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Here is some robot poo look want happens when you don't clean up after your robot. I found this on my floor what a sight to see haha lol.
Remote Engagement Artillery Platform.
Rear shot - details of inside the cockpits to follow in the next few days, when I do my next photo session.
Photos from the Virginia Beach Fire Training Center this week of testing being done on the latest robotic technology available to emergency response agencies. ASTI International along with federal agencies to include NSTI and the Department of Homeland Security were here at the training center to test and evaluate the various systems available today. They are doing standardize testing on the robotic systems to help various emergency response agencies and the military determine and quantify the capabilities of these systems. This testing /competing helps agencies determine what are the best systems for their particular missions and even increases proficiency of the users of these systems. Robotics developers from as far away as Japan and elsewhere around the world are here to participate in this unique event.
The robotics systems included ground, aerial and aquatic robots, maneuvering through special obstacle courses built for this event. Some of the robots even maneuvered through the “Burn House” at the fire training center. Local police departments and military units are participating with their bomb disposal units and NYFD and other fire departments across the country are also participating.
Photographs by Craig McClure
17105
© 2017
ALL Rights reserved by City of Virginia Beach.
Contact photo[at]vbgov.com for permission to use. Commercial use not allowed.
One in a series of World of Tomorrow cigarette cards produced by W.D.& H.O. Wills featuring futuristic machines and processes. Will leave you to decide if the Mitchell's Cigarette Card view of the future has come true or not...
Many of the 50 cards in this series were designed/illustrated by Vienna born Frank R. Paul, an illustrator of American science fiction pulp magazines.
This item featured in our Particles of the Past exhibition, a part of Dublin City of Science, 2012.
Date: 1936
NLI Ref.: CIG/10
Reproduction rights owned by the National Library of Ireland
Robotic hand controlled by thought: A robotic hand has been successfully connected to an amputee, allowing him to feel sensations in the artificial limb and control it with his thoughts...
Isn't it so incredible? For sure we will see this as an investment opportunity to improve many lives. These hair-thin electrodes is the stunning part. Currently it convey basic electric signals, such as muscle to move into direction in mind form.... once the technology will be refined it be able to send more complex signals through the electrodes, such as light input that could actually be interpreted by the brain as vision. There are numerous possibilities. It is already a huge step versa creating an artificial nervous system in the future...
Daridan
Unusual German classic.Dates from 1930's in different models. The earlier ones, 1,2 etc.use 24mm x 24mm frame size on 35mm film. The film transport is operated by a very powerful spring. The mechanism must be wound by the large knob on the top plate, this can be doubled by fitting 2 (or more? ) springs one above the other. The film must be loaded in darkness into special cassettes.Do NOT buy a camera without these cassettes !! The shutter is a cylinder with a standard hole through it , different speeds achieved by slowing or accelerating the traverse of the hole.. Speed set by the knob on the left side of the camera front, The interchangeable lenses were of high quality,as was the build standard. This example is fitted with a Zeiss Tessar. The camera was apparently much favoured by the wartime German Luftwaffe, and some in black are engraved ' Luftwaffe Eigentum', = ' Property of the Air Force'
Photo d'illustration pour le article robot.txt, concernant le référencement et optimisation de pages web SEO.
SISYPHUS learns to traverse a crack in the runway!
SISYPHUS is a robot that learns to crawl using a simple AI algorithm called reinforcement learning. The robot tries random actions at first and learns if it is moving forward or backward. Over time it connects actions that move it forward.
Photos from the Virginia Beach Fire Training Center this week of testing being done on the latest robotic technology available to emergency response agencies. ASTI International along with federal agencies to include NSTI and the Department of Homeland Security were here at the training center to test and evaluate the various systems available today. They are doing standardize testing on the robotic systems to help various emergency response agencies and the military determine and quantify the capabilities of these systems. This testing /competing helps agencies determine what are the best systems for their particular missions and even increases proficiency of the users of these systems. Robotics developers from as far away as Japan and elsewhere around the world are here to participate in this unique event.
The robotics systems included ground, aerial and aquatic robots, maneuvering through special obstacle courses built for this event. Some of the robots even maneuvered through the “Burn House” at the fire training center. Local police departments and military units are participating with their bomb disposal units and NYFD and other fire departments across the country are also participating.
Photographs by Craig McClure
17105
© 2017
ALL Rights reserved by City of Virginia Beach.
Contact photo[at]vbgov.com for permission to use. Commercial use not allowed.