Introducing the Robot Patrol
Evolution Robotics' ER1 personal robot can guard your house, tease your cat.
Andrew Brandt, PCWorld.com
LOS ANGELES--It's not entertainment of the video game variety, but the ER1 Personal Robot System, unveiled at the Electronics Entertainment Expo here this week, is definitely a standout.
Touted as the first Internet-enabled, completely autonomous consumer robot, it is the first product from Evolution Robotics of Pasadena, California. With the company's $499 build-it-yourself kit, you essentially construct a mobile robot around your own notebook PC. Included software permits novice robotics hobbyists to program complex behaviors with relative ease.
Key to the robot's success is a powerful vision system that lets the robot map its environment and track its use of visual cues, says Bill Gross, Evolution Robotics chairman. The vision system is actually a common USB-connected PC camera, but it enables the ER1 to maneuver in a so-called "unstructured environment."
"In the past, if you wanted a robot in your house, you needed one of two things. Either you had to lay tracks in all the hallways and rooms you wanted the robot to go, or you needed to create a pathway of magnets under the floor," Gross says. "Nobody wants either of those things, so they never took off."
With the freedom of movement the ER1 enjoys, it can navigate a house with ease and find its way to a destination even if you rearrange the furniture.
You can also program the robot to follow or track objects or people, which may lead to more than a few annoyed cats in robot-enabled households over the next few years.
Robotic Security?
The ER1 can also be configured to respond when it hears specific sounds or voices, if it sees faces, or if it senses motion--a potentially useful security function for the household. The robot responds to communication over the Internet, using wireless 802.11b networking, and even has its own e-mail address. There, it can check for commands or even send images or recorded sounds to its master.
"You can set it up so when it hears the words 'I'm home,' it snaps a picture of the person and e-mails that picture to another address," Gross says.
While more sophisticated than Sony's Aibo robotic pets, the ER1 approaches the technological prowess of other humanoid devices showcased recently at the Robodex show in Japan.
One impressive demo showed the robot using what may be its most desirable accessory: a $199 mechanical arm connected below its built-in camera. With the arm and camera working in concert, the robot can identify objects and retrieve them upon voice command. In the demo, the robot rolled over to a refrigerator, removed a soda can, and took it to a company representative.
The company is taking orders for the ER1K robot kit now, and will begin shipping a fully assembled $599 ER1 robot (sans notebook) in a few months. In the third quarter, Evolution Robotics expects to release a charging base where ER1 can reside when its battery gets low. For now, the robot runs about five hours for each charge, but the limiting factor is likely the notebook battery life.
Evolution released the robot at the E3 show for a specific reason: "We wanted the creative people who work on the games being shown here to turn their creative energy towards these robots," Gross says. "We want these people to program these robots to do things we never imagined."
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