View allAll Photos Tagged Robots
Robot 61 (8”)
This little guy somehow won the hearts of more of my Flickr viewers than any who came before him. Just goes to show when you group a kitchen strainer, electrical wire terminal, 3/8" wrenches, TV knobs, spark plug sleeves, air duct, drawer pulls together you achieve...cute!
Robot IIa
with Schneider Tele-Xenar 75/3,5
Universal Robot TeWe Viewer,
side viewer,
shoulder strap lugs,
collapsible sunshade and
metal snake shoulder strap.
Works smoothly
bought in 1961, Photo Ali Brussels
This is a scene during the robotics competition sponsored by the ECE department at BYU. Robots chased each other around the oval track to see which was the fastest.
For more of my creative projects, visit my short stories website: 500ironicstories.com
One of my earliest creations that wasn't a rainbow warrior. I made this when I was 5, and gave it to my Mom as a present. It's been collecting dust on her desk, so I thought I would post it for the heck of it.
ok, so I was daydreaming a bit at work one day, and looked at the photo booth pictures I have hanging in my cube, and this idea popped into my brain.
part of the eventual series of robot stitches.
I think this is one of my favorite things I've ever made.
Pattern for this available at www.etsy.com/shop/MrXStitch !!!
Sera capaz esta maquina de superar el modo experto en hyperspeed con todas las canciones en 100%
Por la cara que pone va a ser que no :P
American Robot is a 1999 American drama film directed by Sam Mendes and written by Alan Ball. Kevin Spacey stars as office worker Lester Burnham, who has a midlife crisis when he becomes infatuated with his teenage daughter's robot, Danbo. Annette Benning co-stars as Lester's materialistic wife, Carolyn, and Thora Birch plays their insecure daughter, Jane. The film has been described by academics as a satire of American middle class notions of beauty and personal satisfaction; analysis has focused on the film's explorations of romantic, robotic and paternal love, sexuality, beauty, materialism, self-liberation, redemption and bizarrely, technology.
Tried to make a big robot with enough articulation to allow for some posing. Especially like how the head turned out.
Wanna pre-order one? Customized Female Robot-Connie...in the future~ ^^
不久的未來,機器人會愈來愈人性化,除了外表擬真,也有各種不同的功能,可以客製化外表,選擇各種臉形、身材、性別、功能等。。。
客製化機器人-代號康妮,有沒有人想要訂購一台呢? 呵呵~ ^^
Don't know whether this fits to a drone specification, but I have fun building and taking this shot :)
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I was thinking about selling this on Ebay. John and I took it to the studio and made a nice set-up for it with a big foam astroid that my friend Hunter made for a movie called Zero Prospect. We put a green light on it and shot this. The robot walks a few steps and the a little movie is projected on his chest. I ended up never listing it.
I'm not the best at making up names, so I'll say as it is... a robot dinosaur ...it's also been a while since I've made any formal robots
Functionality includes... movement in any possible way and my favorite bit... the legs are rubberband powered
best if viewed in lightbox
Robots - Friday 12th March 2021 @Subculture - Listen: www.mixcloud.com/BaxCoen/night-of-the-living-vocoders/
Robots at Ford's Transit Van plant in Southampton.
View the full set on my website - www.bcd-urbex.com/ford-transit-van-factory-southampton/
An entry for JUNEBOT in here: www.flickr.com/groups/junebot/
I wouldn't say that I stepped out of my comfort zone building this, but still the legs and the oscillating turret were tricky.
The four women in charge of the effort to build and test the 212-foot-tall rocket stage that will enable NASA's first Artemis mission to the Moon watch as the first completed core stage for NASA's Space Launch System Program rolls out from the agency's Michoud Assembly Facility in New Orleans on Jan. 8, 2020. These key leaders are, from left, Lisa Bates, NASA Stages element deputy manager; Jennifer Boland-Masterson, Boeing Michoud production/operations manager; Julie Bassler, NASA Stages element manager; and, Noelle Zietsman, Boeing chief engineer. Each of these women manage the entire scope of design, development, testing and production of the complex core stage that will power the super heavy-lift rocket and the agency's Artemis lunar missions. Combined, the women have 90 years of experience in the aerospace and defense industries. Bassler and Bates previously held leadership positions within many NASA programs and projects, including International Space Station, space shuttle, microgravity experiments, robotic lunar landers and other launch vehicles. Â Manufacturing of the core stages for the SLS rocket is a multistep, collaborative process for NASA and Boeing, the core stage lead contractor. The first core stage for Artemis I is undergoing the core stage Green Run test series at NASA's Stennis Space Center near Bay St. Louis, Mississippi, ahead of the program's first launch. Michoud manufacturing teams are currently producing core stages for the second and third Artemis missions.
NASA is working to land the first woman and next man on the Moon by 2024. SLS is part of NASA’s backbone for deep space exploration, along with Orion and the Gateway in orbit around the Moon. SLS will be the most powerful rocket in the world and will send astronauts in the Orion spacecraft farther into space than ever before. No other rocket is capable of carrying astronauts in Orion around the Moon.
Image credit: NASA/Jude Guidry
Found this weird robot while walking along some row of shops... Haha, this is so creative albeit a bit creepy though... those eyes!
This mini miner has a drill for one arm, and a movable grabby-hand...thing. (What would I call that? :I ) The robot also has a small light to illuminate the underground darkness.
Meet the cheeky robot, Titan! Sorry the quality isn't very good, I just couldn't get close! It was frustrating, as they'd fenced off a small area for the 8 foot robot, and we knew there was a crowd round him. I videoed a bit (to follow soon!) and when he seemed to have finished his 'show' we wandered around looking at the exhibition, ending up in the area he had been in. By then he had started to move around, and ended up not far from where we'd patiently been watching, so if we'd stayed where we were we probably could have got some better photos!!
These photos were just before he disappeared off for a break!