Ghost Robotics’ Minitaur Demonstrates Impressive New Skills – IEEE … – IEEE Spectrum

For more details, we spoke with Kenneally andDe, along withGhost Robotics CEO Jiren Parikh.

IEEE Spectrum: How does a legged robot like Minitaur compare to robots with wheels or tracks?

Ghost Robotics: On flat surfaces with no objects in their path, wheeled robots are more efficient than tracked, legged, and even aerial robots. In sand, mud, and rougher terrain, tracks are superior to wheels. However, with fixed objects, obstacles, and vertical surfaces in the path of a tracked robot with no alternative path, legged robots are superior. Even if moderate objects and obstacles can be overcome by tracks, continuous unstructured terrain over a large field of operation reduces the energy efficiency of tracked devices when compared to dynamic legged robots.

Another advantage is that legged robots typically have a lot more actuated degrees of freedom than similar sized tracked or aerial robots, [and those additional DoF] can be recruited for tasks like reorientation, manipulation, and getting the robot unstuck in a much more flexible and versatile way. In scenariossuch as sand and mud flats, tracked devices do well up to the point of getting stuck but they have limited options for escape, whereas the Minitaur will have greater maneuverability and escape behaviors. Additionally, you would almost certainly need to attach an arm to a wheeled, tracked, or aerial robot to open a door, while we have shown the Minitaur doing this without any modifications to its body.

The primary challenge in the adoption of legged robots has been the difficulty of coordinating the many degrees of freedom and balancing on a variety of terrains. Minitaur was designed specifically to allow for very flexible and versatile software control of its limbs at a high bandwidth, which gives the control designer a lot of freedom to design control algorithms that can keep improving as time goes on (without needing to modify the robot body).

Whats your experience been like with the durability of Minitaur now that youre doing dynamic testing outdoors?

Considering the Minitaur is still pre-production, we have been subjecting the robot prototype to exhaustive physical experimentation from Day 1, and it has been quite hard (and fun) to try and damage it in a way that isnt easily field repairable. Large falls can bend the aluminum legs, but those are easy to either bend back or replace without loss of functionality. The chassis, even in its current design state, has been quite robust, and with appropriate protection for the motors, the legs become the primary concern. The direct-drive actuators are inherently robust since there are no gears to break due to impact loading, and we have no hydraulic system or force/torque sensors that can be damaged.

One of the core design principles of Minitaur is its reduced mechanical complexity when compared to other legged robots and tracked devices. Tracks look simple, but require complex suspension mechanisms which would be hard to repair on the fly. With regards to mobility, if a tread or suspension mechanism gets damaged on a tracked robot, it is only able to travel in circles, but if one of Minitaurs legs are bent, or a leg is immobilized, it can continue to limp away.

Can you describe how Minitaur changes its gait to adapt reactively to different types of terrain?

A very basic example is that the walk gait is designed to use feedback to react to perturbations (like the toes slipping on ice, or the uneven nature of walking on a rock bed). If you closely examine the video of Minitaur walking on ice, you can see that the legs recirculate and move much faster when they start slipping, always swinging and repositioning under the body to prevent the body from falling on the ground. A conventional way to design multi-legged walking has been to use a fixed clock signal that moves the legs at a fixed frequency (often along a fixed trajectory). Obviously when the legs start slipping and sliding, with a rigid locomotion architecture, it would be very challenging (if not impossible) to keep the legs under the body without feedback from the legs and environment.

Your videos show Minitaur using lots of creative ways of moving across varied terrain. What kinds of multi-modal locomotion are you working on?

Weve already shown fence climbing with toe attachments in our first video, and intend to demonstrate other climbing behaviors in future videos using fixed leg attachments that will support climbing various vertical surfaces. Depending on the use case, we expect to have a future design where leg attachments can be interchanged in the field.

We are also working on modifications with a confidential customer to repurpose Minitaur to operate as a surface and sub-surface swimmer, and submersible platform, that would operate on a seafloor or riverbed using flipper legs. If you look at Minitaur with the legs retracted, you can see how we can make a water-sealed design with sponsons for stability and air bladder to control buoyancy without much effort. Our robot is relatively quiet (no gearbox operating noise), which makes it useful in a variety of scientific and military applications, and it also has very high specific power (which is one of the limiting resources for underwater vehicles).

How far can Minitaur walk on two legs? Is there potential for it to manipulate with the other two legs while balancing?

The bipedal walking is a work-in-progress and one of the more challenging behaviors were working onwe dont think theres currently another 3D biped in the world that uses only four actuators. However, weve been quite pleased with the progress weve made. Minitaur can take up to 20 steps [using two legs] and then drop down onto four legs when it knows it can no longer maintain its bipedal state. Were continuing our research and intend to have it operate in a bipedal state for much longer.

Using one or two of the legs for various tasks is critical behavior for the Minitaur that we are researching (for example, door opening). Bipedal use cases include object manipulation, positioning the robot for climbing a vertical surface, gaining a vantage point for a sensor reading, escape maneuvers, and bracing/flailing to aid balance.

How well does Minitaur scale upwards to medium-sized (or larger) legged robots?

Were pushing up against fundamental limits of torque density with the commercially available electric motors we currently use. The selected motors are critical in keeping the machine at a price point that will be on par with and even below existing tracked devices, and at a much lower cost than other legged robots. With the current motor technology, we cant build a direct-drive machine as agile as Minitaur at a length-scale much larger than Minitaurs 40-centimeterlength. We can make a heavier version at the same scale that would have better payload capability, but wed have to make sacrifices to increase the length scale. We are also considering modified/custom motor designs in the future for specific use-cases where cost is less of an issue.

Having said that, we have design efforts underway that will allow us to scale Minitaur down and deliver the same functionality with a smaller chassis and payload capacity for specific use-cases where a smaller form factor is necessary. Stay tuned on this front.

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Ghost Robotics' Minitaur Demonstrates Impressive New Skills - IEEE ... - IEEE Spectrum

Starsky Robotics’ autonomous transport trucks also give drivers … – TechCrunch


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Boys’ STEAM, robotics club in Parkway receives grant – Wicked Local West Roxbury

Julie M. Cohen jcohen@wickedlocal.com

A Parkway program was recently recognized with a $6,000 grant for its role in helping to increase opportunities for minority children in the city.

The BCYF Menino Community Center Boys STEAM (science, technology, engineering, arts and math) and Robotics Club in Roslindale was one of 10 organizations receiving an award from the first round of grants from My Brother's Keeper, totaling $50,000. The Boston Foundation also collaborated on the effort.

The Transcript recently spoke with Roslindale resident Donna Parker, a computer instructor who said she has been providing technology programs in this neighborhood for about 20 years. I work with all ages. I coordinate all the STEM programming at the center, including STEAM Club and STEAMing It in the Park (steamingit.weebly.com) and am a Technology Goes Home (techgoeshome.org) instructor.

How did you feel when you learned the BCYF Menino Community Center Boys STEAM and Robotics Club was awarded a $6,000 grant?

I was very excited and relieved, and grateful to Mayor (Marty) Walsh and MBK Boston for their support. At the time I found out we were doing a bridge-building activity in the Boys STEAM (STEM + Art) Club using straws and testing their strength with pennies. I jokingly said this came just in time we are down to our last pennies.

How has the program helped maximize My Brother's Keepers impact in improving outcomes for young people of color?

We strive to give our youth the opportunity to learn about and develop skills in a variety of different STEM subjects. We hope that during this exploration they will gain confidence and develop new skills or even find a life passion that could lead to a promising future for themselves and their families.

How will the funds from the grant be used?

(The money will be used as) stipends for four 13-14-year-olds to work as STEM mentors, to learn about STEM and pass down what they learn to those who are younger. (It will also pay for) supplies for science experiments, building/making, electrical circuits, physical programming, healthy snacks, etc. We will also be purchasing a 3-D printer and going on STEM-related field trips.

Do you use mentors in the program and if so, what has their impact been? Also, how many kids participate in the program?

Teenage mentors are a key component of our program. We currently have six STEAM (STEM + Art) Club teenage mentors who are caring, enthusiastic, creative learners and teachers of STEM. We also have some adult mentors (with and without STEM backgrounds). There are about 15 members of the Boys STEAM Club in addition to a variety of boys who participate in robotics.

How can area residents help or become mentors in your program?

We will be looking for more FIRST Lego Robotics adult mentors/coaches as we expand to start teams at two other community centers. Training will be provided. We are also looking for those in STEM careers to come and share their career experiences or engage youth in a related interactive activity.

More information

To learn more about MBK Boston or to get involved, visit boston.gov/mbk.

To learn more about the BCYF Menino Community Center Boys STEAM and Robotics Club, visit https://www.boston.gov/community-centers/bcyf-menino

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Boys' STEAM, robotics club in Parkway receives grant - Wicked Local West Roxbury

Lily Robotics Promises Refunds As It Files For Bankruptcy Protection – Forbes


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Lily Robotics Promises Refunds As It Files For Bankruptcy Protection
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By Aaron Tilley and Ryan Mac. Lily Robotics, the hyped drone startup that shut down last month amid a consumer-protection civil suit from the San Francisco district attorney's office, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection on Monday. In documents ...
Shuttered drone startup Lily Robotics details failure, refund plans in bankruptcy filingThe Mercury News

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Frshly uses robotics and algorithms to deliver fresh, hot food to … – Phys.Org

February 28, 2017 by Julie Jacobs The Frshly dispenser. Credit: New Jersey Institute of Technology

Six different cuisines with 30 combos all served hot within 90 seconds, and patrons need only pick, swipe and eat. That's what Frshly, a fully automated "vend-caf" and the brainchild of NJIT alumnus Satish ChamyVelumani, provides to a growing number of hungry consumers on the move through India's railway system and airports. It's an offer the tech startup, established in 2013, calls "plated happiness."

Here's how Frshly works: Customers desiring fresh, hot food from popular local restaurants choose from a selection of stocked menu items at a Frshly state-of-the-art dispensing machine. The company's proprietary technology, a "recipe" of robotics and algorithms, then enables the quick procurement, takeaway-friendly wrapping and prompt delivery of the order. To ensure that the food is always fresh, Frshly restocks the dispensing machine regularly.

The meals "are packed according to the given specifications for every mealtime at the participating restaurant kitchens and then are transported to the Frshly outlets where they are stacked," explained ChamyVelumani. "This is as good as any convenience store where products are pre-stacked based on predictive demand analysis."

Customers also can place an order, as well as specify a pickup location and time, via the free Frshly app, available from the Apple and Google Play stores. The app secures their meal until they collect it, at which time the dispenser reheats and serves it. The cost for Frshly meals ranges from Rs 59-159 in Indian currency (approximately $1-$2.50).

ChamyVelumani has introduced Frshly in three cities in India: Bengaluru, Chennai and Secunderabad. Each market features different cuisine.

"The idea is to serve the brands from the cities in which we operate," ChamyVelumani noted. "Frshly is an ecosystem for multiple restaurants to get on board and reach out to new customers. Even though Frshly is an aggregation platform, the brands that participate are curated based on the market demand."

In addition to train stations and the Chennai International Airport, the company also has a presence at information technology parks and large information technology companies and commercial technical support locationsa pipeline ChamyVelumani describes as strong.

Food for Thought

The Frshly journey, from "back of the napkin" concept sketches to the first customer making a selection, took ChamyVelumani two-and-a-half years to complete. He faced some challenges along the way, particularly with building the interface between the ordering app, the dispenser and the enterprise resource planning system.

"With Frshly, every single thing had to be developed from scratch," he said. "There were a lot of dependencies. We are talking about an entire ecosystem here, including hardware."

Fortunately, pitching Frshly to the Indian Railways Network and airport authorities proved much easier. Indian Railways had been searching for an innovation in the food and beverage space and Frshly fit the bill. A successful pilot in Chennai Central Railway Station followed and since then Frshly has opened two more stores in India, with a third and possibly more poised to launch this year. Frshly may even find its way soon inside the compartments on long-distance trains.

First-Gen Entrepreneur

"First" is certainly a recurring theme of the Frshly story. The business is a first of its kind and the first commercial venture for ChamyVelumani, who is the first in his family to become an entrepreneur. All in all, he said, it "has been a great ride so far."

Before returning to his home country to start Frshly, he worked in the manufacturing industry in the U.S. for 11 years in a variety of engineering roles at 3M Purification Inc. (formerly CUNO Incorporated). And just before joining 3M, he earned his M.S. in manufacturing systems engineering at New Jersey Institute of Technology (NJIT); he also holds an MBA in global enterprise management from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute.

"I was working in India as a mechanical engineer for about two years, mostly doing 2D drafting and 3D modeling. I became bored of that work and I didn't think those jobs were paving the way for me to achieve my future dreams. I wanted to get a broader exposure to manufacturing and through my friends I heard about the manufacturing systems engineering course that was offered at NJIT," offered ChamyVelumani, who arrived at the university in 2000. "Overall, the course work was an eye opener. I particularly enjoyed my design-for-manufacturing classes with [Professor Sanchoy] Das."

Feedback and Future

To further improve service, ChamyVelumani and his Frshly staffabout 60 people including store ownersare fielding recommendations for new cuisines and meal quantities from customers, who on the whole have appreciated the convenience of getting their favorite food brands at the touch of a button.

Looking ahead, Frshly is expanding its operations into Singapore this March and also working to set up stand-alone dispensers for several large food brands. ChamyVelumani's vision for his company includes moves into other Asia Pacific countries, the Middle East and ultimately North America.

ChamyVelumani encourages aspiring entrepreneurs to dream big and work hard. He credits his NJIT education with helping shape him into who he is today.

"My master's program put an entire business sense of things in my head," he reflected. "I always say this: 'It is not the subjects that we study, but it is the application that makes the difference.' NJIT helped me with learning the application."

Explore further: Why restaurants want you to order food on your phone

More information: For more information on Frshly, visit gofrshly.com

Swipe, click, food. The ability to order food with the click of a few buttons on a smartphone is becoming widespread - even fast-food companies are getting in on the action. But the technology - which in some cases tracks ...

US drone delivery service Flirtey on Monday announced that its self-piloting flying machines have whisked flu medicine, hot food and more from 7-Eleven convenience stores to customers' homes.

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The car of the future will let you pay for petrol or parking directly from your vehicle and receive traffic alerts and restaurant recommendations from your onboard digital assistant.

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A University of Central Florida professor has invented a way to use light to continuously monitor a surgical patient's blood, for the first time providing a real-time status during life-and-death operations.

The smartphone revolution is poised to go onto the next levelwith "superphones" equipped with artificial intelligence now on the horizon.

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Frshly uses robotics and algorithms to deliver fresh, hot food to ... - Phys.Org

Local middle school robotics team headed to world championships – KPVI News 6

A team of Pocatello students from Franklin Middle School are embracing the future, using robots.

"Right now if we are beating high school teams it should fairly easy to beat middle school teams," said Christopher Entzel.

That confidence is no joke. The team is fresh off winning the Idaho State Robotics Championship where they beat out 28 of the best robotic teams in the state including 23 high schools. Now their attention turns to the best teams in the world.

"When I came here I didn't really thing we would get that far, like maybe a couple competitions in city, and I never even thought of worlds but now we are going there," says Chloe Curtis.

Getting to the world championships wasn't really a goal of the team when they started getting into robotics, but after recent tournament success they are ready for the challenge.

"We just did it for fun and some of these people do it seriously and do it as classes in school, but somehow we are doing better than them," said Entzel.

Despite having different roles on the team all members have put in many hours into their robot "Kirby".

"Its done way better and I really like it and I'm really proud of it," said Curtis.

Making sure everything is working properly and making modifications to the claws and body so it can pick up a heavier load.

"The competitive feeling whenever you're chucking stuff over and they are chucking stuff back. It's really fun and even though it's as nerdy as it can seem it's the most fun thing ever," said Jred Harden.

The team has qualified for the Robotics World Championships in Kentucky but they lack the funding to get to the event and compete. You can help them get to the world championships by donating here: https://www.gofundme.com/plz-send-us-to-vex-world-robotics

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Local middle school robotics team headed to world championships - KPVI News 6

Who are the hottest robotics startups in the UK? Meet 13 of the country’s best – Techworld.com

1. Best robotics startups in the UK: Cambridge Medical Robotics Cambridge Medical Robotics

Minimally invasive surgery tends to be a highly expensive procedure, but Cambridge Medical Robotics is developing a next-generation robotic system that could make it affordable and universally accessible.The startup has already successfully tested the performance of the platform on cadavers.

The big planshave already attracted big backing. In July 2016, the company raised $20.3 million in a Series A funding round from investors including ABB Technology Ventures, LGT Global Invest and Cambridge Innovation Capital.

London-based startupAutomatawas founded in January 2015to democratise robotics by lowering costs and improving usability. The company plansto use a robotics-as-a-service (RAAS) business modelto integrate robotics into existing workflows more efficiently and to bring automation to new markets. Automata has attracted an undisclosed quantity of funding from ABB Technology Ventures (ATV).

Founders Mostafa El Sayed and Suryansh Chandra previously worked as lead designers at Zaha Hadid Architecture, and their first product should be a welcome one in their former profession. The low-cost, plug and play, table-top robotic arm called Eva is ideally suited for design studios, but has been developed to also work in SMEs from a myriad of other industries.

University of Sheffield spin-out Consequential Robotics was established to develop companion and assistive robotic systems toenhance quality of life as people age. The first product developed by the startup is a mechanical pet with dog-like features called MiRO that is said to be "the first robot that thinks like an animal".

MiRo is controlled bytechnology modelled on the biological brain, and alimited number are currently available to professional researchers for 1,900 plus tax andshipping.Iconic British designer Sebastian Conran teamed up withthe university's Professor Tony Prescott and Dr Ben Mitchinsonto found the company in 2016.The research was supported by Innovate UK and it's received funding as part of an EU project.

Ai Buildwants to develop robotic technologies to support 3D printing in the built environment. The London startup was born in November 2015 and attracted 75,000 of seed funding from Seedcamp the next year.

Founder Daghan Cam envisions a future of construction in which industrial robotics and machine learning automate fabrication processes and help make large-scale 3D printing affordable. Last October the company unveiled the Daedalus Pavilion to showcase the technologys potential. The 5m high and 4.5m wide structure wasbuilt using a customised KUKA robotic arm and a 3D printing gun.

Bristol-based Reach Robotics is developing monster robots controlled by mobile devices to use with video games. The company has created more than thirty prototypes since it was launched in 2014, but the first design to be released commercially is MekaMon.

The customisable machines are designed to let players engage in combat through augmented reality gaming and are currently available from $275 (224). Reach Robotics has secured a disclosed total of $250,000 (200,575) in seed funding so far from seven different investors.

Open Bionics designs3D-printed bionic hands for amputees using medical grade materials. The open source initiative produces devices that are easily reproduced using off-the-shelf materials and teamed up with Disney in 2015 to create a superhero-themed range of prosthetics for children.

The company has received a total of $120,000 (96,270) equity funding and $20,000 (16,045) seed funding. In February it added$1 million (802,100) in prize money after beating more than 1,000 other entrants to the International UAE Robotics for Good Award. The winnings will be used topush the product throughthe final stages of medical testing before it can be made available to everyone who needs it.

Oxfordshire startup Animal Dynamicsemerged as a spinout company from the Department of Zoology at Oxford University that builds bio-inspired vehicles usingdeep science to understand naturally-evolved designs. The team are working to develop a portfolio of products based on research into flight, swimming and walking in the natural world.

The company was co-founded by biomechanics professor Dr Adrian Thomas and entrepreneur Alex Cacciain in 2015, andhas attracted seed funding from angel investors Oxford Technology and the University of Oxford Isis Fund (UOIF) to build and test its first products and an undisclosed amount of Series A funding.

The creators ofMoley Robotics claim to have designed theworld's first robotic kitchen. The automated chef is operated by a smartphone and combines the standard kitchen equipment ofoven, hob and sink with the unusual addition of two dexterous robotic arms thattake care of the cooking.

The company has raised a total of $1.17 million (939,000)in equity crowdfunding since it was founded in 2014. Aprototype of the device won the"Best of the Best" award at the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Shanghai the next year, and a consumer versionis set to launch sometime in 2017, supported by an iTunes-style library of different recipes.

Primo Toys are designed to help children learn, play and create with technology. Their first release is a wooden robot called Cubetto that helps teach young children how to code through tactile learning. Cubetto is placed atop a map on a floor mat and the child puts coloured blocks onaboard that tell the smiling robotwhere to go.

The company was founded in 2013 by Matteo LoglioandFilippo Yacob to help kids become creators of technology rather than just consumers. They've attracted a total of $1.18 million (950,000)in funding so far, from investors including Randi Zuckerberg, the sister of Facebook founder Mark.Cubetto is currently available to buy for $225 (180).

London-based startup Emotechhas designed what it bills as "the first personal robot with individual personality." The deep-learning capabilities of the voice-controlled device known as "Olly" let it adapt to the personality of its user over time through daily interactions. The technology won the creators four differentCES Innovation Awardsin 2017.

The robotics startup was founded in August 2014 to explore ways of improving the relationships between people and technology and has already secured$10 million (8 million) of Series A funding from Alliance Capital and Lightning Capital, plus an undisclosed amount of angel funding.

Serial entrepreneur Tom Lipinski developed Q-Bot after he uncovered a problem with laying floor insulation in older homes while working on a previous project aimed atreducing domestic energy use. Q-Bot is his solution. The tiny four-wheeled robot isinserted through an air vent armed with a 3D scanner and insulating foam to survey the underside of floorboards and apply insulation as required.

Q-Bot was founded in 2012 andwon best startup at the Invention and Entrepreneurship in Robotics and Automation Awards in Seattle in 2015.The system has been trialled with clients including Camden Council and CityWest Homes, and the company claims it can savebetween 200 and 300 a year in energy bills. A total of 2 million has been invested in Q-Bot from the EU Horizon 2020 Programme andtwo rounds of seed funding.

Starship Technologies develops small self-driving robotsdesigned to deliver goods locally within 30 minutes. The electric six-wheeled personal couriers drive on pavements at a pedestrian speed of four miles per hour to the location of the customer who then unlock the delivery using their personal code.

The startup is headquartered in London but its engineering operations are based in Estonia.Skype co-foundersJanus Friis and Ahti Heinla created the company in 2015 and have gained $17.2 million (13.8 million) of funding from eight investorsincludingHOF CapitalandPlayfair Capital.

Dr Alexander Enoch developed his idea forRobotical whileworking withbulkymachinesduringhisPhD in Robotics studies at the University of Edinburgh. The compactbipedal robot called Marty harnesses the power of play to teach computer skills to childrenby letting themreprogramme the device and customise its3D-printed parts.

The company has received funding from the the Royal Academy of Engineering's Enterprise Hub and more than 86,000 on a crowdfunding platform. Marty is currently available at a special pre-order price of 99 plus shipping.

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Who are the hottest robotics startups in the UK? Meet 13 of the country's best - Techworld.com

Robotics team off to championships – The Wilton Bulletin

Wilton Librarys robotics team, Singularity Technology, recently qualified in the CT State Competition to move to the Super-Regional Competitions in Scranton, Pa., in March. Standing left to right: Rohit Singhal, Albert Wei, Alex Cameron, Harris Patnaik, Rishabh Raniwala; kneeling left to right: Navod Jayawardhane, Khloe Rackley, Emilie McCann, Cathy Campbell, Nickia Muraskin.

For the first time ever, Singularity Technology, Wilton Librarys robotics team, has qualified to compete in the FIRST Tech Challenge (FTC) Super-Regionals Championship, a global robotics competition, to be held in March in Scranton, Pa.

The library team had an outstanding performance at the FTC CT State Championships on Feb. 18 at Greens Farms Academy in Westport. Earning second place in the state competition, the team was recognized for excelling in all facets of the challenge, including innovative and successful robot design and the embodiment of the FIRST value of Gracious Professionalism.

We are so excited to have come this far, said team captain Nickia Muraskin of Singularity Technologys performance against 23 other teams from around Connecticut.

FTC competitions are alliance-based. That means teams are partnered with one another for every match. Alliances change from match to match and former partners turn into adversaries. Its all part of FTCs goal of developing team-building skills and cooperative approaches to problem solving among the young engineers which they summarize with the trademarked terms Gracious Professionalism and Coopertition.

Albert Wei, the teams software captain, finds wisdom in Gracious Professionalism.

To me, it is less about the robot that we make and more about the way we act, he said. It has motivated us to integrate as many people as we can into our building process, because our product turns out better when everyone works together.

Susan Lauricella, Wilton Librarys teen services and maker space manager noted, This has been such a wonderful learning and bonding exercise. The group has grown in experience in the last year or so and really has come together as a team in the true sense and spirit of the word.

The Singularity Technology team consists of 10 middle and high school students: Cathy Campbell, Alex Cameron, Navod Jayawardhane, Emilie McCann, Nickia Muraskin, Harris Patnaik, Khloe Rackley, Rishabh Raniwala, Rohit Singhal, and Albert Wei. Members meet and work at the library with volunteer mentors Tom Abend and Paul Lauricella and library staffers Susan Lauricella and Thomas Kozak.

Part of the teams success comes from their integration of various sensors and custom 3D-printed designs. The team uses online CAD programs and the 3D printer in the librarys Innovation Station to create everything from bevel gears to cap ball holding parts, all in SingulTechs signature blue and green. Team member Rishabh Raniwala is most proud of how far our coding has come, its been a huge improvement over last year.

This year, the team made a strategic decision to focus on two specific challenges with the robot: lifting the cap ball and pressing infrared beacons in both autonomous and teleop modes.

Our cap ball lifting and beacon-pressing mechanisms are incredibly reliable, said team member Harris Patnaik. Much more so than those of our competitors.

Our team needs to spend a lot of time practicing driving in high-stress situations, so we can be prepared for anything that could possibly go wrong, added Emilie McCann, the teams build captain. Additionally, we have to create lots of promotional materials not only for our own team, but for FIRST as a whole.

The team is most grateful for the support of Jet Blue, Wilton Hardware, Glenn Hemmerle and McHancock County LLC, as well as Wilton Library for the initial funding. Anyone wishing to support the teams push to the Super-Regionals may make an online donation through Wilton Librarys website, http://www.wiltonlibrary.org, and specify Robotics in the comments field.

FIRST (For Inspiration and Recognition of Science and Technology) is a nonprofit organization with the mission to inspire young people to be science and technology leaders, by engaging them in exciting mentor-based programs that build science, engineering, and technology skills, that inspire innovation, and that foster well-rounded life capabilities including self-confidence, communication, and leadership.

To learn more about the FIRST Tech Challenge, visit http://www.firstinspires.org/robotics/ftc or http://7034st.wixsite.com/singultech to see more of the team and its robot.

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Robotics team off to championships - The Wilton Bulletin

Boston Dynamics Officially Unveils Its Wheel-Leg Robot: "Best of Both Worlds" – IEEE Spectrum

Image: Boston Dynamics via YouTube Boston Dynamics' Handle is a humanoid robot on wheels, and it's amazing.

When Boston Dynamics introduced its massively upgraded Atlaslast year, we said the robot coulddo things weve never seen other robots doing before, making it one of the most advanced humanoids in existence. But now, after seeing the video that Boston Dynamics just released to officially unveil itsnewest creation, Handle, a sort of Atlas on wheels,well just say it again: Handle cando things weve never seen other robots doing before, making it one of the most advanced humanoids in existence.

Wheels are a great invention,Marc Raibert, founder and president of Boston Dynamics, tells IEEE Spectrum, adding that Handle, which uses a wheel-leg hybrid system,can have the best of both worlds.

You probably saw footageof Handle a few weeks ago, when Raibert gave a talk in California and someone filmed the screen with a phone and posted it on YouTube. When we asked Boston Dynamics about the leaked video, the company saiditwasnt ready to discuss the new robot and suggested that we wait. Now, finally, we have more details about Handle, and Raibert even answered a few of our questions on why and how they built the robot.

Boston Dynamicssays Handle is an R&D robot, so although it can perform a number of useful tasks, like carrying 45-kilogram crates, it probably wont be commercially availableanytime soon. Handle has a range of24 kilometers on a battery charge, which is much more than what it would be able to cover with traditional bipedal robot locomotion. Using wheels also helps reduce thenumber of degrees of freedom,and the company says Handle is significantlyless complex than some of the quadruped and biped robots that precededit.

Indeed, this kind of multi-modal locomotion is highly effective. In a much more limited capacity, its what helped DRC-HUBO win the DARPA Robotics Challenge Finals: Being able to use both wheels and legs helps your robot efficiently adapt to different situations, trading the ability to traverse rough terrain for speed (and stability, which legged robots can have trouble with)and back again whenever necessary, just like you would as a human with a pair of rollerblades.

Teaching bipeds to move like this seems like an idea with a lot of potential, especially if Boston Dynamics can develop a generalized controller that allows robots with regular legs to take advantage of wheelsimagine the next generation of Atlasbeing equipped with an integrated pair of roller shoes likeHeelys. Were not sure if thats part of the companys plans, but hereswhat Raibert told us about Handle and his teams experience using wheels after famously building so many legged robots.

IEEE Spectrum:How did the idea to build a wheeled robot come about, and how long did it take to build it?

Marc Raibert:Weve had the idea for building a robot that combined legs with wheels for a long time, but never had the opportunity to explore it.We started last summer and had something working in about six months. We accelerated the project by using components for power, arms, and upper body that were originally designed for Atlas.

Were you able to reuse or adapt any of the bioinspired control strategies youve used so successfully in legged robots?

Much of the control used in Handle leverages our teams experience with the quadruped and biped robots.The software is not exactly the same, but the balance and dynamic control principles have a lot in common and share the same physics-based roots.

Is Handles upper body an Atlas torso, or a completely new design? And isthe robot all electric or does it use hydraulics?

Yes, it uses Atlas torso and a slightly modified version of Atlas arms. [For power we use] electric power (batteries), but both electric and hydraulic actuation.

How do you and your team feel about working with wheels after working on legged designs for so long?

Wheels are a great invention. But wheels work best on flat surfaces and legs can go anywhere. By combining wheels and legs, Handle can have the best of both worlds.

IEEE Spectrum's award-winning robotics blog, featuring news, articles, and videos on robots, humanoids, drones, automation, artificial intelligence, and more. Contact us:e.guizzo@ieee.org

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Boston Dynamics Officially Unveils Its Wheel-Leg Robot: "Best of Both Worlds" - IEEE Spectrum

ACME Robotics earns trip to Super Regionals with top 10 finish at NorCals – The Union of Grass Valley

ACME Robotics is moving on.

The independent robotics team, made up mostly of Nevada Union High School students working out of one of the school's portable buildings, finished eighth among 202 teams at the NorCal For Inspiration and Recognition of Science and Technology (FIRST) Tech Challenge at Newark Memorial High School on Feb. 19.

The top 10 finish sends ACME Robotics to the FTC West Super Regional in Tacoma, Washington March 9-11 for the first time in the team's three-year history.

The goal is to reach the World Championships April 19-22 in Houston, Texas by placing in the top 38 of the 72 teams at the Super Regionals.

"I'd say we have a 50-percent chance," said Kellen Bodine, one of the team's co-founders and the lead engineer. "We're one of the better teams based on (our data)."

THE TEAM

Ryan Brott, 16, is in charge of scouting opponents, and he's also the team's software lead who does most of the robot's programming. A Nevada Union junior, Ryan helped found the team as a freshman. He wasn't surprised ACME advanced to the Super Regional.

"This is our third year as a team, and this is also our third year being in the (NorCal) Championships," he said. "It was just a matter of time before we moved on."

Bodine, 16, a junior at Nevada Union, said his love of engineering led him to help start the ACME team.

"I've always loved building things, and this gives me the perfect outlet to do that," he said. "The whole program is just really cool and it gives kids a lot of great opportunities I knew I wanted to be some sort of engineer since I was probably 4 years old."

Bodine has been hard at work improving the robot for the trip to Washington.

"Our button presser is a little slow, and we keep improving the accuracy and speed of the components, primarily the ball launcher," Bodine said.

John Convis, 17, a Nevada Union junior in his second year with ACME, is in charge of the team's 3-D modeling, something new this year. He created a 3-D model of the robot, which helped ACME create special wheels the robot uses to fire balls.

Ivy Brott, 14, a Nevada Union freshman, handles the team's outreach, including fundraising, the website, social media and team events.

"My position is a way to get involved with the team without having to be good at coding or know exactly how to make a robot," Ivy Brott said. "My part is more connecting with the community, not the technical part."

Other team members include Shawn (last name withheld by request), Thea Pelayo and Kelly Muir. Michael Lewis and Stephanie Lewis help Oitzman as mentors.

GOTTA GET THERE

ACME Robotics operates on a budget of about $7,000 a year, excluding travel. The trip to Tacoma alone is going to cost about $7,000. The team has set up a GoFundMe page, gofundme.com/acme-robotics-superregionals-trip. Those wishing to help can also visit the team's website at goacmerobotics.com.

Team sponsor Telestream stepped up, with employee donations exceeding $1,500. The company matched the first $1,000, and Telestream CEO Dan Castles matched the $1,500 raised by employees to get the team more than halfway to its goal.

Autometrix, another of ACME's corporate sponsors, had raised $490 in employee donations as of Friday afternoon with a goal to reach $750. The company has also pledged to match the employee donations.

According to the ACME website, the team had raised $5,255 as of Monday afternoon.

HOW IT'S PLAYED

The challenge requires teams to fit their robot in an 18-by-18-inch box, but it may expand once it's been removed.

That's where the 3-D modeling comes in.

"It's helped out immensely," Convis said. "From the 3-D modeling, we were able to determine that we couldn't fit some of the parts we wanted to use."

They then compete on a field that's 12-by-12 feet and divided into red and blue sides.

This year's game, Velocity Vortex, consists of two driver/operators, one coach and one robot per team. There are four teams in each match, two sets of two-team alliances.

"There's a lot of politicking about what teams the kids want to align with," ACME mentor Mike Oitzman said.

In the center of the playing surface is a rotating vortex with one red and one blue "basket" that essentially serves as a basketball-like hoop. There are also vortices ramps with a goal on top, one red and one blue in opposing corners of the field and four beacons on top of the 1-foot-tall walls that frame the field.

Each team has multiple particles, which are essentially Wiffle balls, and one 21-inch cap ball. Teams are awarded points for a variety of things, most commonly shooting particles from the robot through the center vortex rings, scoring the particles in the corner vortices, and pushing the beacon when it flashes the color corresponding with a team's color.

The team that touches the beacon last is the only team awarded points.

To contact Staff Writer Stephen Roberson, email sroberson@theunion.com or call 530-477-4236.

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ACME Robotics earns trip to Super Regionals with top 10 finish at NorCals - The Union of Grass Valley

TC robotics state champs again – Shelbynews

The Triton Central robotics team has built itself quite the reputation in recent years.

That reputation continues to grow after the team successfully defended its state championship from a year ago.

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TC robotics state champs again - Shelbynews

Young women gear up for FIRST Robotics Competition – Swinburne University of Technology

Swinburne has opened its state-of-the-art Factory of the Future to a team of young women set to compete in an international robotics competition.

Comprised of 17 students from Melbourne high schools, the girls-only RoboCats spent six weeks at Swinburnes Hawthorn campus programming and building a50kg robot for the FIRST Robotics Competition.

Led by mentors Dr Therese Keane, Deputy Chair of Education at Swinburne, and Swinburne alumni Milorad Cerovac, the team will compete in the South Pacific Regional at the Sydney Olympic Park in March.

The theme for this years competition is Steamworks, with teams challenged to launch a large airship via the collection, transportation, and depositing of plastic gears and balls.

Dr Keane, who co-founded the team with Mr Cerovac in 2015, says the event is an opportunity to introduce young women to disciplines in which women are traditionally underrepresented.

The interesting thing is that many of the girls do not see this as maths, science, technology or engineering, they see it as a fun activity where they have the chance to build a robot and make friends.

In 2016, the RoboCats were one of three all-girl teams at the South Pacific competition, and the only one from Victoria.

Its fantastic to see the girls starting conversations about gender diversity, Dr Keane says.

The RoboCats are sponsored by the Swinburne Innovation Precinct, with additional support from the Faculty of Health, Arts and Design, the Faculty of Science, Engineering and Technology, BAE Systems, Ford Australia, Rockwell Automation, Salesforce, Ivetech and Boeing.

They also had a team of mentors that included Swinburne Senior Electrical Technician Antonio Lione and Swinburne Bachelor of Engineering (Robotics and Mechatronics) (Hons)/Bachelor of Science (Computer Science) graduate Devon Boyd.

We had more support than ever this year and it has made a huge difference, Dr Keane says.

The girls loved the whole experience of being on campus and being able to use all of the facilities.

Excerpt from:

Young women gear up for FIRST Robotics Competition - Swinburne University of Technology

Stamford girl headed to robotics finals – The Advocate

By Nelson Oliveira, Stamford Advocate

Photo: Contributed / The Harvey School

Harvey School student Wendy Lichtenberg, of Stamford.

Harvey School student Wendy Lichtenberg, of Stamford.

Harvey School students Wendy Lichtenberg, of Stamford, and Clayton Collum during a February match of the VEX IQ Challenge state-qualifier competition at East Rockaway High School on Long Island.

Harvey School students Wendy Lichtenberg, of Stamford, and Clayton Collum during a February match of the VEX IQ Challenge state-qualifier competition at East Rockaway High School on Long Island.

Stamford girl headed to robotics finals

Stamford resident Wendy Lichtenberg, a seventh-grader at the Harvey School in Katonah, N.Y., will compete in a statewide robotics tournament this weekend.

She and her sixth-grade partner, Clayton Collum, placed eighth out of 40 teams in the final match of the VEX IQ Challenge state-qualifier competition earlier this month at East Rockaway High School on Long Island.

The pair will compete Saturday in the New York state tournament in Massapequa.

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Stamford girl headed to robotics finals - The Advocate

First Elementary Robotics Team Winning Competitions – WHIZ

ZANESVILLE, Ohio The John McIntire Elementary Schools newest program is winning awards and becoming a world competitor.

This is the first year the elementary school has started their first three robotic teams. Their sixth grade girls team has won the state competition and will now be competing in the 2017 VEX Worlds Robotics Competition Elementary School Division. Melissa Rider is a team member who was excited to make it on to the team and wants to be a part of the junior high and high school teams when the time comes.

It feels wonderful especially now that we get to go to worlds its just absolutely exciting, Rider said. I think I can speak for all of us when we say I cant wait.

Each student had to write an essay to apply for a position. Following the teams being selected each student took on a role in the teams and had to learn how to troubleshoot different issues.

We kept bumping the ramp up, like I said there were magnets on the ramp, and we kept bumping it up, Team Member Caroline Pinson said. We had no way to push the ramp back down onto our side, so we could balance. So we decided to add that little arm that could push it down so we would no longer have to face that problem.

The team has a GoFundMe page asking for donations so they can travel to the World competition.You can find their page by searching John McIntire Elementary School Robotics.

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First Elementary Robotics Team Winning Competitions - WHIZ

Drone Startup Lily Robotics Files Chapter 11 – CFO

The company was unable to find enough financing to go into production and is now seeking a buyer for its technology.

Camera drone startup Lily Robotics filed for bankruptcy protection on Monday so it can conduct an orderly sale of its technology and pay refunds to customers.

The company netted 61,450 pre-orders for its drone cameras, generating about $38.4 million, according to court papers. But it announced last month that it had been unable to find enough financing to go into production.

As TechCrunch reports, Lily was one of the first autonomous AI-assisted camera drones ever announced, and was supposed to revolutionize the personal cameradrone industry. But in the time it took Lilyto ship, others drones like Hover hit the market, and DJI developedautonomous flight modes forthe Phantom and Inspire (and now Mavic),arguably the three best drones on the market.

In a bankruptcy court filing, Chief Restructuring Officer Curtis Solsvig said Lily was hoping for a competitive auction after already receiving indications of interest for its primary asset the intellectual property related to its flying drone with a waterproof camera from potential buyers.

The company is seeking a speedy sale process to avoid the potential loss of value to the [intellectual property] if it goes stale, Solsvig added.

Lily, which was founded in 2013 by two University of California, Berkeley, students, attracted investors including venture capitalists Spark Capital and SV Angel and celebrities Steve Aoki and Joe Montana.

The first drone shipment date had been scheduled for February 2016, but court papers say the high demand forced Lily to postpone deliveries until later in 2016. By the end of the year, it said the financial market had dried up, leaving the company to explore strategic alternatives such as a sale.

Lily said it has lined up a $3 million bankruptcy loan, subject to court approval, from Spark Capital.

Access to post-petition financing is necessary to enhance the debtors liquidity, provide necessary capital during the pendency of this Chapter 11 case, and provide customers, employees, and other interested parties confidence that the debtor has sufficient resources available to organize a successful sale process and be able to refund customers in an orderly manner, the company said.

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Drone Startup Lily Robotics Files Chapter 11 - CFO

Lego robotics championship encourages students to solve real-world problems – Channel3000.com – WISC-TV3

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JANESVILLE, Wis. - Janesville Parker High School hosted a statewide Lego robotics championship Sunday, where 36 teams showed off their programming skills.

The program First Lego League is for students in fourth through eighth grades. This years theme, Animal Allies, asked students to build and program a Lego robot to complete animal-related tasks.

Teams also invented products to solve real-world problems. One groups project hit close to home for members.

Anvita and Anay Bansal, from Richmond Schools team, recently lost their cousin in India to dengue fever. Anvita explained that this is a viral infection caused by the Aedes mosquito.

Our whole team was really struck by [his death], Anvita said. We wanted to make sure this didnt happen to anybody else, so we decided to make preventing dengue our project for Lego League.

The team from Sussex, Wisconsin created a device to repel mosquitoes that may be carrying the deadly virus. The invention had rotating chambers filled with various essential oils. Their project even explained financial details about how to make this product affordable to those living in third world countries.

The six winning teams selected at the Wisconsin robotics championship will move on to the national level, with four teams advancing to the First Lego League world festival and two teams submitting their projects to the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office.

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Lego robotics championship encourages students to solve real-world problems - Channel3000.com - WISC-TV3

Korah team, two Missarenda brothers, off to World Robotics Competition – SooToday.com

SooToday has received an update from the Saults Jonathan Budau, Superior Heights physics teacher and local VEX Robotics Competition organizer, after the secondary school level provincial VEX Robotics Championships in St. Catharines.

Lone Wolf has done it. They are off to the World Championships for VEX Robotics.

Lone Wolf, a team of Korah students, was the top northern team.

In the exciting finals matchup, the Lone Wolf Alliance faced a powerhouse Alliance of the Lancebotics from Toronto, Team Winston from St. Catharines and Bramptons Viking Robotics B. However, Lone Wolfs squad was unstoppable, and fought hard to win, taking home the gold medal as the top Teamplay performance. This is the highest finish ever by a northern Ontario team at this level of competition, Budau wrote in an email to SooToday.

During the final awards presentations, Budau was given the Provincial Volunteer Of The Year award, in recognition for his efforts to create a district program that now has the largest per capita participation of any robotics program in Canada, and possibly the world.

To top off the evening awards, the Excellence Award for overall tournament winner in all performance and judging categories combined, and the highest award given at this event, was Lone Wolf Robotics, who now hold the title of top robotics team in Ontario, Budau reported.

Lone Wolf will join brothers Chase and Hunter Martel from Missarenda Consolidated Public School (in Missanabie), who earned a World Championships invitation in last weekends VEX IQ provincial elementary event, and will mark the first time that any northern team has earned a world invitation at either VEX robotics division.

The World VEX Championships will take place in Louisville, Kentucky from April 23 to 29.

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Korah team, two Missarenda brothers, off to World Robotics Competition - SooToday.com

Local Vex Robotics teams ready for state – Elizabethtown News Enterprise

From outside the Project Lead the Way suite at the Early College and Career Center, the hum of robots could be heard.

Its crunch time for all the Vex Robotics teams, and inside the suite, busy students work on their programs, tweak their robots, add new parts or practice a new strategy. Teams from Hardin Countys schools practice at EC3.

State competitions for Vex Robotics are a week away for the middle school teams and two weeks away for high-schoolers. The middle school contest is March 4 at EC3 in Elizabethtown. The high school competition is March 11 at Martha Layne Collins High School in Shelbyville.

Ten teams from Hardin County middle schools have qualified for state. At the high school level, 10 teams also have qualified. Teams from Hardin County have won state three consecutive times since the program started in 2013.

EC3 has been setting the pace for the state, said Jason Neagle, Project Lead The Way instructor for EC3. Our goal is to be good at the national and world level.

Neagle is aiming to win overall excellence in a robotics program. The first step, though, is to qualify for the Worlds competition in Louisville. To do that, Hardin County teams have to win at the state competition.

Weve set our goals high, Neagle said. We want to win excellence awards. Weve been knocking on the door for the past few years.

They hope to knock down the door this year, and hes optimistic about their chances.

THEY DON'T STOP

Thor Newsome, a seventh-grader at East Hardin Middle School, worked at building new arms for the teams robot at practice Wednesday. The new arms will act like a clamp and help the robot pick up more objects.

Thor and his team hope the change will help them earn more points, which could make a difference at the state competition. Their team, EHMS Vex A, currently is ranked third in the state.

A Vex competition has two parts: a head-to-head competition and a skills challenge. This year, robots are tasked with picking up yellow stars and soft-sided orange cubes and then throwing the objects over a 2-foot fence. The objects equal different points, with cubes having a higher value. The action takes place in a 12-by-12 arena.

Susan Hatfield, East Hardins Vex coach, wouldnt let them dismantle the robot until they built the new parts. After all, this is risky business, tweaking the robot so soon before a competition.

I told them not to mess up what youve got when you are third in state, Hatfield said.

East Hardin has three teams going to state, the most of any middle school in the district. Its Hatfields first year coaching the program.

Weve got a good team, she said. Kids spend hours programming. One kid stays up all night notebooking. They dont stop.

In a corner of the practice room, another team is working on programming their robot to be autonomous, meaning they will pick up objects and fling them over the fence without being controlled. Its a way to earn extra points, sixth-grader Gabi Sutherland said.

Near the end of their weekly practice, the teams robot could run on its own.

A TRADE-OFF

Tyler Sweckard and his team from John Hardin High School opted to make drastic changes to their robot this past week, switching up the motors.

Before, there were six motors in the robots chassis and four in the tower. This week, they took two motors from the chassis and put them in the tower. The change will give them more power but not as much speed.

Its a trade-off, said Sweckard, a senior.

Sweckard said it was stressful changing the robot so late in the season because he said the choice came down to efficiency. The new design will be more efficient.

On Thursday, the team had finished most of the work. All that was left to do was wiring and rewriting the robots programming.

Thats 4,000 lines of code I have to change, Sweckard said. Its going to be a late night for me.

Once the robot is put back together, the team will go back to practicing their driving skills. Sweckard said thats the best preparation for state.

Just practice, practice and more practice, he said. It never stops.

'ADD 30 TONS OF STRESS'

Andrew Schreacke dreams about robots, or rather the robot noise. He has nightmares about stripping gears.

Schreacke captains 6135W, the top team in the state. The Central Hardin High School junior also is the lead driver, meaning he controls the robot during competitions.

In January, the team was ranked No. 1 in the world. Theyve since dropped to No. 16, but Schreacke said knowing people in China and around the world were talking about his team was a great feeling.

I dont know if I can put it into words, he said.

Schreacke has come a long way in one year. Last year, his robot was incapacitated almost every match, so his was one of the bottom teams at EC3. He said he barely qualified for state the last two years.

Now, 6135Ws robot is the one to beat. He said theres added stress with their success.

Its as much as last year, but add 30 tons of stress, he said. This year, theres a constant battle to be the best.

In practice before state, Schreacke isnt tweaking the robot or writing new programs. Instead, hes working on new strategies for the skills challenge in which he tries to earn as many points as he can in 60 seconds. He said the new strategies should help rack up more points.

He estimated hes done the 60-second skills run 600 to 700 times.

But he doesnt mind the extra work or long hours. He wants to win.

We are raising the bar about what we think a Vex Robotics team should be, he said.

Katherine Knott can be reached at 270-505-1747 or kknott@thenewsenterprise.com.

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Local Vex Robotics teams ready for state - Elizabethtown News Enterprise

Middle-schoolers start robotics club – Parsons Sun

Parsons High School began its robotics program in 2003 and now Parsons Middle School has a new Robotics Club to offer younger students a similar opportunity.

Middle school industrial arts teacher Kenneth Rhuems has stepped up to the challenge of helping the students enter into the realm of building robots for competition.

Im learning, because this is new for me, he said. I enjoy it quite a bit and they are every serious. They are pretty focused on what they are doing.

Discussions had taken place the last few years on the possibility of beginning some type of robotics program at the middle school level, so as students enter high school, they have determined their level of interest and have been given some basic understanding of robotics should they want to participate in high school.

When Rhuems began teaching the program this year, he expressed his willingness to PHS robotics teacher Bruce Rea to work with the younger students, but wasnt sure if it would be feasible to obtain the needed equipment.

Come to find out, there were some kits that the school actually had. I had no clue. I found out last semester we could probably do that and then I found we had couple of kits. One of the students got some of his things done ahead of time, so he started building one and got the enthusiasm going, Rhuems said. And then we found we had some more kits at another building.

Then I wrote a grant and got two kits the Parsons Education Foundation bought for us, that were actually going to use in the contest. Weve got three that are different than what we are doing here today. They are the next level. Those will be our contest robots, he said.

Second semester, beginning in January during Friday Fun Time, students had the chance to join the Robotics Club if interested. About 10 students signed up.

Pairs of students were working at separate stations building their first level robots.

I think its really cool because hes my friend and we get to workas a team together, sixth grade student Brayden Myers said.

I think its cool because theres not a lot of things we can do in our grade andthis is one of the things we can do, Marion Ryan said. Like you cant do sports for the school or anything in our grade, but you can do robotics.

And in sixth grade you cant do any wood workingin here and today they did like race cars, I think, Brayden said. But we get to do this.

It will probably be another couple of weeks before they get to start work on their robots for the competition. With spring break and Easter recess the students are going to be down to the wire.

I may have to have them come back to school for a few nights to work on them, Rhuems said. They have the same screws, bolts, nuts, so as they become familiar with them at this level it will be easier, and theyll know the motors and other components and what they do, so it will go faster.

The students act as though they wouldnt mind putting in the additional time one bit.

Its fun. Its fun building them, Andy Winslow-Kephart said. My favorite part is the team work because you are helping and working together.

You learn all about teamwork, Ryan added.

The evening of April 5 parents will be invited to come watch a preview of the robots in action.

Well have like a little contest within our own class, Rhuems said.

April 24 the students will be headed to their first competition at Emporia State University, what they all said they are looking forward to the most.

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Middle-schoolers start robotics club - Parsons Sun

Soldier-turned-robotics-CEO has a special understanding of his product’s need – Stars and Stripes


Stars and Stripes
Soldier-turned-robotics-CEO has a special understanding of his product's need
Stars and Stripes
"These are small and narrow places, a very dangerous environment," the businessman said. Those missions prepared Abuhazira, 36, for his work as the chief executive of a Gaithersburg, Maryland, company called Roboteam. It sells high-tech robots capable ...

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Soldier-turned-robotics-CEO has a special understanding of his product's need - Stars and Stripes