Basketball-Throwing Baby Seal

ParoParoParo

If you have been looking for a reason to dress up a basketball-throwing robotic arm in a baby seal outfit, you may want to start looking here for suggestions.

The idea, though, is not very original

The Elderly Need Robots More Than Any of Us

Babyloid

Professor Kanou Masayoshi of Chukyo University of Science and Technology has invented Babyloid, a robot doll for the elderly that looks (vaguely) like a baby beluga whale…

Turn Your Kinect into a Mars Rover

“Modders Bending Tech to Their Will”: An interesting piece from BBC on reusing commercial tech.

“Now They Can Escape and Fend for Themselves”

AAAI

Yesterday, the New York Times published an interesting piece on the artificial intelligence ethics conference organized by the Association for the Advancement of Artificial Intelligence. The meeting was held in February at the Asilomar Conference Grounds on Monterey Bay in California.

Power-seeking robotThe group of scientists addressed the ethical implications of creating autonomous intelligent robots. (The article cites several examples that already exist, from predator drones to computer viruses. It links to another NYT article from June 2009 on the development of robots that can find power sources and recharge themselves.)

The interesting thing about this article is how it shows once-skeptical scientists coming to the conclusion that the public needs to be aware of the increasingly important role AI will play in our lives and to reckon with the possibility of a coming Singularity. (The author also notes that some futurists’ writings on the Singularity have become nigh religious, as if it were the Rapture.)

The article links to an overview on the “AAAI Presidential Panel on Long-Term AI Futures.” Be sure to check out the AI Topics page at AAAI’s Web site as well.

Brother, Can You Spare a Yen?

Out of Work Robot

Alas, the global recession has finally trickled down to our artificial friends. In Japan, robots will soon be on the welfare lines.

Remember my post about getting a bipedal robot on the moon by 2012? With robot unemployment levels this high, that’s starting to look like a robot dream deferred…

PLEASE DON’T FEED THE ROBOTS

Robogourmet

Isn’t this just asking for it? I mean, you know that once a robot tastes dead man-flesh, it’s just going to want to know what live human tastes like.

Admittedly, there is a potential upside to independent robots that feed on biomass, but I think it might be wiser to allow them to dine only on inorganic material, like Nissans.

Japanese Got Biped Robots Telling Moonage Fortunes

Given the limits of bipedal locomotion, it always surprises me how obsessed the Japanese are with two-legged robots. Granted, the market there is focused on human interaction and caring for the elderly and disabled: Japan’s population is aging fast and their birthrate is extraordinarily low so they need friendly androids as receptionists and nurses.

But why put a humanoid robot on the moon? … Ah, yes. I see. Because it would be cool as shit.

God Bless Japan

For some time, my friend Christopher and I have been infatuated with the song “Tokyo Storm Warning” (Track 3 on the Elvis Costello and the Attractions album Blood and Chocolate). For the longest time, we thought one of the lines was “Japanese got Jesus robots tellin’ teenage fortunes, for all we know and all we care they might as well be Martians”—which we agreed was really a cool line. Later, we were disappointed to learn that the line is actually “Japanese God-Jesus robots…” which seemed decidedly less cool and a little nonsensical.

Until now… (Click here for a short explanation or here a cheesy video.)
You gotta love Japan.

Hirose Shigeo Is the F-ing Man

Robo Eel

This video and short article on Gizmodo provides a great overview of the work of roboticist Hirose and his team at Tokyo Tech. His designs are elegant and ingenuous, and his robots accomplish tasks in ways that push the envelope of the imagination. Plus, Isaac Asimov himself would get a boner watching Hirose’s watersnake robot swim around…

Robots on Comedy Central

Wired for War

See Jon Stewart interview P. W. Singer, author of Wired for War.

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