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The Robot Cell project entails, among other things, research on robot arms’ fine motor skills. The combination of sensitive gripper arms and intelligent perception enables two industrial robots to solve a Rubik’s Cube within a very short time and with the minimum number of pivots.
Fotocredit: Ars Electronica / Robert Bauernhansl
“[proteus]” is the initial prototype of an analog interactive display. In this experiment, ferrofluids—liquids that react to magnetic fields without becoming rigid, and thereby often form interesting three-dimensional structures—are controlled by both electromagnetic signals and a robotic interface.
fotocredit: Ars Electronica / Robert Bauernhansl
PRINT A DRINK combines methods from robotics, life sciences, and design to explore a completely new field of 3D-printing. Rather than building up objects layer by layer, the process uses a high-end KUKA Robots to accurately “inject” microliter-drops of edible liquid into a cocktail. Within a minute, PRINT A DRINK can build up complex 3D structures in a wide range of drinks – creating fascinating augmented cocktails using only high quality ingredients.
Read more about the Ars Electronica Center’s Creative Robotics exhibition.
Ars Electronica Center Linz
Ars-Electronica-Straße 1
4040 Linz
Austria
credit: Ars Electronica / Robert Bauernhansl
© copyright by Csaba Bajkó. All rights reserved. IMG_023
Industrial robot manufacturing in TUNGSRAM Rt, Kaposvár. (1987)
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Artist Anna Piecek’s main objective in this project was to come up with new and innovative ways to work with textiles by making volumes and unconventional shapes with methods that had never before been used in the context of fabric design.
Fotocredit: Ars Electronica / Robert Bauernhansl
Photo showing two industrial robots that can solve the Rubik's Cube. Roboterzelle is a project by the Johannes Kepler University's Institute for Robotics.
Fotocredit: Vanessa Graf
Inspired by production technologies in the fashion industry, Tailored Structures experiments with the development of a new fabrication method for wood constructions. The structures consist of several 3-millimeter-thick beech wood plates that are sewn together. This is done by an industrial sewing machine mounted on a 6-axis industrial robot.
Read more about the Ars Electronica Center’s Creative Robotics exhibition.
Ars Electronica Center Linz
Ars-Electronica-Straße 1
4040 Linz
Austria
credit: Ars Electronica / Martin Hieslmair
Preparation works of the Creative Robotics exhibition at the Ars Electronica Center Linz.
Credit: Ars Electronica / Martin Hieslmair
Video is about the Ars Electronica Center’s new exhibition Creative Robotics.
Ars Electronica Center
Ars-Electronica-Straße 1
4040 Linz
Austria
credit: Ars Electronica / Martin Hieslmair
© copyright by Csaba Bajkó. All rights reserved. IMG_024
Industrial robot manufacturing in TUNGSRAM Rt, Kaposvár. (1987)
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I moved things around quite a bit today and set up my work table and portable table next to the gantry. (Which you can't see, the camera was sitting on it)
So now I've got a great little corner set up for woodworking, which incidentally is in the main passageway hence the forklifts.
It was a day for purpose, not fashion: my work over-shirt and work pants, generic t-shirt and my ever so happy graffiti chucks.
Inspired by production technologies in the fashion industry, Tailored Structures experiments with the development of a new fabrication method for wood constructions. The structures consist of several 3-millimeter-thick beech wood plates that are sewn together. This is done by an industrial sewing machine mounted on a 6-axis industrial robot.
Read more about the Ars Electronica Center’s Creative Robotics exhibition.
Ars Electronica Center Linz
Ars-Electronica-Straße 1
4040 Linz
Austria
credit: Ars Electronica / Martin Hieslmair
© copyright by Csaba Bajkó. All rights reserved. IMG_013
Industrial robot manufacturing in TUNGSRAM Rt, Kaposvár. (1987)
You can follow me also on Getty Images
© copyright by Csaba Bajkó. All rights reserved. IMG_005
Industrial robot manufacturing in TUNGSRAM Rt, Kaposvár. (1987)
You can follow me also on Getty Images
Robot, Doing Nothing accuses our modern society of being incessantly busy even beyond the confines of everyday life in the workplace. What is now demanded of us—above all due to the proliferation of digital technologies—is our permanent presence, readiness to communicate and receptivity to information. In response, Emanuel Gollob and Johannes Braumann have created a fictitious scenario: the results of studies demonstrate that the efficiency of our society is enhanced by doing nothing.
Read more about the Creative Robotics exhibition.
Ars Electronica Center Linz
Ars-Electronica-Straße 1
4040 Linz
Austria
credit: Ars Electronica / Christopher Sonnleitner
Photo taken at the Ars Electronica Center’s Deep Space 8K.
Read more about the Creative Robotics exhibition.
Ars Electronica Center Linz
Ars-Electronica-Straße 1
4040 Linz
Austria
credit: Ars Electronica / Christopher Sonnleitner
© copyright by Csaba Bajkó. All rights reserved. IMG_007
Industrial robot manufacturing in TUNGSRAM Rt, Kaposvár. (1987)
You can follow me also on Getty Images
© copyright by Csaba Bajkó. All rights reserved. IMG_006
Industrial robot manufacturing in TUNGSRAM Rt, Kaposvár. (1987)
You can follow me also on Getty Images
Photo showing two industrial robots erforming a choreography during the voestalpine Klangwolke.
credit: Reinhard Winkler
Photo showing two industrial robots erforming a choreography during the voestalpine Klangwolke.
credit: Reinhard Winkler
Photo taken at the Ars Electronica Center’s Deep Space 8K.
Read more about the Creative Robotics exhibition.
Ars Electronica Center Linz
Ars-Electronica-Straße 1
4040 Linz
Austria
credit: Ars Electronica / Christopher Sonnleitner
Viktoria Falk and Lukas Mahlendorf’s luggage includes their own Traveling Pavilion, which was executed as their final assignment at the RWTH Aachen’s Faculty of Architecture. Based on their work, RWTH Aachen has developed an intelligent robotic aide in cooperation with KUKA, a manufacturer specializing in industrial robots. This assistant supports the fabrication of foldable construction elements that are created from a variety of materials.
Read more about the Ars Electronica Center’s Creative Robotics exhibition.
Ars Electronica Center Linz
Ars-Electronica-Straße 1
4040 Linz
Austria
credit: Ars Electronica / Martin Hieslmair
Viktoria Falk and Lukas Mahlendorf’s luggage includes their own Traveling Pavilion, which was executed as their final assignment at the RWTH Aachen’s Faculty of Architecture. Based on their work, RWTH Aachen has developed an intelligent robotic aide in cooperation with KUKA, a manufacturer specializing in industrial robots. This assistant supports the fabrication of foldable construction elements that are created from a variety of materials. Photo showing Viktoria Falk (left) and Sigrid Brell-Cokcan, both of RWTH Aachen University.
Read more about the Ars Electronica Center’s Creative Robotics exhibition.
Ars Electronica Center Linz
Ars-Electronica-Straße 1
4040 Linz
Austria
credit: Ars Electronica / Robert Bauernhansl
Photo showing Kristina Maurer (Ars Electronica), co-curator of the Creative Robotics exhibition. Read more about the Ars Electronica Center’s Creative Robotics exhibition.
Ars Electronica Center Linz
Ars-Electronica-Straße 1
4040 Linz
Austria
credit: Ars Electronica / Robert Bauernhansl
Photo showing two industrial robots erforming a choreography during the voestalpine Klangwolke.
credit: Reinhard Winkler
© copyright by Csaba Bajkó. All rights reserved. IMG_004
Industrial robot manufacturing in TUNGSRAM Rt, Kaposvár. (1987)
You can follow me also on Getty Images
Photo taken at the Ars Electronica Center’s Deep Space 8K during the opening of the Creative Robotics exhibition.
Read more about the Creative Robotics exhibition.
Ars Electronica Center Linz
Ars-Electronica-Straße 1
4040 Linz
Austria
credit: Ars Electronica / Christopher Sonnleitner
Read more about the Ars Electronica Center’s Creative Robotics exhibition.
Ars Electronica Center Linz
Ars-Electronica-Straße 1
4040 Linz
Austria
credit: Ars Electronica / Martin Hieslmair
Viktoria Falk and Lukas Mahlendorf’s luggage includes their own Traveling Pavilion, which was executed as their final assignment at the RWTH Aachen’s Faculty of Architecture. Based on their work, RWTH Aachen has developed an intelligent robotic aide in cooperation with KUKA, a manufacturer specializing in industrial robots. This assistant supports the fabrication of foldable construction elements that are created from a variety of materials.
Read more about the Ars Electronica Center’s Creative Robotics exhibition.
Ars Electronica Center Linz
Ars-Electronica-Straße 1
4040 Linz
Austria
credit: Ars Electronica / Magdalena Sick-Leitner
© copyright by Csaba Bajkó. All rights reserved. IMG_019
Industrial robot manufacturing in TUNGSRAM Rt, Kaposvár. (1987)
You can follow me also on Getty Images
IRB 1600 ID is an arc welding robot by ABB Robotics. In IRB 1600ID (Integrated Dressing), all cables and hoses are routed inside the upper arm, making the robot perfectly suitable for arc welding.
For more details, visit
www.abb.com/product/seitp327/dc4d20315f67edd5c12572d50033...
Fluxuri consists of a new surface material that’s thin and flexible and can be painted by merely touching it. Extraordinary visual and haptic experiences emerge on this innovative canvas upon which aesthetic “moment art” can be created and then easily erased. Since this mode of painting doesn’t require tools, no materials are used up and no waste products are produced. Individual “pixels” are flipped and made visible thereby. They’re bi-stable and reflective, which means that they retain their pictorial content forever without energy having to be input; all that’s needed for them to be seen is ambient light.
Fluxuri is part of the Ars Electronica Center’s Exhibition Creative Robotics.
Ars Electronica Center Linz
Ars-Electronica-Straße 1
4040 Linz
Austria
credit: Ars Electronica / Robert Bauernhansl
© copyright by Csaba Bajkó. All rights reserved. IMG_025
Industrial robot manufacturing in TUNGSRAM Rt, Kaposvár. (1987)
You can follow me also on Getty Images
Robot, Doing Nothing accuses our modern society of being incessantly busy even beyond the confines of everyday life in the workplace. What is now demanded of us—above all due to the proliferation of digital technologies—is our permanent presence, readiness to communicate and receptivity to information. In response, Emanuel Gollob and Johannes Braumann have created a fictitious scenario: the results of studies demonstrate that the efficiency of our society is enhanced by doing nothing.
Photo showing Emanuel Gollob.
Read more about the Ars Electronica Center’s Creative Robotics exhibition.
Ars Electronica Center Linz
Ars-Electronica-Straße 1
4040 Linz
Austria
credit: Ars Electronica / Martin Hieslmair
Photo showing Philipp Hornung of PRINT A DRINK. Read more about the Ars Electronica Center’s Creative Robotics exhibition.
Ars Electronica Center Linz
Ars-Electronica-Straße 1
4040 Linz
Austria
credit: Ars Electronica / Robert Bauernhansl
Viktoria Falk and Lukas Mahlendorf’s luggage includes their own Traveling Pavilion, which was executed as their final assignment at the RWTH Aachen’s Faculty of Architecture. Based on their work, RWTH Aachen has developed an intelligent robotic aide in cooperation with KUKA, a manufacturer specializing in industrial robots. This assistant supports the fabrication of foldable construction elements that are created from a variety of materials.
Read more about the Ars Electronica Center’s Creative Robotics exhibition.
Ars Electronica Center Linz
Ars-Electronica-Straße 1
4040 Linz
Austria
credit: Ars Electronica / Martin Hieslmair
Photo showing two industrial robots erforming a choreography during the voestalpine Klangwolke.
credit: Reinhard Winkler
Photo taken at the Ars Electronica Center’s Deep Space 8K.
Read more about the Creative Robotics exhibition.
Ars Electronica Center Linz
Ars-Electronica-Straße 1
4040 Linz
Austria
credit: Ars Electronica / Christopher Sonnleitner
Preparation works of the Creative Robotics exhibition at the Ars Electronica Center Linz.
Credit: Ars Electronica / Martin Hieslmair
The Robotic Woodcraft interdisciplinary research team consists of architects, mathematicians, designers and master cabinetmakers. The University of Applied Arts Vienna, the Association for Robots in Architecture and Lucy.D, a Vienna-based design studio, are jointly exploring ways to customize production processes.
Recently, the team developed several pieces of furniture, the production of which builds upon the flexibility of today’s robots. Working together with master cabinetmakers, the research crew identified particular fabrication processes that are highly challenging to do by hand but benefit from a robot’s high precision and strength.
Read more about the Ars Electronica Center’s Creative Robotics exhibition.
Ars Electronica Center Linz
Ars-Electronica-Straße 1
4040 Linz
Austria
credit: Ars Electronica / Magdalena Sick-Leitner
Photo taken at the Ars Electronica Center’s Deep Space 8K during the opening of the Creative Robotics exhibition.
Read more about the Creative Robotics exhibition.
Ars Electronica Center Linz
Ars-Electronica-Straße 1
4040 Linz
Austria
credit: Ars Electronica / Martin Hieslmair
© copyright by Csaba Bajkó. All rights reserved. IMG_014
Industrial robot manufacturing in TUNGSRAM Rt, Kaposvár. (1987)
You can follow me also on Getty Images