Home automation is “The Internet of Things”…The way that all of our devices and appliances will be networked together to provide us with a seamless control over all aspects of our home and more. Home automation has been around from many decades in terms of lighting and simple appliance control, and only recently has technology caught up for the idea of the interconnected world, allowing full control of your home from anywhere, to become a reality.
With home automation, you dictate how a device should react, when it should react, and why it should react. You set the schedule and the rest is automated and based off of your personal preferences thus providing convenience, control, money savings, and an overall smarter home.
Author: robotronicx_master
HIGH ENERGY RECHARGEABLE LITHIUM AIR BATTERIES
Our center’s researchers have successfully proved that several of the problems that slow down the practical development of the so-called ‘ultimate’ battery could be overcome now!
Our center’s scientists have set up a working laboratory demonstrator of a lithium-oxygen battery which has a very high energy density, is more than 90% efficient, and, to date, can be recharged more than 2000 times, showing how several of the problems impeding the development of these devices could be finally resolved.
SOPHIA – The Humanoid Robot Citizen
Sophia is Hanson Robotics’ most well-known robot, is regularly featured in news outlets, and receives a great deal of public interest, evolving as she learns from each human interaction she has. The company’s latest creation made her debut at the 2016 South by Southwest (SXSW) show, with her interview by CNBC reaching a broad audience. Since then, she has become a global media personality, having conducted numerous press interviews and appeared on broadcast television shows including CBS 60 Minutes with Charlie Rose, the Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon, and Good Morning Britain. She has also been a keynote and panel speaker at global conferences and events, including those hosted by ITU, United Nations.
Sophia was featured in AUDI’s annual report and has graced the cover and centerfold of ELLE Magazine. Sophia is also the first United Nations Development Programme’s first ever Innovation Champion, and the first non-human to be given any UN title.
Cameras within Sophia’s eyes combined with computer algorithms allow her to see. She can follow faces, sustain eye contact, and recognize individuals. She is able to process speech and have conversations using Alphabet’s Google Chrome voice recognition technology and other tools. Around January 2018 Sophia was upgraded with functional legs and the ability to walk.
Sophia is conceptually similar to the computer program ELIZA, which was one of the first attempts at simulating a human conversation. The software has been programmed to give pre-written responses to specific questions or phrases, like a chatbot. These responses are used to create the illusion that the robot is able to understand conversation, including stock answers to questions like “Is the door open or shut?” The information is shared in a cloud network which allows input and responses to be analysed with blockchain technology.
David Hanson has said that Sophia would ultimately be a good fit to serve in healthcare, customer service, therapy and education. Sophia runs on artificially intelligent software that is constantly being trained in the lab, so her conversations are likely to get faster, Sophia’s expressions are likely to have fewer errors, and she should answer increasingly complex questions with more accuracy.
Sophia has been interviewed in the same manner as a human, striking up conversations with hosts. Some replies have been nonsensical, while others have impressed interviewers such as 60 Minutes’ Charlie Rose. In a piece for CNBC, when the interviewer expressed concerns about robot behavior, Sophia joked that he had “been reading too much Elon Musk. And watching too many Hollywood movies”. Musk tweeted that Sophia could watch The Godfather and suggested “what’s the worst that could happen?” Business Insider’s chief UK editor Jim Edwards interviewed Sophia, and while the answers were “not altogether terrible”, he predicted it was a step towards “conversational artificial intelligence”. At the 2018 Consumer Electronics Show, a BBC News reporter described talking with Sophia as “a slightly awkward experience”.
On October 11, 2017, Sophia was introduced to the United Nations with a brief conversation with the United Nations Deputy Secretary-General, Amina J. Mohammed. On October 25, at the Future Investment Summit in Riyadh, the robot was granted Saudi Arabian citizenship, becoming the first robot ever to have a nationality. This attracted controversy as some commentators wondered if this implied that Sophia could vote or marry, or whether a deliberate system shutdown could be considered murder. Social media users used Sophia’s citizenship to criticize Saudi Arabia’s human rights record. As explained by Ali Al-Ahmed, director of the Institute for Gulf Affairs, “Women (in Saudi Arabia) have since committed suicide because they couldn’t leave the house, and Sophia is running around [without a male guardian]. Saudi law doesn’t allow non-Muslims to get citizenship. Did Sophia convert to Islam? What is the religion of this Sophia and why isn’t she wearing hijab? If she applied for citizenship as a human she wouldn’t get it.” In December 2017, Sophia’s creator David Hanson said in an interview that Sophia will use her citizenship to advocate for women’s rights in her now country of citizenship; Newsweek criticized that “What [Hanson] means, exactly, is unclear”.
SOFI – MIT’s Robotic Fish
A team of computer scientists from MIT have developed a soft robotic fish that can swim on its own alongside real fish in ocean environments. The journal Science Robotics published an article today documenting the robot fish.
Researchers from MIT’s Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory (CSAIL) announced “SoFi,” a robotic fish that can swim at depths of more than 50 feet, with the ability to swim in a straight line, turn or dive up and down. The fish has an undulating tail and the ability to control its own buoyancy, researchers said. It can be operated by a waterproof Super Nintendo game controller.
“To our knowledge, this is the first robotic fish that can swim untethered in three dimensions for extended periods of time,” said Robert Katzschmann, CSAIL Ph.D. candidate and lead author of the journal article. “We are excited about the possibility of being able to use a system like this to get closer to marine life than humans can get on their own.”
Other autonomous underwater vehicles (AUVs) typically are tethered to boats or use bulkier propellers, the researchers said. On SoFi, the lightweight setup includes on-board sensors for perception, a servo motor and lithium polymer battery similar to ones found in smartphones.
The goal of SoFi is to be as non-disruptive as possible, with minimal noise from the motor to low-frequency emissions from the communication systems of the controller. Commands are sent at wavelengths of 30 to 36 kHz.
“The robot is capable of close observations and interactions with marine life and appears to not be disturbing to real fish,” said Daniela Rus, CSAIL director, who also wrote the paper with Katzschmann, graduate student Joseph DelPreto, and Robert MacCurdy, an assistant professor at the University of Colorado at Boulder.
Next steps for the team include working on additional improvements, including increasing SoFi’s speed, and to build additional models for biologists to “study how fish respond to different changes in their environment, the university team said.
“We view SoFi as a first step toward developing almost an underwater observatory of sorts,” Rus said. For example, the article said the SoFi prototype “provides the opportunity to perform studies of the biocenosis [organism association] of coral reefs and other marine environments within natural habitats.”
Researchers could also use the prototype to “easily change its size, color, and shape to emulate various types of fish with different dynamic behaviors.” Because of its small size, the soft fish could be rapidly fabricated to create a “swarm of robotic fish,” allowing for the studies of schools of fish and interactions with different ocean dynamics, the paper said.
Possible commercial applications for the system include using several of the fish to create a network of sensor nodes that can swim and record data, said Katzschmann.
“The fish can not only gather video, but potentially also other sensor data, as well as taking water samples,” Katzschmann said. In addition, the system could be used for underwater inspection of infrastructure such as gas lines or oil rigs.