Posts Tagged ‘RoboLamprey’

MIT robotic cheetah can run 70 mph, give you nightmares

Tuesday, October 20th, 2009
roboCheetah

MIT rendering

Wired talks to Sangbae Kim, of MIT’s Biomimetic Robotics Lab, about his biomimetic robots: The iSprawl, SpinyBot, the StickyBot, and his latest project, the terrifying robotic cheetah pictured above. By mimicking a cheetah, Kim is looking to increase the speed of robots, the fastest of which aren’t that quick on their feet/wheels/paws.

So far, the biomimetic robots pumped out by local researchers have been as fun as anti-landmine technology can be — the Ghost Swimmer, Robofish, RoboLobster, RoboLamprey, RoboClam, even Kim’s StickyBot. I’m still waiting on someone to develop a robot monkey, and we jump all the way to this?

Seriously, this isn’t funny any more, guys. I’m picturing the heavily armed MBTA cops at South Station getting these things to replace their bomb/drug/turnstyle jumper-sniffing dogs. I don’t want that malevolent-looking, 70-mph-running, lightweight carbon-fiber-foam composite piece of death following me down the street at night. Or at noon, either.

MIT’s “Stickybot” gecko robot will not sell you car insurance

Friday, September 25th, 2009

A robotic gecko has been added to the local robotic zoo that already includes a tuna, a dog, a smaller dog, a lobster, a lamprey, a clam, and a whole school of fish.

The MIT Biomimetics Lab’s “Stickybot“ has footpads that mimic a gecko’s, allowing it to scale walls. The robot could be used in military surveillance and search and rescue.

The biomimetics lab is also working on a robot inspired by the cheetah, according to MIT. Yikes.

Boston Engineering lands SBIR grant for BIOSwimmer

Friday, June 12th, 2009

Computer model of Boston Engineering's Ghost Swimmer

Boston Engineering has landed a $100,000 Phase 1 SBIR grant from the Department of Homeland Security to develop a version of its tuna-mimicking Ghost Swimmer robot (pictured at right) to inspect the hulls of oil tankers, according to the company.

Under the grant, the company will also develop sensors for performing the inspection. The robot, called the BIOSwimmer, could have applications in harbor protection and inspecting tankers on land, the company said.

Boston Engineering also reports bringing in $70,000 in a Phase 1 SBIR grant from the U.S. Army to work on giving reconnaissance robots the ability to open doors. 

MHT’s animal robot coverage is getting to be prolific. There’s robotic tuna and lobster, clams, dogs, humans, and some kind of crazy lamprey-like robot made out of biological material.

Affiliate publications: ACBJ.com, Boston Business Journal, Bizjournals.com, Portfolio.com, Wired.com

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