Books

National Geographic Gets Into Robotics

Friday, July 29th, 2011

The August issue of National Geographic magazine features a fascinating article on robots, find it on newsstands July 26th 2011. In ”Making Robots Human,” the author Chris Carroll explores the world of robotics, and the advances in technology that allow robots to speak, blink, smile and perform such tasks as folding clothes and cooking. From childcare provider to chef, roboticists have big plans for these human-like machines, which raises the question: how human is too human?

Credit: National Geographic

National Geographic August 2011 - UK, Australia, & New Zealand cover

In five or ten years robots will routinely be functioning in human environments,”

- Reid Simmons, a professor of robotics at Carnegie Mellon

Interview With DIY Robotics Guru Gordon McComb

Monday, June 20th, 2011

Gordon McComb is a seasoned robot builder and author of the very popular and incredibly useful book Robot Builder’s Bonanza. This book is an almost necessary resource for all robot makers ranging from DIY weekend tinkerers to commercial robot builders.

Gordon McComb has written more than 60 books and thousands of magazine articles—more than a million copies of his books have been printed in more than a dozen languages. He’s has been called “The father of hobby robotics” by MAKE Magazine.

For 13 years, Gordon wrote a weekly syndicated newspaper column on computers, which reached several million readers worldwide. He’s still a regular contributor to SERVO Magazine, and most recently finished his seventh year as writer of their popular “Robotics Resources” column.

-RBB Press Release

Gordon McComb and some of his robofriends

Gordon McComb and some of his robofriends

Enough said on our part, let the interview begin!

Q. Could you please start by giving us a brief history of the Robot Builder’s Bonanza’s odyssey?

I began the original edition of Robot Builder’s Bonanza (“RBB”) in the mid-1980’s, during a major resurgence of interest in robotics. I couldn’t afford the ready-made bots of the time — the HERO, RB5X, Gemini, Androbot, and others — so I had to build my own. I thought about ways to simplify the projects I read about in books and magazines, and developed what was then new approaches to construction.

With each new edition I’ve tried to take a fresh look at how people with a modest budget and a minimum of tools can create their own robots. In the fourth edition, for example, almost all of the project plans are based on making only straight, simple cuts. You don’t need special tools or skills.

The fourth edition also embraces the latest low-cost microcontrollers, and the new fusion of affordable all-in-one sensors and breakout boards. It talks about how to hook these up and use them with your own custom robot.

Q. Is it possible to know (even approximately) how many copies of this book have been sold in the world so far, all editions included?

No one really know for sure because of the accounting system used by the original publisher of the first edition. Estimates are several hundred thousand copies of the book have been printed so far. For over a decade the book was featured in various book clubs, and was a major seller through mail order.

Q. How does the content of the new edition compare to the previous one? Can you give us a highlight of its new features?

The book has been heavily revised, and took over a year to write. There are 10 all new robot construction plans, demonstrating building robots using a variety of materials, including wood, plastic, and metal. The new plans include a compact six-legged hexabot, a small but very functional revolute coordinate arm, and a unique but cheap-to-build gripper system.

A lot of attention was made to expanding the discussion of such things as understanding and using electronic components, the proper use of tools, and all levels of electrical and mechanical construction. The fourth edition contains about 30% more text and graphics, and they redesigned the interior of the book to accommodate the extra material. I also off-loaded content to the Robotoid.com support site in order to make room for new chapters.

Q. Using microcontrollers is always a big aspect of building robots. Did you reserve an important place to the open source Arduino phenomenon of the last years?

The Arduino factors heavily in the fourth edition of RBB. There’s a new “getting started” chapter on the Arduino, plus many of the projects that interface to a microcontroller include Arduino hookups and code sketches.

I also added coverage of the PICAXE, another microcontroller that’s popular among robo-builders. Several projects in the book demonstrate using special features of the PICAXE, such as its built-in support for reading infrared remote control signals.

Q. We know the book has a companion website at Robotoid.com. It looks like a true paradise for all roboticists and especially for people building their first robot. Could you please give us an overview of what we can find on this website?

Lost In Space - Image by reflectionsonfilmandtelevision.blogspot.com

Lost In Space - by reflectionsonfilmandtelevision.blogspot.com

Robot Builder’s Bonanza, Fourth Edition is supplemented with what I call the “RBB Online Support site,” at Robotoid.com. (By the way, the name “robotoid” comes, in part, from a particularly bad episode of the old Lost in Space television series that features Robby the Robot — originally seen in the movie Forbidden Planet — as a very naughty bot.)

The support site has all the microcontroller source code from the book, of course, plus bonus projects like an advanced 12-servo hexapod, printable cutting and drilling templates, parts sources, and “app notes,” mini-articles on all sorts of interesting robotics topics. I add new material on a weekly basis.

Also on the Support site is my Arduino-based ArdBot Project originally published in SERVO Magazine, plus My First Robot, a collection of lessons for getting started in robotics. Access to the support site is free, and does not require registration or membership.

Q. Is Robot Builder’s Bonanza appropriate for teaching robotics at schools or for educational institutions in general? Would you recommend it for teachers starting a robotic class?

While RBB is not a textbook, it’s been used as a hands-on robot building guide in various classrooms. I like to think of RBB as a point of inspiration. It’s a compendium of robot facts and ideas, rather than a how-to on constructing one, basic robot. Since the projects are modular, students are free to build their own unique creation. That’s always been an important part of RBB, and why it’s remained popular all these years.

Q. Does the 4th edition of Robot Builder’s Bonanza continue to offer a list of sources of where to buy robots and robot parts? Do you have your favourite places to shop? How have you tested their service quality before recommending them in your book?

The bulk of the source listings have been moved to the RBB Online Support site, where links to important retailers are now maintained. The lists are categorized, and I’ve purchased from just about all the retailers in the main Robotics category. (On those I didn’t, I got recommendations from close friends.)

I have often placed “secret shopper” orders, in case someone at the online store recognized my name. And before you ask, not all passed muster. Those that failed weren’t included. You might be interested to know that I secret-shopped at RobotShop.com during the writing of the fourth edition, and you should be proud that you passed with flying colors!

Q. What do you see for the future of robotics? What role are hobbyists playing in the advancement of robotics today?

Robotics is what I call inspired technology, using the affordable materials and electronics involved in building robots to learn about cutting edge technologies used in aerospace, microbiology, marine science, artificial intelligence, psychology, and other disciplines. Whether or not someone perfects their beer-fetching robot doesn’t matter. Robotics is a journey; the destination is what you’ve learned along the way, and how you use that knowledge to better yourself, and the world.

Ten years ago robot hobbyists were experimenting with all the gadgets common in today’s smart phones — digital compasses, accelerometers, GPS, touch screens, microcontrollers. I am sure at least some of these technologies found their way into so many modern consumer electronics because their designers had first-hand experience while building a robot at home or school.

Q. What is next for you? Can you give us a sneak peek or scoop about your future projects?

I’m currently working on a new book that concentrates just on fun projects with the Arduino. It’ll be out first part of 2012. I’m also stepping up my contributions to magazine such as SERVO, Nuts & Volts, and MAKE, concentrating on affordable DIY projects that teach while they entertain. Components like the Arduino and PICAXE, plus their easy availability through customer-centric retailers like RobotShop, are making fundamental changes in the Build-It community.

Nao Christmas Special

Friday, December 24th, 2010

Nao, by Aldebaran Robotics,  has been busy this holiday season and prepared some cool presentations for us all to enjoy!

Below, its official holiday greeting. Robots can have the jitters too.

After conquering its stage fear, Nao was able read A Christmas Carol by Charles Dickens for children’s and grown-ups’ pleasure. The videos below were created by the German Fachhochschule Kiel University of Applied Sciences.

Chapter One: Marley’s Ghost

Chapter Two: The First of the Three Spirits

Chapter Three: The Second of the Three Spirits

Chapter Four: The Last of the Spirits

Chapter Five: The End of It

Via Aldebaran’s Youtube Channel, Robot Dreams.

Nearly 9 million robots in the world

Thursday, April 15th, 2010

World Robot Population

Nearly 9 million robots in the world in 2008 (8.6 million exactly).

That’s according to the official report by IEEE Spectrum using 2009 data from World Robotics.

Of the 8.6 million, there are 7.3 million service robots (RobotShop‘s core business), that’s 85 %, and 1.3 million industrial robots.

To give you some idea, 8.6 million is a little more than the population of Quebec, and that represents the population of New Jersey.

Will the billion mark be reached in 10, 20 years time?

On the chart above you can see that the robot population has doubled in 2 years. By continuing at the same pace we’ll cross the billion line around 2022.

World Robotics 2009

via IEEE

VIVA LA ROBOLUTION! by Bruno Bonnell

Monday, April 12th, 2010

Viva Robolution

Exclusive!! Viva la Robolution – Une nouvelle étape pour l’humanité (A new step for humanity), the book by Bruno Bonnell, CEO of Robopolis, will be on sale at RobotShop in a few days.

“After the tool that extended its hand, then the machine that increased its strength tenfold, man now projects its intelligence in objects. VIVA LA ROBOLUTION! explains why and how robots will radically transform our daily lives in the next twenty years. The author opens the doors of international laboratories which put together these intelligent machines that will fill our homes, schools and streets. He invites us, through his personal experiences and meetings, to become aware of this new stage in humanity. Punctuated with illustrations and aimed at a large audience, this manifesto of the robotics revolution is an invaluable key to understanding robulation in motion.”

Bruno Bonnell is a French businessman. He co-founded Infogrammes (Atari) in 1983, a company specialized in publishing and distributing video games. In 1995, he created the first internet provider in France, Infonie.

In 2006, he became president of Robopolis, the current leader of robotics in France.

The book by B. Bonnell is intended primarily for the general public.

It answers several questions, such as: What exactly is a robot? Is a robot stupid or intelligent? How long does a robot live? Are robots environmentalists? Are robots afraid of the dark?

The book is divided into 3 main parts: the challenges of service robots, intelligent machines, and the reflections and spreading of Robolution.

It contains 200 images of robots and 35 drawings by Noël Barbier. The book is also connected to the Internet thanks to some icons which can be read with a mobile phone, which offer direct access to photos and videos of robots.

Viva la Robolution by Bruno Bonnell, 300 pages published by Jean Claude Lattes. Price available soon.

Atomic Swarm Dot Robot: A Robot that goes mad?

Tuesday, April 6th, 2010

Dot Robot Atomic Swarm

How could a robot become so mad to turn against its designer?

Of course it’s impossible if you buy a robot from RobotShop. We sell robots to serve humans.

On the other hand, if you attempt experiments all alone at your home with prototypes, you’re on your own!

That’s why you should always make sure they are RobotShop-Approved.

In the video below, the British Gadget Man, Jason Bradbury, wanted to present one of his inventions: a helicopter robot controlled by an iPhone.

In fact, it’s a viral video to promote his new book, Dot Robot: Atomic Swarm.

Botmag (Robot Magazine) is on Twitter

Tuesday, March 30th, 2010

Botmag Twitter

Botmag aka Robot Magazine now has an account on Twitter.

You can follow it on: twitter.com/Robot_Magazine

Robot Magazine is a bi-monthly magazine in the United States, whose first issue was released in 2003.

It addresses mainly topics such as robot manufacturing, education, events and robotics conferences, and various competitions.

Botmag Robot Magazine

via rd

Isaac Asimov: Video

Monday, March 15th, 2010

Isaac Asimov

Isaac Asimov (1920-1992) was an American writer of Russian origins.

He was a visionary and considered as one of the leading figures in science-fiction, and he is specially known in robotics by his three laws (1942, Runaround):

  1. Fiirst Law: "A robot may not injure a human being or, through inaction, allow a human being be exposed to danger ;"
  2. Second Law: "A robot must obey orders given by human beings except where such orders would conflict with the First Law ;"
  3. Third Law: "A robot must protect its own existence as long as such protection does not conflict with the First or Second Law "

According to Asimov, "robots are going to free us":

Planete Robots: a Magazine about Robots on sale at news-stands

Wednesday, February 10th, 2010

Planete Robots Magazine

Planete Robots Magazine no2

Here is the birth of a new French magazine dedicated totally to the Robot universe: Planete Robots.

The first issue was released November 24, 2009 and the second one in January 26, 2010.

This magazine comes out bi-monthly (once every two months), has 60,000 copies printed, and is edited by Rom Rom Rom Publishing.

It contains 100 pages in color, and it covers the four main subjects of technology news with their reports:

-domestic robotics -medical robotics -home automation -technological innovation

A summary of the first issue:

In summary the first issue reports on:

- Colin Angle’s Interview, iRobot’s president, – Small robotics background, – 30 robots for Christmas from 20 to 5,000 Euros, – How to choose your vacuum cleaning robot, – Tests on Clocky, and on Litter Robot… – Files: the Dustbots, the gastrobots, – A review on projects Nao from Aldebaran Robotics and Wany Robotics, – Urbi tutorials and how to make your own robot

via Accessoweb and RobotImpact