View allAll Photos Tagged robot
Made by Remco in 82.
Nissing yellow knee armor and sword.
5 1/2 inch tall figure.
Made around the time of Warrior Beasts and Conan. So these would be the robot offerings MOTU style from Remco back in the day !
Even though they don't have the squatty MOTU pose....
RoBoT star - Adox 50 - Rodinal
I love this camera soooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo much :)
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.
Visiting the Library today are Blip (Crazy Bones Gogo), Bbot (Aimerai pet BBBot), Bob (I name so many things Bob--a 3-D printer robot designed by Sonia Verdu), and master of them all Beebo (whose name is Benjamin Booker, but after he was made into a robot, all he could remember was Beebo--he is an Impldoll Jozo). Al and Maeve (the bigger 3-D printer bots) stayed home.
My first build in quite sometime. A microscale space transport robot. I envision 100's of these guys lugging fuel tanks and cargo at some kind of spaceport
Corpo Automi Robot. Tra arte, scienza e tecnologia.
25 ottobre 2009 - 21 febbraio 2010
Villa Malpensata - Villa Ciani
Lugano -Svizzera
La mostra “Corpo, automi, robot. Tra arte, scienza e tecnologia”, organizzata dal Museo d'Arte in collaborazione con la Fondazione Antonio Mazzotta di Milano e con la partecipazione del Museo Nazionale della Scienza e della Tecnologia “Leonardo da Vinci” di Milano e del Museo Cantonale d’Arte di Lugano, affronta con un approccio interdisciplinare il rapporto tra il corpo umano e la rappresentazione che di esso è stata data da parte delle arti, della scienza e della tecnologia, soprattutto per quanto riguarda la dinamica dell’imitazione del corpo (con gli automi) e della sua sostituzione (con i robots).
We are teaching two robot classes this fall, to help students create their own artistic robots. These classes are taking place at the Lycée Français in Sausalito (for 4th & 5th graders), and at Tam High School in Mill Valley (for adults and teens). During those classes, students learn how to build a robot from scratch, then make them move in a variety of ways, using a programmable Arduino board.
This photo set is about the custom robot kit we created for these classes at Tam Makers, our community makerspace. It includes a laser-cut chassis with motors and wheels, an Arduino Feather M0 with assorted electronics, an Arduino-powered remote control, as well as body parts and servo motors to make them move.
Our robot kit is similar to commercial products, but with a lot more features, at a lower cost. It was a lot of work, but we’re very happy with the final results, and our students seemed to really enjoy the class. We hope this will encourage other teachers, students and makers to create their own animated characters, for art and technology’s sake.
View photos of our ‘Robot World’ class:
www.flickr.com/photos/fabola/albums/72157687758927575
View photos of our ‘Create a Robot‘ class:
www.flickr.com/photos/fabola/albums/72157687842857094
Read our online student guide to learn how to create your own robot:
Learn about our ‘Robot World’ class for children at the Lycee:
fabriceflorin.com/2017/08/18/robot-world/
Learn about our ‘Create a Robot’ class for adults at Tam Makers:
www.tammakers.org/create-a-robot/
Learn about our Maker Art classes:
fabriceflorin.com//teaching-maker-art/
Learn about Tam Makers, our makerspace in Mill Valley:
#arduino #robots #makers #makerart #makered
robot cake with gears. I <3 my baker and i wish this cake wasn't gone already, it was sooo good
Photo by Moxie Studios
It was a lot of money to advertise in this lonely gas station in the back of beyond, those pesky robots gone and messed it up!
We are teaching a new maker art class called ‘Robot World’, to help 4th and 5th graders create their own artistic robot. This after-school class is taking place in fall 2017 at the Lycée Français in Sausalito. Students are learning how to make their bots move in a variety of ways, as well as play sounds and light up, using a programmable Arduino board.
This photo set covers the first half of our 12-part course, when students get to build their robots. Each student received their own robot kit, which they learned to assemble, control and program. They first built a chassis, then wired up the electronics, assembled a remote control, then added a head and arms, with servo motors to make them move.
We then laser cut wooden figures and body parts based on their designs, which included a police bot, a swat bot, a devil bot and a chef bot. Once their bots are designed and assembled, they will learn how to program them and make them move in different ways, then decorate them, give them a story, and present a robot show to their friends and families in December.
For this course, my partner Edward Janne and I created our own robot kit, using an Arduino Feather M0 for the robot, an RF remote, a custom chassis, plus three additional servos and more parts. Our robot kit is similar to commercial products, but with a lot more features, at a lower cost. It was a lot of work, but we’re very happy with the final results, and our students seemed to really enjoy the class. We hope this will encourage other teachers, students and makers to create their own animated characters, for art and technology’s sake.
View more photos of our ‘Robot World’ class:
www.flickr.com/photos/fabola/albums/72157687758927575
View photos of our ‘Create a Robot‘ class:
www.flickr.com/photos/fabola/albums/72157687842857094
Read our online student guide to learn how to create your own robot:
Learn about our ‘Robot World’ class for children at the Lycee:
fabriceflorin.com/2017/08/18/robot-world/
Learn about our ‘Create a Robot’ class for adults at Tam Makers:
www.tammakers.org/create-a-robot/
Learn about our Maker Art classes:
fabriceflorin.com//teaching-maker-art/
Learn about Tam Makers, our makerspace in Mill Valley:
#arduino #robots #makers #makerart #makered
Paro is a therapeutic robot baby harp seal, intended to have a calming effect on and elicit emotional responses in patients of hospitals and nursing homes, similar to Animal-Assisted Therapy, but without its negative aspects.
It was designed by Takanori Shibata of the Intelligent System Research Institute of Japan's AIST beginning in 1993. It was first exhibited to the public in late 2001, became a Best of COMDEX finalist in 2003, and handmade versions have been sold commercially since 2004.
The robot has tactile sensors and responds to petting by moving its tail and opening and closing its eyes. It also responds to sounds and can learn a name. It can show emotions such as surprise, happiness and anger. It produces sounds similar to a real baby seal and (unlike a real baby seal) is active during the day and goes to sleep at night
(Wikipedia.en)
Bambini e adulti affetti da autismo vivono in un mondo in cui interagire con la realtà circostante è molto difficile. Paro è arrivato dal Giappone per aiutarli. L'idea di base è molto simile a quella della Pet-terapy, con la non trascurabile differenza che l'animale non è vero. Ma non è affatto un giocattolo. Stiamo parlando di robot zoomorfi di ultima generazione, arrivati direttamente da Tokyo e con l'aspetto forma di un cucciolo di foca. Piccolo, morbido e bianco, il robot Paro si comporta come un vero e proprio organismo artificiale. Può ed esempio essere addestrato e programmato, comunica i suoi stati emotivi, si muove autonomamente e gioca insieme ai bambini. Paro "vive" grazie a una rete neurale che gli permette di interagire con l'ambiente circostante, avendo un comportamento autonomo. Attraverso alcuni sensori il robottino capta le informazioni e le rielabora con un microcomputer interno: questo stratifica le informazioni in entrata, costruendo così un vero e proprio archivio. Influenzato da queste informazioni esterne, Paro sviluppa una sua personalità grazie alla quale potrà interagire con gli esseri umani. Interazione non scontata, perché Paro ha un compito difficile: stabilire un contatto con quei bambini e pazienti affetti da sindrome autistica. Persone che per comunicare hanno bisogno di infrangere il muro che esiste fra loro e il resto del mondo. E già da qualche anno alcuni studi scientifici hanno mostrato come questa nuova tecnologia possa dare risultati positivi nel campo della riabilitazione cognitiva. Sembra infatti dimostrato che i robot di ultima generazione riescono a sollecitare nei pazienti dei rapporti di coinvolgimento emotivo che altre tecnologie escludevano.
(La Repubblica, 26 giugno 2006)
Photos from Robot Restaurant in Shinjuku/Kabukicho, Tokyo, Japan.
This 75 minute show was absolutely incredible. I want to go back and watch another.
2014 Randall Tabula / Burning Robot Factory
The flash ruins this a bit, but the one on the left is the boy. No bowtie on his head, see? Also, despite what the photo might say, Austria's disease has not spread to these accessories. The earrings really ARE red.
Photos from our launch event, May 25, 2019 at the Myhal Centre for Innovation. Photos courtesy Elizabeth Do, FASE Communications.
Scripps programmer Alan Yang instructs students building robots in a robotics course. This special course was designed and implemented through a three-way partnership among Scripps Institution of Oceanography at UC San Diego, UC San Diego Extension, and EIS.
Photos from Robot Restaurant in Shinjuku/Kabukicho, Tokyo, Japan.
This 75 minute show was absolutely incredible. I want to go back and watch another.
2014 Randall Tabula / Burning Robot Factory
Photos from Robot Restaurant in Shinjuku/Kabukicho, Tokyo, Japan.
This 75 minute show was absolutely incredible. I want to go back and watch another.
2014 Randall Tabula / Burning Robot Factory
Building a simple and easy microcontroller based robot is always a fascinating topic to be discussed, especially for the robotics newbie enthusiast. On this tutorial I will show you how to build your own microcontroller based robot which known as a photovore or you could call it as the light chaser robot using the simplest possible circuit for the microcontroller based robot brain, locomotion motor and the sensor. For more information visit www.ermicro.com/blog/?p=1549