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Jesus Malverde

(10,274 posts)
Wed Jun 10, 2015, 11:21 AM Jun 2015

Why a supermarket might be building the world's most exciting robot

An ambitious robotics project that combines artificial intelligence, machine learning and advanced sensors to understand and assist humans in real time could be truly "revolutionary", according to the team working on it. The SecondHands humanoid, being developed for online supermarket Ocado, could soon be helping factory engineers fix mechanical faults and even learn on the job.

The robot will be completely autonomous and should be able to help with everything from fetching tools to holding objects and even assisting with cleaning and engineering tasks. The project is a collaboration between the technology arm of the online supermarket and four universities across the European Union. The robotics team at Ocado Technology believe it could become "the most advanced assistive robot in the world".

SecondHands will use 3D vision to see both depth and colour, with artificial intelligence allowing it to learn by example and respond to its surroundings. Once trained in a series of basic tasks the robot should be able to increase its own intelligence and act independently. SecondHands will also be able to understand natural speech, allowing it to respond to voice commands.

In order to operate in a factory designed for humans SecondHands will be based heavily on human morphology. Early versions might operate on wheels, but in the future the robot could move on tank tracks or even legs. It could also have extra abilities such as telescopic arms to make it more useful as an assistant. The robot will be flexible enough to work easily alongside humans, with torque-controlled arms, anthropomorphic hands and a bendable torso.

http://www.wired.co.uk/news/archive/2015-06/10/ocado-secondhands-collaborative-robot

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Why a supermarket might be building the world's most exciting robot (Original Post) Jesus Malverde Jun 2015 OP
Vaporware GreatGazoo Jun 2015 #1
will robots ever have a sence of humor ? olddots Jun 2015 #2
Will robots ever pay into the social safety net Jesus Malverde Jun 2015 #3

GreatGazoo

(3,937 posts)
1. Vaporware
Wed Jun 10, 2015, 11:39 AM
Jun 2015

"could be" "could soon be" "will be" "Should be" "believe it could be"
"should be able" "will also be" "will be based heavily..." "could" "could also"

That would make a hell of a drinking game -- read that press release and take a shot every time they say 'could be' or 'should be.'

Jesus Malverde

(10,274 posts)
3. Will robots ever pay into the social safety net
Wed Jun 10, 2015, 08:17 PM
Jun 2015

Or will a dwindling tax base of human workers be forced to pay off the enormous debts and finance the government. It's a no brainer to see the attraction from the businessmans perspective. It doesn't doesn't bode well for many.

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