Posts Tagged ‘Roomba’

Colorado students make Roomba Pac-Man game

Wednesday, November 11th, 2009

Some students at the University of Colorado-Boulder have taken a bunch of iRobot Roombas and made a live-action Pac-Man game.

The game isn’t just some nutty hack, either. The students made it to demonstrate developing for unmanned aerial vehicles. The Pac-Man Roomba is controlled by a player using a joystick — the ghosts are autonomous. The Pac-Man robot eats tape “pellets” along its path, including the special huge pellet that sends the ghost robots running in the other direction; and even acts out the death spiral Pac-Man does when he gets eaten.

This could open up a whole new cottage industry of robots jazzing up old games: PackBot Minesweeper, Predator-drone Space Invaders, Artaic Pictionary, Precision Urban Hopper Q-Bert, crazy robot baseball, Petman marathons, etc. Competitive BigDog/LittleDog racing at Wonderland could bring together animal activists, racing enthuisasts, the gaming industry, the tech community and maybe even the Nascar crowd. I’d like to see that industry networking event.

Georgia Tech lab adds picker-upper to iRobot Roomba

Monday, July 27th, 2009

“Dustpan” Robot End Effector from Travis on Vimeo.

Georgia Tech’s Healthcare Robotics Lab has developed a scooping arm attachment for the Roomba robotic vaccuum cleaner. In the video, the hacked Roomba picks up a TV remote, a medicine box and a single pill, which could be handy for the elderly or otherwise incapacitated.

The Healthcare Robotics Lab is also working on a project called Clickable World, which looks to make your immediate surroundings into a user interface that allows you to control robots with a laser pointer. Watch a demonstration after the jump. (more…)

Helen Greiner likes her robots just the way they are, thanks

Tuesday, June 23rd, 2009
Helen Greiner

Helen Greiner

IRobot co-founder, Droid Works CEO and 2007 MHT All-Star Helen Greiner contributes an article to Forbes Magazine’s package on robotics and artificial intelligence, and makes a compelling argument against humanoid robots:

Customers don’t want a Roomba vacuuming robot that argues when you tell it to vacuum the floor. That’s what kids are for. When the company I co-founded, iRobot, first delivered Roomba to customers, they didn’t write to us and say, “I want it to be more humanlike.” They said, “Make it cover the floor better and make it recharge on its own” (we did) …

Likewise, the military doesn’t need robots that question commands or find their assignment boring. Combat robots are built for a mission; they are tools for the soldier. 

In the same package, Yale computer science professor David Gelernter argues for a resurgence in AI research’s less practical side:

This facet of AI research has more or less shut down because it ignored an all-important detail: Intelligence isn’t just about problem-solving, but about a whole cognitive spectrum that includes dreaming and other forms of unconscious activity.

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

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