rick Folea knows as well. Folea, a senior tech marketer at Automation Direct in Cumming, was there when the robotics program kicked off in the county. His son, Chris, had worked on a robotics project at North Forsyth High, and he and his friends, including Welsch, wanted to start a team to enter competitions.

I quickly realized it wasnt just about robotics, said Folea. It was about getting students engaged in learning through competition. My son had never touched a robot, but he wound up at [Savannah College of Art and Design], and now hes a fulltime animator.

Folea went to his employer and asked for the backing to support robotics teams in every county school. The idea flourished and with the companys assistance, grew into the Forsyth Alliance.

Its a farm system, if you will, that gets kids from elementary and middle schools into these programs in high (schools), said Folea. Almost all the funding comes entirely from Automation Direct. These are after-school, extracurricular activities and some of these competitions cost $5,000 to register. We can help with that and things like travel and parts - things that would be stumbling blocks for the schools. We do it because we believe in the idea hat if you get a young kid involved in a program theyre interested in, it gets them exited to learn. Kids go from sitting in class with a glazed look in their eyes to I have to learn this stuff to make my robot work.

Today, Welsch said, robotics programs flourish in the countys five high schools, 10 middle schools and about 15 elementary schools. That came about because Automation Direct saw the value of our program way back in the beginning, he said. They wanted to get it into all the schools.

The teams enter contests on an almost monthly basis and face off with students from around the world. About two dozen teams have won spots at national and world competitions. Last year, Welsch coached six teams, all of whom went to state finals; two went to the nationals. The teams successes have spurred more interest across grade levels, he added.

In my program alone, I had 50 7th and 8th graders last year. I also have 240 students in classes where we do robotics, too. Having it in class has also changed my numbers; last year, it was 60-40 boys to girls, and this year, Im looking at the opposite. Robotics have really become a big part of what the students do here, and I love seeing what it does for them.

Folea is happy to see that an idea from a handful of kids has mushroomed into meaningful learning. There are now schools running more than a dozen teams in the same school, even at the elementary and middle levels, he said. Jon was on that very first team, so the program has come full circle.

Information about the ForsythAlliance Robotics teams: facebook.com/ForsythAlliance.

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Making the Grade: Robotics comes full circle; student becomes teacher - Atlanta Journal Constitution

A robotic technology stack aimed at developers on a budget – ZDNet

With HEXA, Vincross is taking aim at a market that founder and CEO Sun Tianqi feels has long been ignored: Independent tinkerers and developers on a budget.

Vincross, a Beijing-based robotics company, has announced a small programmable robot called HEXA. The new bot runs on MIND, an operating system built on the Linux kernel and optimized for robotics.

It's the second bit of news from Vincross in the last few months. The company was a CES 2017 Asia Innovation Award Honoree in May.

With HEXA, Vincross is taking aim at a market that founder and CEO Sun Tianqi feels has long been ignored: Independent tinkerers and developers on a budget.

"There hasn't been a single robot or platform built for the masses -- especially for those developers and innovators eager to create [new] robots," said Sun.

HEXA, which, as its name implies, is a sensor-rich, six-legged robot that resembles a crab. It's designed to be a platform and not a finished product.

"We all have this dream of what robots should be, of robots interacting with and helping humans on a daily basis," Sun said. "But the reality is, robots have a long way to go. To date, the industry has focused on single-use robots for industrial labs or household cleaning purposes or robots for children."

Sun's reference to the Roomba vacuum, which is the best-selling consumer robot of all time, is perhaps poorly chosen. iRobot has offered its own programmable platform based on the Roomba and targeting developers for some time. It's become a go-to for STEM classrooms, college robotics teams, and tinkerers in need of small mobile robots for all kinds of tasks.

Still, HEXA is a capable piece of technology. Because it has six legs, it can handle terrain that a platform like the Roomba never could. Sensors include a camera with night vision capability, two three-axis accelerometers, an infrared transmitter, and a distance-measuring sensor.

The idea is that developers can pick up one of these for about $500 and -- using Vincross's standard developer kit -- shape it into anything they'd like. Some examples on the company's website include surveying volcanos on Mars or helping save lives after earthquakes.

"The single biggest impediment to technologies like robotics and AI is that talented developers don't have ready access to the full technology stack required to engineer new products," Jenny Lee, managing director at GGV Capital said. GGV Capital recently invested in Vincross's $6 million series A round.

Vincross has chosen to launch HEXA as a Kickstarter campaign. Funded companies are doing this more and more, and it raises some issues in this case. Vincross's campaign is slick, bespeaking resources that unfunded DIY developers looking for crowdfunding can't afford. Since crowdfunding dollars are limited, that edge seems to fly in the face of the "for the masses" ethos the company is promoting.

Vincross COO Andy Xu defended the play in an email to me.

"This is a go-to-market strategy that we've seen work well, especially in the US and allows us both to distribute and market HEXA to a broader audience. We're not relying solely on this money to build our robots -- we have a full-fledged manufacturing operation set up in China, but Kickstarter's larger unit orders allow us to drive down costs to the end user."

Units ordered via Kickstarter pledges will be delivered on a rolling schedule between December and February.

There are some cool videos and project ideas on the Kickstarter page. Given the price point and functionality, I have a sense we're going to see some novel stuff built on this platform in 2018.

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A robotic technology stack aimed at developers on a budget - ZDNet

UD lab in Lewes home to cutting-edge robotics – CapeGazette.com

The University of Delaware's Robotic Discovery Laboratories in Lewes is all about about automation.

At least that's the way robotics is headed, as researchers, interns and students develop ideas for jet-powered kayaks and automated drones that can capture data about coastal ecosystems for an array of projects.

The high-tech equipment housed at the university's College of Earth, Ocean and Environment or the College of Earth, Wind and Fire if you're U.S. Sen. Tom Carper is impressive enough to attract the attention of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and National Park Service as well as the Department of Defense, federal agencies that have taken advantage of the advanced robotic systems found at the lab.

We develop and utilize robots in a variety of applications, whether it's tracking sharks and sturgeon to using aerial drones for mapping, said robotics professor Art Trembanis, who added that UD hosts one of the nations largest collections of coastal robotics systems. And even since last summer, we've acquired some other toys I mean, equipment.

Carper stopped by the lab Aug. 8 to meet and greet the minds that operate the fancy tools, pose for photos on the quadski a combination between a jet ski and an ATV that looks more like fun than work and try his hand at flying one of the school's automated drones.

I'm not an oceanographer, but I know a little bit about the ocean, Carper said, noting his naval career as a flight officer. Meanwhile, researchers showed off underwater contour maps highlighted by an augmented reality display and sensors that can help find buried munitions along the beaches.

UD's robotics lab, which officially opened in 2014, previously focused on underwater robots. Much of the data collected by robots is used for localized studies on coastal habitats and marine life, but the tools can have much broader application, explained Katy O'Connell, executive director of Project Recover.

Robots are being used in Project Recover, a public-private partnership that helped locate a downed World War II aircraft in the waters surrounding the Pacific Islands last year. The idea is to help locate the resting places of those who went missing in action, information that is then passed on to the Department of Defense, she said.

It's a chance for us to use those technologies in a meaningful way, Trembanis said.

The lab also offers a unique opportunity for U.S. Naval Academy students to study the science that will support their future military endeavors. An educational partnership between the college and the academy allows students to step up their engineering game while also receiving a four-year degree.

Sussex Tech High School graduate Natalie Sava is pursuing a bachelor's in ocean engineering through the program before she is commissioned into the Navy. The Seaford native, who was nominated by Carper and Sen. Chris Coons for the U.S. Naval Academy, said she is considering a future in aviation.

I do hope to do something with the ocean degree once I retire from the Navy, and who knows where that's going to take me, Sava said. I think the partnership is awesome. I knew about this lab from growing up in the area, and this has kind of connected my two worlds together.

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UD lab in Lewes home to cutting-edge robotics - CapeGazette.com

UC Berkeley Robotics Expert Joins Company’s Advisory Board – Patch.com


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UC Berkeley Robotics Expert Joins Company's Advisory Board
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From Business Wire: ROBO Global, creator of the first benchmark index to track the global robotics, automation and artificial intelligence market, continues to hand-pick world-renowned robotics and automations experts for its team. Famed researcher and ...
ROBO Gl Robotics and Automation GO UCITS ETF (ROBG.L) Moves 0.94%Morgan Research
Needle Tilting Mid-Session For ROBO Gl Robotics and Automation GO UCITS ETF (ROBG.L)Evergreen Caller

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UC Berkeley Robotics Expert Joins Company's Advisory Board - Patch.com

Global robotics market set to soar – Investment Week

The global robotics market is expected to grow by 10% yearly until 2025, according to Boston Consulting Group. The uptick is projected to be driven by an increase in consumer demand, as well as falling prices and an increase in private investment in robotics.

The underlying technology that enables advanced robotics is only in its formative stages but considerable value has already been created, says Johan Van Der Biest, Senior Fund Manager at Candriam Investors Group.

Candriam, a European multi-specialist asset manager with 102bn of assets under management, launched a new Robotics and Innovative Technology strategy in March this year. The fund has been designed to invest in companies within the technology and robotics space who are developing innovative products to positively impact the future.

And it's not just start-ups that investors should be eyeing, says Van der Biest. "Opportunities also exist in known brands, which have reinvented themselves to benefit from this automation trend. These include Delphi, which was a unit of General Motors and is now a prominent independent player in autonomous and electrical vehicles. Or John Deere, the largest producer of agricultural equipment, which is reinventing its legacy products."

Candriam perform sophisticated screenings on thousands of companies worldwide and assess which companies derive meaningful revenues from robotics and/or innovative technologies. The use of machine learning, big data technology, virtual reality, 5G technology, advanced robotics and programmatic advertising are examples of exciting trends the group are investing in.

In the sensors and mechatronics area there are still some excellent names with nice upside, explains Van der Biest, but in terms of industrial robots and service robots, those valuations are starting to become rather stretched.

The manager, who has been with Candriam since 1993, added that the demographic angle is a long-term market driver behind all this and to cope with an ageing population we will have to automate.

"Going forward one of the most important factors to evaluate is economic activity. If we observe that global economic activity continues to go well then I think there might be some further upside."

Value and wealth in the sector has been created for years and this is likely to accelerate as the "fourth industrial revolution" becomes a significant driver of the global economy, Candriam's manager concludes.

Click here to learn more about industry trends in robotics and computing power, and how Candriam are unearthing market-leading technology at sensible prices.

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Global robotics market set to soar - Investment Week

AI, Robotics find way into B-school curriculum – Economic Times

MUMBAI: Artificial intelligence and robotics are making their way into management curriculum of the countrys business schools, including Indian Institutes of Management, even as machine intelligence and Internet of Things increasingly influence business strategies and analytics. Two months ago, SP Jain Institute of Management & Research (SPJIMR) launched two courses Reinventing Business with IoT, Artificial Intelligence and Machine Learning and IoT in Supply Chain for students of its flagship MBA programme.

The institute aims to expose students to full ecosystem of IoT, said Anil Vaidya, area head of information management at SPJIMR. A management graduate will not do an engineers job, but in a world where automation is fast disrupting businesses, anyone in leadership position must have knowledge of technology, which they can use to improve business, he told ET.

As part of the courses, students would build their own IoT devices, deploy them in the real world and monitor their working, using cloud services. They would be able to store data in cloud that they can access and download when required to do necessary analysis.

Indian Institutes of Management (IIMs) in Bengaluru and Kozhikode are offering courses on AI and robotics that can be connected to business strategy to enhance performance, output and customer experience. Others such as IIM Calcutta cover AI within broader courses on business and data analytics.

IIM Kozhikodes revised Fellow Program in Management (FPM) curriculum of the IT and systems area has both artificial intelligence and machine learning as elective courses. Employability of students enhances with skills, and peaks if enthusiasm can be tapped into, said Mohammed Shahid Abdulla, associate professor, information technology and systems at IIM Kozhikode.

AI and machine learning have both managerial applicability and a futuristic touch that enthuses students, he said. One of the courses focuses on AI-linked automation and replacement of human job roles.

IIM Bangalore has an elective course on AI for its MBA students. U Dinesh Kumar, chairperson of the Data Analytics Lab at IIMB, said several students are opting for it. A lot of the automation happening today is through AI and machine learning, and it is a necessity for managers to learn how to provide decision through analytics, he said. IIM Calcutta conducts a specialised course in business analytics.

Anindya Sen, professor of economics at IIM Calcutta, said AI and machine learning have become essential tools in strategy courses when you are producing CEOs and managers.

Vaidya of SPJIMR said its vital for students to understand the technological foundation and design business perspective on top of it. The idea is to teach them do ask the right questions, to get the right vendors to develop these, how to stream data, how to write a bot, etc., he said.

MBA students should know the business value of all this and connecting all these concepts with business to figure out the different business models and improve customer engagement. Globally, a few business schools such as The Kellogg School of Management, MIT Sloan School of Management and INSEAD run standalone programmes on AI and robotics.

Others, such as NYU Stern School of Business, Harvard Business School and London Business School explore AI within courses on data analytics and coding.

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AI, Robotics find way into B-school curriculum - Economic Times

Blue Ocean Robotics – Robotics Online (press release)

Blue Ocean Robotics Posted 08/14/2017

Blue Ocean Robotics opens Joint Venture office in Singapore and brings its We Create and Commercialize Robots business to the fast-moving and rapidly growing Asian market.

ODENSE, DENMARK - AUGUST 14 2017 - Blue Ocean Robotics announces the opening of Blue Ocean Robotics SEA (Southeast Asia) with base in Singapore, where the needs of a rapidly ageing society and a focused political initiative on market development, are driving demand for robotics. The establishment is motivated by the governments earmarked budget of SGD 450 million (USD 330 million) as part of The National Robotics Programme, to support the societal robotic scaleup and industry-level transformation from 2016 to 2019. From Singapore, the company will target the surrounding countries of Southeast Asia , whose 662 million population makes it the worlds third largest market (after China and India).

The Joint Venture will also be the vehicle for Blue Ocean Robotics to work with users and partners in China, the worlds second largest economy (annual growth rate ranging from 6 to 7%) which is fast shaping up to become a future leader in innovative technology and business models.

- Blue Ocean Robotics SEA is excited to bring not just new technology but a new partnership model to the market. We co-create robots in close partnership with end-users and market leading companies. Thus, we bring developers, researchers and businesses together, to bring innovative robot solutions to the market by utilizing living labs as test beds. Asia offers a large pool of investors looking for new growth businesses. It is key to these investors that the technology has been verified by the end user to solve a scalable need in the market. By bringing everyone together in the development process, we can contribute to better quality-of-life, productivity and work environment for users and workers alike in healthcare, education, manufacturing, agriculture, construction, offshore and logistics, says Peter Tan, CEO and Partner of Blue Ocean Robotics SEA.

Peter Tan will take the seat as CEO. Peter has more than 30 years of management and operations experience in automation and robotics from the manufacturing, telecommunications, transportation and healthcare sectors. In the position he brings in-depth knowledge of international business, having set up green-field operations in Suzhou (China) and managing markets in China, the rest of Asia, Europe and USA.

The second partner is C. L. Goh, who is the founder of MMI Systems, a leader in industrial test equipment and robotics automation in data storage. He is also investor and board member in several start-ups in robotics and life sciences. Chee Bin Tay, co-founder of AI4U, also joins Blue Ocean Robotics SEA as Director. Chee Bin Tay brings a proven track record and expertise in defence technology, an influential leadership role in future advanced material systems technologies, advanced ICT technologies and innovative transportation platforms. Chee Bin Tay is also investor and advisor to technology start-up companies in nano-materials, robotics and artificial intelligence.

- We are experiencing a great deal of interest in our RoBi-X partnership program from both private and public partners from the Southeast Asian region. On top of that we find it appealing that the Singaporean government funds a growth program, that will increase the development rate and demand in robotics over the coming years. Therefore, our mission in Singapore and Southeast Asia is first and foremost to team up with new partners from various markets and then together design, develop and commercialize a range of new generations of robots which will eventually lead to a portfolio of robotic spin-out companies to be located within the Singaporean tech community and to be on a steep growth curve for the benefit of the region and our business. We are also excited about having C.L. Goh, Peter Tan and Chee Bin Tay as our partners in Blue Ocean Robotics SEA. With this team to lead our activities in Southeast Asia we are well positioned to be successful, says Claus Risager, Rune K. Larsen and John Erland stergaard, Co-CEOs and Partners of the Blue Ocean Robotics Group and based in Denmark.

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Blue Ocean Robotics - Robotics Online (press release)

Robotics & AI Day provides a showcase of what is, what can be – The Signal

Three wide-eyed middle-school students stood over Turtlebot 3 Burger, one of the latest robots procured by University of Houston-Clear Lakes Center for Robotics Software. Under eight inches tall, it doesnt look much like a robot. It doesnt look anything at all like a turtle, let alone a hamburger.

Look! Is that a raspberry pie? one said excitedly as he pointed to one of the Turtlebots components.

I think so. Yes! Its raspberry pie, said another.

At least, thats what the exchange might have sounded like to an uninitiated attendee of the Robotics & AI Day, hosted by UH-Clear Lakes Center for Robotics Software in collaboration with San Jacinto College, University of Houston, Rice University, NASA and other area partners.

The middle-schoolers, who had accompanied a UH professor to the event, knew their stuff.

They were referring to Raspberry Pi, the credit-card size, fully programmable computer that runs Turtlebot 3 and tens of millions of other robots and devices. Raspberry Pi is a favorite in schools for teaching basic computer science and for robotics enthusiasts worldwide for learning how to code in Robot Operating System, or ROS, the ubiquitous, open-source middleware that tells robots what to do.

Turtlebot 3 is the third-generation of a mobile, extensible and relatively low-cost robot that thousands of developers use to learn ROS. Add an arm and a claw, a camera, GPS and collection receptacle and you have a valet that picks up after you or an off-world rover.

From cobbled-together parts, indispensable things are invented things we didnt know we needed until they existed. Careers are launched and industries are built, said Thomas L. Harman, professor of computer engineering, chair of the Engineering Department and director of the Center for Robotics Software. A case in point:

BMW uses the Robot Operating System in some of their self-driving cars, said Harman.

So if theyre using it, youre going to see ROS everywhere, said Harman, who added that he visited the German automotive giant in Munich. Their research facility 22 stories high.

More than 60 students, educators, engineers and others heard 20 five-minute presentations on a wide variety of robotics and artificial intelligence topics, from ongoing research projects to real-world solutions for NASA and the International Space Station.

Faculty and students from throughout the Greater Houston area presented topics such as robot mechanisms, motion planning, manipulation, robot swarm technology and robot programming.

Other thought-provoking presentations included research on what graphing the electrical impulses of the brains nerve cells might tell us about cognition, health, memory and the brains ability to heal; intelligent, energy-saving lighting systems; using augmented reality as a chemistry teaching tool, and a low-cost, networkable air-and-soil sampler to help farmers make informed, instantaneous decisions on where to best plant crops.

This was the second year for a day of robotics presentations at UHCL.

The point of Robotics & AI Day is collaboration, Harman said. All of the centers outreach programs are to let people know that this expertise is here. As with the Center for Robotics Software, the goal is to have a center of excellence based on the work being done at the University of Houston-Clear Lake, but that also encompasses work being done by other universities, NASA and other companies.

Learn more about UHCLs science and engineering centers and outreach programs at http://www.uhcl.edu/science-engineering/centers-initiatives.

Also published on Medium.

"THAT'S RIGHT -- twas I who set the house ablaze!"

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Robotics & AI Day provides a showcase of what is, what can be - The Signal

Robot hijacking threat in homes, cars could paralyse robotics industry, cyber expert warns – ABC Online

Updated August 15, 2017 09:50:12

Imagine having a robot in your kitchen which is capable of cooking you dinner.

Well, for some it will soon be a reality. Now imagine what happens if your cooking robot is hijacked?

Dr Nicholas Patterson, a cyber security lecturer at Deakin University, has to take more than just the average laptop or smartphone into account nowadays; he also has to plan for if or when a robo chef is hacked.

"Think about if someone does hack that, how powerful it could be it's wielding knives and God knows what else," he said.

"Cyber security for robots is still a really new area, but I've spotted the holes quite early so I can see it's going to be a big problem.

"Someone in a certain country overseas can hack a robot in Australia and take control of that, spy on you, or attack you.

"You don't have to be in the next street or next house; you can be in another country."

Dr Patterson said robotic hacking had the potential to put a halt on the robotics industry.

With things such as robotic vacuum cleaners and drones becoming more common household items, he said other consumer robotics would be introduced a lot sooner than people thought.

By 2019, Dr Patterson said we could see up to 1.4 million new industrial robots installed in factories globally, and more would begin entering our homes as technology advanced at an alarming rate.

According to Dr Patterson, smaller robots might not pose much of a physical threat, however their speakers and microphones could be used to listen in to people's conversations.

"The larger ones are probably more the physical threat, like your robotic chef or the industrial type of robots," he said.

"The industrial ones are upwards of 200 pounds and they have things like lasers, welding devices and the clamping devices."

An SUV was hacked in the United States just last year.

"They could take over control of the car while it was mid-driving," Dr Patterson said.

He said in the past a person had also been able to hack into an airplane mid-flight.

"I think we're too much focused on laptops and phones, but there's these new avenues which are not looked at as much in terms of robots and passenger planes."

To prevent robotic hacking, Dr Patterson suggests updating anti-malware software and turning off Bluetooth and the wi-fi on robotic devices when not required.

He also recommends regularly changing the password you use to access the robot.

"Any remote doorways into the robot you want to switch off as best you can.

"Do we really need internet on a fridge or a TV? Probably not.

"Do we need it in a car? Yes, it helps download the GPS maps much more easily, but do we need that really?"

He said not only did it have the potential to cause problems surrounding privacy, but it could risk people's lives as well.

Topics: robots-and-artificial-intelligence, hacking, computers-and-technology, internet-culture, internet-technology, canberra-2600, australia, united-states

First posted August 15, 2017 07:30:00

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Robot hijacking threat in homes, cars could paralyse robotics industry, cyber expert warns - ABC Online

Robotics ETF Races To $1 Billion in AUM – ETF Trends

The ROBOGlobal Robotics & Automation Index ETF (NASDAQ:ROBO), the original exchange traded fund dedicated to robotics investing, has a new milestone to celebrate. Last week, the ETF topped the prestigious $1 billion in assets under management mark.

The once far flung concept of robotics is gaining some momentum. For example, the International Federation of Robotics expects that worldwide sales of robots will rise by 6 percent between 2014 and 2016, and over 190,000 industrial robots will be supplied to companies around the globe in 2016, said ROBO Global in the statement. ROBO debuted in late 2013.

The ETF tracks the ROBO Global Robotics & Automation Index, which is the brainchild of a team deeply entrenched in the robotics industry who created the innovative methodology, according to Dallas-based ROBO Global. The index and subsequent ETF offer investors access to the entire value chain of robotics, automation and artificial intelligence. The ROBO Global Robotics & Automation Index is comprised of 83 global companies from 14 countries in North America, Europe, Asia and the Middle East and offers almost no overlap with traditional equity indices.

ROBO follows a two-tiered, equal-weighted system that ensures the strategy provides diversified exposure to a broad global ecosystem of new and enabling technologies as well as established automation/robotic providers. The ETF holds 92 stocks.

The robotics ETFs portfolio may also provide exposure to companies with sustainable growth opportunities, as the underlying ROBO Global Robotics & Automation Index has exhibited attractive sales growth, EBITDA growth and earnings-per-share growth. The underlying index has even outperformed the broader technology and S&P 500 index since the 2008 financial downturn.

ROBO Global said there is now $1.6 billion allocated, on an international basis, its robotics index. That includes products in Europe and Asia tracking the benchmark.

Year-to-date, investors have added $828.6 million to ROBO. The ETF charges 0.95% per year, or $95 on a $10,000 investment.

For more information on the tech sector, visit our technology category.

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Robotics ETF Races To $1 Billion in AUM - ETF Trends

Monongahela robotics engineer finds time for trio of diverse pursuits – Observer-Reporter

While Rich Pantaleo studied mechanical engineering at Carnegie Mellon University, one of the electives he chose was a class in photography. He also joined the robotics club.

Together, the class and club paved the way for his current dual career owner of a photography enterprise and a robotics engineer for National Robotics Engineering Center, a research facility in Pittsburghs Lawrenceville neighborhood owned by CMU.

Hired shortly after graduating, Pantaleo, 30, has worked on some interesting robotics projects. One took him to South Africa for three weeks, where he was part of a team trying to develop a robotics system for mapping an underground platinum mining operation. Part of that effort also took him to Croatia, where he worked with a mining company to turn a remote-controlled dozer into a fully automated one.

Another trip, this time to California, had him work in the strawberry fields designing a robotic plant sorting system. Another project had him design a sensor pod for the remote measurement of steel slabs for a steel mill in Illinois.

For the military, he worked on a team that created a robotic wheel that enables vehicles to move through a wide variety of terrain swamp, desert, and dirt and paved roads. Currently, hes engrossed in a project for the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency to improve the survivability of military vehicles.

Traditionally, the answer to improved survivability was to add more armor, but in this age of advanced weaponry that is not always practical, he said. Instead, were working on a robotic shield that can move in front of an incoming ordnance.

Pantaleo said he always loved making things with his hands, which is why he likes robotics for its hands-on attributes. As a child, his maternal grandfather, George Karabin, a master carpenter for Donora Lumber Co., taught him how to use hand tools. This eventually led to his woodworking interests, which initially saw him making serving trays for family as Christmas gifts.

For the last 10 years, hes been turning out furniture (end and coffee tables, lamps, a clock case and serving trays) at his Monongahela home workshop that he gives to friends as wedding presents.

In addition to his work and furniture-making, he is now focusing on photography.

I started taking photos in high school with a digital camera at a time when I was an avid rail fan, he said. I saw awesome rail photos on the internet, wondered if I could do the same and drove around taking photos of locomotives.

A breakthrough moment came about when he enrolled in a black-and-white photo class at CMU.

There, I performed the rites of passage of photography: shooting on an SLR, developing my own film, making my own prints from negatives and working long nights in the darkroom, he writes on his photography website, http://www.monvalleyphotoworks.com. It let me see that photography could be an art form.

Pantaleo put his photographic endeavors on hold after the end of the photography class, partly because he no longer had access to the darkroom, partly because he was too involved with his engineering studies. But in 2012, with his student loans paid off, he invested in a new digital camera and resumed his picture-taking passion with a focus on the old industrial sites of the Mon Valley.

On his website, which he promotes through social media sites like Facebook, Instagram and Flickr, he sells prints of images hes taken from Greene County north to Pittsburgh. At the moment, he has between 800 and 900 photos for sale and also publishes an annual Mon Valley-themed calendar.

In the last couple of years, hes gone back to shooting on film rather than digitally and said hes fallen in love with the work he gets on medium format film.

I now take fewer photos, but the results are better, he said.

Theres yet another side to Pantaleos multifaceted interests, one he attributes to his father, Rich, a retired instrumental music teacher for Ringgold School District. His father encouraged all three of his children to play an instrument, and his childhood home was full of music.

Kate plays the flute, Regina plays the clarinet and I play trumpet and piano, Pantaleo said. In two annual concerts at Ringgold Middle School, Regina and I play in the Greater Monongahela Area Community Band, which my dad directs. I also play trumpet during the summer for Too Many Tubas at nursing homes and church festivals.

Putting his piano talents to the test, he also plays electric keyboard for the Indie rock band, Good Ship Gibraltar, at gigs in and around Pittsburgh. As if all his interests arent enough to fill up his appointment book to the max, he has another project he hopes to start on soon.

Ive been thinking of publishing a photo coffee table book on the coal mines of our region, he said. But I havent yet been able to work out the publication details.

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Monongahela robotics engineer finds time for trio of diverse pursuits - Observer-Reporter

Robotics ETF Hits Illustrious Milestone – Investopedia


Investopedia
Robotics ETF Hits Illustrious Milestone
Investopedia
Sometimes, an exchange-traded fund (ETF) focused on a narrow or highly specialized investment theme, also known as niche ETF, proves its doubters wrong. That is certainly true of the ROBO Global Robotics and Automation Index ETF (ROBO.
Robo Whiz for robotics educationThe Hans India

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Robotics ETF Hits Illustrious Milestone - Investopedia

New Haven high schoolers develop tech skills in summer robotics internship – New Haven Register

High school students develop tech skills in summer robotics internship

By Brian Zahn, bzahn@newhavenregister.com @brizahn on Twitter

Photo: Brian Zahn / Hearst Connecticut Media

ESUMS student George Shelton demonstrates driving the Yo(unity) Bot 3.0 from an app on his phone.

ESUMS student George Shelton demonstrates driving the Yo(unity) Bot 3.0 from an app on his phone.

New Haven high schoolers develop tech skills in summer robotics internship

NEW HAVEN >> Following five grueling weeks of developing a cost-effective robotics kit, 15 aspiring entrepreneurs presented and defended their product before investors.

Later this month, they return to high school.

Fifteen New Haven Public Schools students with an interest in engineering got this chance to be entrepreneurs as they were selected to partake in a paid internship program sponsored by the Connecticut Pre-Engineering Program, with financial backing by Liberty Bank. The interns, challenged to develop inexpensive robotics kits for middle school students, were compensated with $1,000 for the five weeks.

Each of the kits had to be acquirable for less than $55, the interns were told, with all the mechanical structures and electrical components needed to build a robot. One of the four teams, a public relations team, was also tasked with developing a manual for middle school students on how to use the kit.

What we want to see is an excitement and passion for STEM, said Sade Owoye, a project manager for CPEP.

Mikayla Osumah, a rising senior at Engineering and Science University Magnet School, said it was indeed her passion for STEM that led her to the internship. She said things clicked into place for her when she built a drone for a class project, and she began to realize several possibilities that could be explored through manufacturing and engineering.

Didacus Oparaocha, a teacher who leads and coaches the interns through the program, said he sees a direct benefit for the students, most of whom come from low-income families.

One of the main goals is poverty elevation, he said. I believe STEM is an answer to solving poverty.

As an employee at Sikorsky Aircraft, Oparaocha said he wants the students to have an even higher quality of life than he has, after moving from Nigeria to Italy and then to Michigan and Connecticut.

The CPEP staff said the program is meant to give students relevant work experience to prepare for careers.

We believe if you give students an opportunity for a real work opportunity, showing up every day on time and dressed professionally, it gives them chances to succeed as entrepreneurs, said Kathy Ciullo, CPEP chief financial officer and director of operations. Were trying to give them provable hands-on opportunities.

One of those opportunities was preparing a presentation during which they would ask CPEP Executive Director David Beam for the funding to carry out the robotics kit project.

Further, in addition to developing a prototype for an affordable robotics kit and considering the costs of materials and labor, students were made to practice communicating and explaining their work.

Were taking the proper steps to be professional, said ESUMS rising senior Donavon Chisolm.

Rising ESUMS senior George Shelton called it an internship you can take further in life.

Shelton said he would like to pursue electrical engineering and automation after he graduates from high school.

District officials said they believe the program offers practical applications for lessons taught in the classroom.

Kenneth Mathews, the school districts math curriculum supervisor, said he believes the interest in the program among students is tenfold its capacity.

The skills theyve learned will serve them throughout their lives, Mathews said. Many have shaped what they want to pursue in college.

After asking the interns approximately a dozen questions on the skills theyve learned from five weeks of work such as about whether any challenge is too difficult for them to overcome, about the value of teamwork or about whether a career can be fun were a few examples Beam said he has worked with engineers at all different levels, and he is certain all of them could have benefited from the type of early job training offered by the program CPEP has to offer.

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New Haven high schoolers develop tech skills in summer robotics internship - New Haven Register

The Whys and Hows of Becoming a Robotics Engineer – Machine Design

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In 2015, a poll of 200 senior corporate executives conducted by the National Robotics Education Foundation identified robotics as a major source of jobs for the United States. Indeed, some 81% of respondents agreed that robotics was the top area of job growth for the nation. Not that this should come as a surprise: as the demand for smart factories and automation increases, so does the need for robots.

According to Nearshore Americas, smart factories are expected to add $500 billion to the global economy in 2017. In a survey conducted by technology consulting firm Capgemini, more than half of the respondents claimed to have invested $100 million or more into smart factory initiatives over the last five years. The study concludes that at least 21% of manufacturing plants will become smart factories by 2022. This is especially true in areas of labor shortage like the U.S. and Western Europe.

The Kuka Official Robotics Education (KORE) certificate program offers professionals and students the opportunity not only to become certified in operating Kuka robots, but also to learn robotic engineering principles.

All of this will result in the addition of more robots to manufacturing sites. Over the past seven years, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) reports that companies added 136,748 robots to factory floors. But while the conclusion of many is to assume that jobs are disappearing due to automation, the opposite is proving true. The BLS also determined that while robots were being added to factories, 894,000 new manufacturing jobs were also created as a result of automation. According to the book What to Do When Machines Do Everything by Malcom Frank, Paul Roehrig, and Ben Pring, 19 million jobs will be lost due to automation over the next 10 to 15 yearsbut 19 million new jobs will be created due to automation.

In other words, the job market for robotic engineers is at a prime. For the engineer either in school or already working, there are numerous resources available for educating yourself in the world of robotics. Take advantage of them, and crest the next wave of jobs in automation.

The lack of robot education in high schools and universities is creating a large gap of skilled laborers for the future of automation. FANUC CERT program brings robot certification to all levels of education, including high schools, colleges, and vocational schools.

In April of this year, the Association for Advancing Automation (A3) published awhite paper concluding that 80% of manufacturers report a labor shortage of skilled applications for production positions. This may result in the U.S. losing a staggering 11% of annual earnings. However, the addition of new automation technologies allows companies to increase productivity and create higher quality products. This allows them to grow their business and add jobs.

The distinction that has to be made is that while robots will automate tasks, they will not automate complete jobs. In the white paper from A3, it was noted that robots have been increasing labor productivity at the same rate as the steam engine: 0.35% annually. Amazon is a key example of how robots add jobs. In 2012, the online shopping giant acquired Kiva Systems, which became Amazon Robotics. By 2014, Amazon Robotics employed 45,000 full-time employees. Three years later, that number had doubled to 90,000, and the company is striving to break the 100,000 mark.

Machine Design recent reported that Amazon has launched 30,000 robots into service in conjunction with 230,000 employees across its fulfillment centers. The Kiva robots have led to higher efficiencies that have resulted in increased growth. Another example of growth due to automation and robotics is in the automotive industry. General Motors grew U.S. jobs from 80,000 to 105,000 from 2012 to 2016. This increase in jobs coincided with the addition of approximately 10,000 robot applications in GM plants.

The robotic engineer job market will grow between now and 2024. The BLS reports that robotics engineers, as part of the mechanical engineering field, will increase by 5% by 2024. The median annual wage for robotic engineers was $83,590 in 2015. If the rate of machines being added to factories remains consistent, then the number of skilled technicians needed to program, operate, and maintain those robots will also increase.

The Universal Robots Academy teaches you how to set up and program its collaborative robots online in six module training courses.

For the young engineering student looking to enter robotics, there are key areas of study that one should focus on to obtain the appropriate education. Robotics is truly an interdisciplinary career which combines several fields of engineering, including mechanical engineering, computer programming, and electrical engineering. According to Robotiq, a manufacturer of end effectors for collaborative robots (cobots), the core subjects for those at the high school level are mathematics and physics. These core areas of study make up the foundation of many robotic courses. If the student has the opportunity at the high school level, they should also take courses computing, programming, design, and extracurricular engineering electives like machine shop and manufacturing classes.

At the university level, many educational institutions offer a robotics major as its own independent field of study. However, since the field of robotics is one under constant change, many professionals reach the robotic industry through different avenues. In the Robotiq guidelines, it is possible to break down the robotic field into three key areas:

According to GradSchoolHub.com, the top 10 universities with grad school programs in robotics are as follows:

NASA has alist of robotics programs at universities across the U.S.:

Robotic education in STEM is growing. In 2015, the government offered in $100 million in federal grants to support the growing workforce. The plan was to offer schools with the resources to introduce robotic education into the classroom, as well as to provide training and certification for those looking to enter the field.

The Nanodegree Robotic Program from Udacity is the first of its kind. It offers remote robot education sponsored by major companies, including Bosch and iRobot.

In recent years, many robotic companies have realized the need to create their own certification programs to help foster robot education. Several of them have created universities and training programs for professionals to become certified in their robotic platforms.

For the engineer looking to get started in robots, the number one resource is the Robotic Industries Association, an associated society of the Association for Advancing Automation. At its website, one will find a plethora of resources to help get started or advance their robotic education. You will also find a listing of safety standards, webinars, upcoming events, and integrator certification training. For those looking to get started, theBeginner's Guide is a good place to start:

Universal Robots is one of the major seller of collaborative robots. If youve attended any technical conference in recent years, youll have seen many of them gracing the booths of automation companies. Universal Robots has its own education platform, the Universal Robot Academy. The module breaks down into six easy learning modules:

This is the advantage of cobots. Since they have safety features built-in and operate in controlled environment, the learning curve is quickerone does not need to determine safety zones, light curtains, or cages.

For larger industrial robots, companies like Kuka and FANUC both offer certification programs.Kuka offers the Kuka Official Robotics Education (KORE) certificate program. The program is designed to be offered in high schools, community colleges, universities, and vocational schools. The program will teach basic robot programming and operation skills, centering around project-based activities that mimic real-world manufacturing.

FANUC Certified Education for Advanced Automation offers high schools, colleges, and universities training in automation techniques. TheFANUC CERT training not only offers education in robotics but also in CNC machining and robotic drilling. Both of these programs are also available to engineering professionals at certified training locations.

Lastly, for those that cannot reach a training location, there are several online courses that provide robotic training. One that is sponsored by the likes of Bosch, Kuka, iRobot, and Lockheed Martin, is the training offered by Udacity, the online education platform. Udacity is a new online learning platform that aims to bring affordable education to the internet. The education is created by educational professionals and sponsored by major companies in the industry. The Nanodegree Program offers a robotic education with hands-on projects in simulated environments. The course itself is a two 3-month terms and will provide instruction in kinematics, perception of objects, controls, and deep learning for robotics.

The resources of robotic education are on the risejust like the robot machines fueling the next wave of automation.

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The Whys and Hows of Becoming a Robotics Engineer - Machine Design

Aurora and MIT Celebrate Nine Years of Student Robotics Program Success – sUAS News

Middle school students across the country today participated in a live interactive broadcast of NASA astronaut Jack Fischer operating satellites developed by Aurora and MIT aboard the International Space Station (ISS). The basketball-sized, battery operated satellites were controlled using computer code written by the students as part of the Zero Robotics summer learning program.

Founded by MITs Space Systems Laboratory and run in partnership with Aurora and the Innovation Learning Center, Zero Robotics is a robotic programming competition for middle and high school students. Students learn to write software to autonomously control the SPHERES satellites aboard the ISS. Each year, the Zero Robotics competition challenges students to address a real spaceflight operational scenario.

Aurora is proud to partner with MIT on this innovative and engaging STEM-education program, said John Langford, Aurora Chairman and CEO. Zero Robotics has introduced thousands of students over the years to the wonders of spaceflight and robotics. With this next generation of scientists and engineers at the helm, the future of NASAs space program looks exceptionally bright.

Aurora built the SPHERES satellites and has partnered with MIT on the Zero Robotics program since its inception in 2008. Over the years, Auroras involvement has evolved to encompass competition coordination support, student mentoring, instructor education, and curriculum development.

This years middle school finals comprised of 13 teams hailing from 12 U.S. states and Russia. Zero Robotics is also open to high school students, with a tournament held each year between September to December for students grades 9-12. The Middle school competition is sponsored by the Center for the Advancement of Science in Space (CASIS), the Northrop Grumman Foundation, and NASA. To learn more about the Zero Robotics program and to view results from todays competition, visit http://www.zerorobotics.mit.edu. To learn more about Auroras SPHERES program, visit http://www.aurora.aero/SPHERES.

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Aurora and MIT Celebrate Nine Years of Student Robotics Program Success - sUAS News

Amazon’s robots: job destroyers or dance partners? – The Seattle Times

The 100,000 orange robots that glide through Amazon warehouses and the thousands of Amazonians who build, program and use them are part of the evolving relationship between humans and their tools that awakens new possibilities but also new fears.

NORTH READING, Mass. Every day is graduation day at Amazon Robotics.

Heres where the more than 100,000 orange robots that glide along the floors of various Amazon warehouses are made, and taught their first steps.

Here they practice their first pirouettes. And heavy lifting too, as they twirl while hauling fabric shelves filled with cinder blocks.

And finally once theyve been given the green light by their makers about 38 robots assemble in a tight four-row formation and in orderly fashion wheel themselves up onto pallets that will be shipped to one of the 25 Amazon warehouses that employ automatons.

Amazon staffers call it the graduation ceremony, and it takes place several times a day.

Its a proud-mama moment, an Amazon spokeswoman said, during the first visit to the facility by a reporter since the e-commerce giant bought the former Kiva Systems in 2012. So far this year the company has graduated about 55,000 robots.

These robots, and the thousands of Amazonians who build, program and use them, are laying out the next episode in a very old story the evolving relationship between humans and their tools.

From the sharp stones wielded by our early ancestors to the internet, every step along the way has awakened new possibilities, and new fears too.

Now, its the turn of robotics, a discipline that after decades of experimentation and recent big leaps in artificial intelligence has finally reached a maturity that allows mass deployment.

Were at an inflection point the ability of robots to be useful at a low-cost point, said Beth Marcus, a robotics expert and startup founder who recently joined Amazon Robotics as a senior principal technologist.

This latest wave of automation has spurred anxiety among scholars and policymakers. They warn it might contribute to a growing economic divide, in which workers with more education or the right skills reap the benefits of automation, while those with inadequate training are replaced by robots and increasingly left out of lucrative jobs.

Its not a novel concern: Spinning jennies, which revolutionized the weaving industry, sparked similar resistance in 19th century England. And in the 1960s, the U.S. government created a task force to study the impact of technology on livelihoods. If we understand it, if we plan for it, if we apply it well, automation will not be a job destroyer or a family displaced, President Lyndon Johnson said at the time.

History has shown that, over time, job losses in rapidly advancing sectors are offset by gains in other activities spurred by a growing economy.

That perspective doesnt quell contemporary concerns. Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates has proposed taxing robotsto pay for other jobs, such as teachers. Some scholars also seem to be losing faith in the old playbook.

Theres never been a worse time to be a worker with only ordinary skills and abilities to offer, because computers, robots and other digital technologies are acquiring these skills and abilities at an extraordinary rate, Massachusetts Institute of Technology professors Erik Brynjolfsson and Andrew McAfee wrote in their 2014 book, The Second Machine Age.

In a recent report, the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development said that technology is contributing to the disappearance of middle-skill jobs, both in manufacturing and in clerical work, even though it helps create both highly skilled and low skilled positions.

Amazon is the modern poster child for automation, and not only because of the orange warehouse robots. Its machine-learning software lets the company predict customer behavior. New retail concepts, such as the Amazon Go convenience store in downtown Seattle, heavily rely on sensor technology in an effort to do away with the need for cashiers.

Amazon is also working hard to have drones deliver items to peoples homes, a move that may replace a lot of delivery drivers.

But automation certainly hasnt slowed down Amazons colossal appetite for people. The companys payroll expansion has long exceeded revenue growth: In the quarter ended last June, its workforce grew by 42 percent to 382,400 jobs, versus sales growth of 25 percent.

Its hard to say, in the case of Amazon, how many potential human jobs have gone to the robots, or inversely, how many new positions have been created to handle this new feature of working life.

But Amazon says that warehouses equipped with robotics typically see greater job creation with more full-time employees, due to the increased volume of orders these centers can handle.

Amazon also says automation has meant the creation of desirable, high-skilled jobs designing robots and teaching them how to do things, as well as middle-skilled jobs such as repairing the robots, or simply focusing on more sophisticated warehouse tasks while letting machines do the boring stuff.

Marcus says that there are plenty of tasks humans will monopolize for a long time.

There are many things humans do really well that we dont even understand yet, Marcus said.

Amazon Robotics facility, in suburban Boston, was first established by Kiva Systems, a company founded on the concept of flipping warehouse logistics around. Instead of having workers walk to products, it sought to bring items to the workers. The solution: flat, wheeled robots called drive units that navigate a warehouse by reading stickers on the floor, all while carrying merchandise on their back.

Amazon bought Kiva in 2012 for $775 million in cash and started introducing the robots into its warehouses in 2014.

Since then, the robotics facility stopped selling to other customers, while its orange robots, now in their fourth generation, have come to play an important part in Amazons operations. In fact, robotics seem to be more important to Amazons bottom line than to other tech giants also making big bets in the field, such as Google, experts say.

For Amazon, its mission critical, said Pedro Domingos, a machine-learning expert at the University of Washington.

Tye Brady, the chief technologist for Amazon Robotics, noted that the e-commerce behemoth is in a unique spot.

We have the ability, through our automation and our robotics, to change the real world by immediately deploying the most recent advances throughout the companys widespread footprint, he said in an interview.

Brady, who joined Amazon two years ago after a two-decades-long career in aerospace and robotics, said that in his ideal vision of the future, society might look a little bit like the original Star Wars movie, in which humans and robots coexisted happily, with the latter capably helping humans lead more purposeful lives. Our machines will allow us to focus on what we want, he said.

A few steps into the Amazon Robotics building, a small sign warns visitors in jest to please not feed the robots.

Some 500 employees work in the facility, mostly engineers and scientists, as well as technicians who assemble the robots. The hardware side is led by Parris Wellman.

As a kid he wanted to build cars, and went on to earn a mechanical-engineering degree at the University of Pennsylvania. There, studying under prominent roboticist Vijay Kumar, Wellman discovered robots. After a Ph.D. from Harvard and a few years in biotech and in medical devices, he joined Amazon Robotics, returning to what he calls his first love.

What he likes about the opportunity is that he can build something and deploy it en masse pretty quickly.

Another interesting aspect of the work, he said, is that the roboticists get plenty of feedback from the warehouse associates who will be dealing directly with the robots. For example, associates helped designers pick out the color of the new lightweight fabric shelves that the robots carry: yellow, because that makes it easier to see the items they carry.

And it was a maintenance worker at a warehouse who designed, and patented with Amazons help, a metal rod that staffers use to push inactive robots around the factory floor (its easier than picking up the 750-pound robots).

Innovation is not restricted to a particular set of people, Wellman said.

In addition to hardware engineers, the facility employs software developers who animate the drive units throughout the Amazon empire. People dont realize Amazon Robotics has a huge software stack, says Jill Sestini, a developer who was Kiva Systems 30th employee when she joined in 2006.

That software prowess got a huge boost after the Amazon acquisition because of the proprietary technology the new owner brought to the table, she said.

The current job of the Boston-area native who builds motorcycles as a hobby, and comes from a family of amateur craftspeople who made their own furniture is to oversee the interfaces that allow the robots to interact with humans more easily.

One of her projects: an app on a Fire tablet that lets warehouse workers without highly advanced computer skills control the drive units when they fail or an item falls in their path. Hundreds of tablet-toting warehouse workers across the 25 highly automated warehouses operated by Amazon now have that ability.

Brady, the Amazon Robotics chief technologist, says the roboticists efforts have brought a more than 50 percent increase in storage efficiency at the Amazon warehouses that employ robots. That means they can contain more items in a smaller space.

These warehouses are also where Amazon figures out how people and machines can work together as in a beautiful symphony, according to Brady.

One of these centers is in DuPont, Pierce County, a warehouse dedicated to mid-size and large items, where 500 humans work alongside hundreds of robots. There the automatons have the run of the core of the warehouse, a maze brimming with metal shelves stocked with merchandise.

They operate in a different space from the humans, who are mostly on the outskirts of the facility. But they work together in an elaborate, seemingly seamless dance.

The robots bring empty shelves out from the depths of the warehouse to a person who loads them with individual items unpacked from pallets as they arrive at the distribution center. The robot then races back into the interior of the facility, putting the shelf back in its place. The automatons can lift up to 3,000 pounds.

When an order comes in, a human operator in another part of the warehouse calls up an item from a computer. A robot will then wheel out the shelf containing the item, which the human will pick out and place on a conveyor belt.

The interaction with the robotic workforce has created new types of roles.

Barry Tormoehlen, a former electrician and conveyance mechanic, is one of a dozen people at DuPont who do preventive maintenance on the drive units, wipe them down every once in a while and fix them when needed.

Over time, Tormoehlen has learned to recognize the individual units, which each have a number and a maintenance history of their own. The collaboration between these robots and humans has created a local folklore.

Workers have painted some of the robots to give them personality: A robot with fiery flames on its sides is known as the devil drive. Another, decorated by warehouse workers in blue and yellow instead of the usual orange, is dubbed The Minion, after animated characters who have the same color pattern.

During a recent visit to the DuPont center, 29-year old Ashley Parks, a former medical assistant from Yelm, Thurston County, stowed newly arrived items of various shapes and sizes onto a shelf atop The Minion.

They kind of dance around you, she said of the automatons, adding that they make her more efficient in her job.

As for fears of one day losing her job to a machine, she seemed nonchalant. I dont think theyre going to take away our jobs, she said. They stay on their side, I stay on my side.

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Amazon's robots: job destroyers or dance partners? - The Seattle Times

Could This Squishy Robot Be the Future of Robotics? – Gizmodo – Gizmodo

The phones in our pockets might be getting more and more complicated, but many researchers advancing the field of robotics are actually engineering simpler bots designed to reliably perform very basic tasks. So instead of one day facing a terrifying future filled with terminators, these squishy rolling donuts might be our biggest threat.

Yoichi Masuda and Masato Ishikawa detail their work on these bots in a paper, Development of a Deformation-driven Rolling Robot with a Soft Outer Shell, published for the 2017 IEEE International Conference on Advanced Intelligent Mechatronics. Instead of trying to replicate the structure and movements of humans or animals, the researchers have designed this robot to function like the simplest of machines: the wheel.

But a wheel only functions when theres a power source, and designing a robot that only works when its pushed down a hill limits its usefulness. Instead of motors and gears, however, the wheel surrounding this robot is made from a soft material thats squished and stretched by a set of four wires connected to an inner core. Its still mostly dependent on gravity to get around, as the robot is essentially repeatedly falling over as its changing shape makes it unstable. But that also greatly reduces the amount of power it needs to move.

So whats the value of a stripped down robot like this? It cant serve you breakfast in the morning, or pick up a gun and charge into battle, but it can be a valuable tool for exploring areas too dangerous for humans to tread, and too risky to send an expensive piece of hardware. The robots core can be packed with sensors, even a 360-degree camera on either end, and rolled into a warzone for reconnaissance, or pointed at an active volcano and told to drive on in. The odds of it getting back in one piece are slim, but before its demise it could transmit loads of data, which could end up being far more valuable than the robot itself.

[YouTube via IEEE Spectrum]

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Could This Squishy Robot Be the Future of Robotics? - Gizmodo - Gizmodo