Tag Archives: robotics
#429796 JR2, the Collaborative Mobile ...
JR2 Mobile Manipulator. Photo Credit : RobotnikRobotnik, in collaboration with Gaitech and Smokie Robotics, has developed its new mobile manipulatorcalled JR2. The new robot will be announced at the 2017 IEEE International Conference on Robotics andAutomation (ICRA, May 29 to June 3, 2017 at Singapore).JR2 is an industrial grade Collaborative Mobile Manipulator and it’s fully autonomous and completelyintegrated. In this sense, its main advantages are: an integrated software, wide range of tutorials andexamples in ROS software, omnidirectional base, competitive price and high speed.This innovating Collaborative Mobile Manipulator is specially designed for the development of industrialapplications. JR2 is the ideal robot for logistics, industrial mobile manipulation: pick&place, pick&feed,fetch&carry, etc.JR2 has as base an omnidirectional platform using 4 high power motor wheels and is able to carrypayloads up to 100 Kg. Furthermore, JR2 mounts a 6 DOF high quality industrial collaborative arm thatcan handle payloads up to 5 Kg (completely extended). The arm can mount almost any standard endeffector, including 2/3 finger servo-grippers and range of cameras and sensors.
Technical specificationsPlatformDimensions 800X550X420mmWeight 125 KgPayload 100 KgSpeed 3 m/sEnclosure class IP 54Autonomy 8 h.Batteries LiFePO4 15Ah@48VTraction motors 4x500WTemperature range 0º to 45º CRange Finders 10m / 20m (Optional)
Arm AUBO-I5Weight 24 Kg.Payload 5 Kg.Reach 924,5 mmGripper (Optional) WSG-50Weight 1,15 Kg.Repeatability +-0,03Strok per finger 55 mm
ControlJR2 uses the ROS open architecture. The software of the robot includes a navigation system as well as anHMI for mission planning, diagnostics and remote control. The JR2 model is available in ROS includingthe completely configured MoveIt! Packages.For more information: JR2Robotnik Automation, since 2002, has been established as a european reference company in mobileservice robotics.Gaitech Technology is an innovative company focused on robotics and develop advanced productsbased on ROS.Smokie Robotics manufactures light-weight collaborative robot.
For further information contact with María Benítez: mbenitez@robotnik.es
Robotnik © | C/ Ciutat de Barcelona, 3-A | 46988 – Valencia | Tel. +34 96 147 54 00 | info@robotnik.es
www.robotnik.eu
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#429793 AI and Robotic Process Automation for ...
ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE AND ROBOTIC PROCESS AUTOMATION: IS THE LEGAL SECTOR READY?
The legal profession is in a period of turbulence and transformation Automation and technology are becoming more utilised in the legal sector to increase efficiency and reduce costs. Artificial intelligence (AI) and robotic process automation (RPA) are being billed as the next industrial revolution and the legal profession will change in a way that has never been seen before.
Is the legal sector ready for Artificial Intelligence?
Many law firms choose not to be early adopters of new technologies. But the techniques of cognitive technologies are already– improving service to clients, reducing costs, and creating new opportunities for firms.
What can you expect in upcoming years?
Cognitive technologies in the law are prompting an ever-greater demand from clients for cheaper, faster, better services. What does that mean?
Cheaper Save money on resources and manpower by implementing the latest technology
Faster – Companies measure cycle time, time to market, and other indicators of speed throughout their businesses, and increasingly expect their lawyers to do the same.
Better – This is critical. Big companies face regulatory and operational complexity for which traditional legal services on the medieval, master craftsman model are simply inadequate.
How to respond to innovation?
To meet those needs and in a world of overwhelming choice of technologies, C5’s inaugural conference on AI and RPA in the Legal Sector will give you give you the information you need on which technology is right for you and your firm.
This conference will bring together law firms, in-house counsel and legal tech companies, providing key insights into the latest technologies and how you can implement them to drive innovation; enhancing your performance and saving time and money. Designed specifically with lawyers in mind, this conference will cut out the technical jargon giving you digestible, easy to understand information on how technology can benefit your daily work.
Gain insight into:
Understanding what legal technology is available to your practice
How technologies can increase efficiency and reduce costs
How to put together a business case for implementing an innovation strategy and getting buy-in from the relevant people
Risks in implementing new technologies and who is liable if something goes wrong
Impact of emerging technologies on current charging models
Hear from your clients how they view the use of technologies and how it can give you a competitive advantage
Would you like to find out more? Visit C5’s AI and RPA in the Legal Sector website
Also Robotic Magazine is partnering with this conference. Get 15%! Quote D15-999-RM17 when registering.
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#429790 4 Keys to Making the Robots of Our ...
“The robots of reality are starting to get a lot closer to the robots of our imagination,” said Sarah Bergbreiter, an image of a fast-moving, multi-jointed search and rescue robot displayed on the big screen behind her.
In her talk on advanced robotics at Singularity University’s Exponential Manufacturing Summit in Boston, Bergbreiter elaborated on how modern robots have already come to resemble the most fantastic robots humans have imagined over the past few decades. She also shared her vision of what’s ahead.
Bergbreiter joined the University of Maryland, College Park in 2008 as an Assistant Professor of Mechanical Engineering, with a joint appointment in the Institute for Systems Research. She received the DARPA Young Faculty Award in 2008, the NSF CAREER Award in 2011, and the Presidential Early Career Award for Scientists and Engineers (PECASE) Award in 2013 for her research on engineering robotic systems down to sub-millimeter size scales.
Below are four key areas Bergbreiter thinks roboticists need to hone to make sure their robots add maximum value to our jobs, our homes, and our lives.
1. Focus on how they interact with humans
At the Tesla plant in Fremont, California, there are dozens of robots, but they’re all caged off from people, with robots and employees performing completely separate tasks. Robots programmed to perform a task or series of tasks over and over are already widespread, but enabling robots to work with people is a still a major manufacturing challenge.
Robots need to be able to understand what people are doing, and vice-versa. How do we get robots to understand social cues and display them back to us?
The Advanced Robotics for Manufacturing Institute (ARM Institute) focuses on collaborative robotics, or robots complementing a person’s job to enhance productivity. The institute’s mission is to lower the barriers for companies to adopt robotics technology, and in the process, bring currently off-shored production back onshore.
Robots that work with people rather than instead of people will not only save jobs, they’ll bring new advances in efficiency and innovation—but we need to keep people in the equation as we develop them.
2. Make them softer
When you picture a robot, whether it currently exists or is a product of your imagination, you’re most likely picturing a rigid machine with a lot of right angles and not much squishiness or pliability. That’s because the field of soft robotics is just starting to take off, with the first-ever completely soft autonomous robot unveiled in December 2016.
One of the problems with traditional robots is that they tend to be clunky and heavy and their movement is limited. Soft robots can do things rigid robots can’t, like more precisely manipulate objects, climb, grow, or stretch.
Having robots perform these actions is useful across a variety of settings, from exoskeletons—which are beginning to be used to augment people in a manufacturing context—to rescue robots that could grasp and turn a valve or climb through rubble in places humans can’t access.
Soft robots are also more compliant and safer around humans; if you can touch a robot, there’s a lot more you can do in terms of programming it. And the best part is, making robots soft actually lowers their cost. This will enable robotic manufacturing in places that couldn’t do it before.
3. Give soft robots sensors
Soft robots have a lot of advantages over rigid ones, but they’re still stuck with one major drawback: they’re harder to control. Soft sensors are thus a crucial research area in robotics right now.
San Francisco startup Pneubotics makes robots out of fabric and air, with the goal of making robots that can interact with and react to the world. Their robots move by shifting air around to different compartments inside the fabric. To improve their precision and reactive capability, they’ll be equipped with sensors tailored to their function or task.
And there is some progress there. Recently, University of Minnesota researchers said they’ve created a process to 3D print flexible sensors. Something like this may act as a kind of “skin” for future robots.
Sensors will allow soft robots with their expanded capabilities to take on the precision of rigid robots, bringing the best of these two robotics worlds together for completely new applications.
4. Connect them
When we think of robots putting together cars or zooming around a warehouse to find a product, we often assume each individual robot is “smart.” That doesn’t have to be the case, though.
Robots can now network and interact with the cloud, eliminating the need for individual robots to be smart. The computation for the 45,000 robots Amazon uses in their warehouses happens in a central system, meaning not all 45,000 bots need to house all that computation inside their own “heads”—they just need to be able to coordinate with the system.
Especially for large-scale operations like this, it’s cheaper and more efficient to have ‘dumb’ robots taking instructions from one, centralized, in-charge bit of software than equipping all the robots with more advanced software and hardware of their own.
We are moving towards a manufacturing environment where robots will both work closely with humans and be able to do things in less-structured environments without human intervention.
As Bergbreiter said in closing, “It’s a fascinating time for robots.”
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#429789 Singularity Hub Is Live This Week at ...
Singularity Hub is on the ground this week at Singularity University’s Exponential Manufacturing Summit in Boston.
At the summit, executives, makers, entrepreneurs, and policy leaders across the manufacturing industry will come together to learn how accelerating technologies are changing manufacturing in the US and around the world.
Talks we’re looking forward to include what augmented reality and synthetic biology can offer industry; how robots are becoming more flexible, capable, and safe enough to partner with people; how the latest round of automation will shape the future of work; how new 3D printing approaches are moving beyond rapid prototyping; and how AI can speed up and optimize design.
We’ll hear from industry experts such as Rethink Robotics CTO Rodney Brooks, Local Motors CEO and co-founder Jay Rogers, Veo Robotics VP of Engineering Clara Vu, Autodesk senior principal research scientist Erin Bradner, and more.
In addition to daily coverage on Singularity Hub, this year we’re broadcasting live on Facebook from inside the summit’s Innovation Lab to bring you exclusive speaker interviews and tech demos with exhibiting companies.
And don’t forget to follow along on Twitter! Throughout the summit you’ll have opportunities to ask the Singularity Hub team questions we may answer live. Our Twitter feed will announce how to submit questions each day.
To see what happened last year, check out this overview of the inaugural Exponential Manufacturing Summit in 2016.
What’s the future of manufacturing? Stay tuned. We’re about to learn a lot.
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#429785 Expert discusses the future of ...
Science and technology are essential tools for innovation, and to reap their full potential, we also need to articulate and solve the many aspects of today's global issues that are rooted in the political, cultural, and economic realities of the human world. With that mission in mind, MIT's School of Humanities, Arts, and Social Sciences has launched The Human Factor—an ongoing series of stories and interviews that highlight research on the human dimensions of global challenges. Contributors to this series also share ideas for cultivating the multidisciplinary collaborations needed to solve the major civilizational issues of our time. Continue reading →