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Google Schaft unveils Interstellar-style bipedal robot that navigates stairs and tough terrain
Schaft,
one of the companies owned by Alphabet (Google), has shown off a new
quirky-looking bipedal robot that is able to climb up stairs, navigate
complex obstacle courses and even cope with uneven terrain outside.
The
bipedal robot, which is at present nameless, bears a striking
similarity to the TARS US Marine Corp robot that accompanies the
astronauts on the Endurance as they travel to a distant galaxy to look
for habitable planets in the Christopher Nolan film Interstellar.
The
robot walked onstage to applause from audiences at the New Economic
Summit conference in Tokyo on 8 April in a talk given by the founder of Schaft, a Japanese robotics firm named after the fictional Schaft Enterprises in the 1980s anime series Patlabor,
and a video presentation showcased the robot walking up and down stairs
in a stadium, across a football pitch and while carrying weights.
The
robot is also able to adapt to walk in narrow corridors or to squeeze
down a line of seats in the stadium; stay upright even when an obstacle
tries to trip it up; and navigate uneven territory outdoors such as
steps cut into the side of a grassy hill, a pebbled beach, a
snow-covered forest and even wet sand with no problems.
Alphabet just put Boston Dynamics up for sale
The Schaft presentation is interesting because Alphabet announced in March that it would be selling off Boston Dynamics,
another robot company also under X Labs with Schaft, which is the maker
of Atlas, one of the most recognisable and accomplished humanoid robots
in the world.
Although Atlas won second place in the prestigious
$2m (£1.6m) DARPA Robotics Challenge competition, Alphabet executives
fear that Boston Dynamics is unlikely to come with a marketable product
in the next few years, and so the decision was made to sell it. Schaft
also entered the same competition, performed well in the trial, but was
eventually pulled from the challenge by Google to focus on producing a "commercial product".
Schaft's robot is easier to market than Atlas
According to Bloomberg,
internal emails show that Alphabet feared that the general public would
not be receptive to the idea of the powerful Atlas humanoid robot
teamed with Google's equally impressive artificial intelligence
technologies, and perhaps the public would associate such a robot with
the terrifying Skynet robots in Terminator.
In contrast, Schaft's
TARS-lookalike bipedal robot can already walk around by itself, whereas
Atlas still has to be tethered to wires, and it is more appealing as it
is smaller and looks less threatening than a human-sized robot.
"The team were simply delighted to have a chance to show their latest progress," said a spokesperson for X Lab.
"As
with all of the robotics teams that recently moved from Google to X,
we're looking at the great technology work they've done so far, defining
some specific real-world problems in which robotics could help, and
trying to frame moonshots to address them."
It said Daljinder Kaur gave birth to a baby boy at a fertility clinic in the northern Indian state of Haryana, following two years of in vitro fertilisation (IVF) treatment. The report noted that though Kaur doesn’t possess any official paper to justify her age, but doctors at the hospital have registered her age as 72 years. It noted that if Kaur’s age is correct, that makes her one of the world’s oldest woman to become mother.
I believe that we were all sent here for a reason and that we all have significance in the world. I genuinely feel that we are all blessed with unique gifts. The expression of our gifts contributes to a cause greater than us.
The son of former Nigerian military head of state Yakubu Gowon is due to return to Nigeria after spending 22 years in a US prison after being convicted on drug-related charges. It is believed Musa Gowon was released from the Taft Correctional Facility Bakersfield, California, after US President Barack Obama granted him pardon earlier in November.
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