Slashdot Mirror


Japanese Robot on Diplomatic Tour

baquiano writes "Inaugurating 21st century diplomacy, Japan's Pime Minister Junichiro Koizumi is visiting Prague this week, accompanied by Honda's experimental humanoid robot, Asimo. According to this story, Asimo even attended the official dinner. Apparently, the Czech Prime Minister Spidla has often been criticized because he's too 'stiff' and 'robot-like.'" Uncomfortable moments aside, it's a fitting tribute, for as stated in the story, the Czech writer Karel Capek was the first to use the term robot.

8 of 168 comments (clear)

  1. It's an ASP Page, most likely the server... by Suhas · · Score: 2, Informative

    ..WILL be /.ed

    Czech Republic: Humanoid Robot Livens Up Japanese Premier's Delegation
    By Kathleen Knox

    Robots that walk and talk like humans have come a long way in the last few years. Now a humanoid robot has even been included in an official delegation accompanying Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi to Prague.

    Prague, 22 August 2003 (RFE/RL) -- With his white "suit" and standing at just over a meter tall, Asimo the humanoid robot resembles a diminutive astronaut.

    "I am Asimo," he says. "I've come to the Czech Republic, the country where the word robot was invented, with Prime Minister [Junichiro] Koizumi."

    Asimo -- or Advanced Step in Innovative Mobility -- can walk on two legs and climb stairs. He can recognize voices and follow simple instructions.

    That makes him one of the world's most advanced human-like robots.

    And he can also dance, as he showed a crowd of spectators in Prague's national museum today.

    As Asimo noted, it was a Czech writer -- Karel Capek -- who first used the word "robot" in his 1920 play, "Rossum's Universal Robots."

    That's why Asimo was brought along on Japanese Prime Minister Koizumi's visit to Prague this week.

    He even attended the official dinner last night and toasted the Czech prime minister, Vladimir Spidla -- himself a bit stiff and robot-like, according to critics.

    "Good evening, Prime Minister Spidla," Asimo said. "Pleased to meet you. I am a robot, a goodwill ambassador."

    A robot delegate clearly has its advantages. He won't embarrass the host with off-color remarks, or get too tipsy on champagne.

    But humanoid robots still have only limited uses, like for entertainment or publicity stunts.

    Other robot technology, however, has made some exciting advances -- robot arms already help out in brain surgery. British scientists have developed a snake-like robot spy that can "evolve" and adapt to injury. A robot "suit" is in the works -- one that will help disabled or old people walk, climb stairs, or sit without a chair.

    But it will be a while before humanoid robots are advanced enough to even do household chores, says German robot expert Helge Ritter.

    "It may seem very difficult and sophisticated to assist in brain surgery, but there the task is carefully cut out and mainly formed in a way that it is largely positioning and high-precision application for very specialized tools. In a household, the problem is basically that there is no high precision around, you don't have any databases about where your objects are, the room can be not cleaned up, there will be objects around, pets and children, you will have deformable objects such as carpets, cushions. And to deal with such a variable environment poses a lot of challenges to robots."

    It's almost comforting to see how hard robots find actions most of us take for granted -- like walking and climbing, or grasping objects with a hand.

    So why make robots like humans anyway? Ritter says there are several reasons.

    One is so they can fit into a world already made according to human needs. It's also easier for humans to figure out how a robot with hands and legs can perform a task than one with wheels.

    And then, of course, there's the emotional side. Once robots have sufficiently advanced cognitive skills, a human-like form will greatly smooth communication.

    "We use head movements, eye movements, body movements in order to run a dialogue. If someone looks at me I see that now he attends to my words, or I recognize that now it's my turn to step in and say something. And all these things can work in an effortless way only if we also endow our machines with a similar repertoire of reactions -- if we give them heads, or at least if we depict heads on a computer screen that can look at us and give us some feedback if the robot attends to me or a different speaker."

    So, while the laughter and applause show what the humans thought of Asimo, unfortunately he isn't able to tell us how he enjoyed his visit to Prague -- not yet, anyway.

    1. Re:It's an ASP Page, most likely the server... by tesmako · · Score: 2, Informative

      Come *on*. It will be slashdotted because it is an ASP page? That is just plain stupid.

  2. Re:"humanoid"? by Lacota · · Score: 3, Informative

    I think that by humanoid they mean the shape, two legs, two arms a head and body. They've used this term before in Star Trek and such. "I'm detecting three humanoids, two human, one klingon" etc.

    --
    It is not a god that would do evil biddings, but only a mortal and its limited knowledge would let such atrocities exist
  3. Re:"humanoid"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    I guess, one head, two arms and legs, bipedal.

  4. Wow by teko_teko · · Score: 3, Informative

    Just saw the videos of the robot climbing the stairs and walking backwards. It's awesome, didn't think something like this can be accomplished in the current time.

    When will they start making C3PO?

  5. Re:Isaac Asimov by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative
    The Three Laws of Robotics are:

    1. A robot may not injure a human being, or, through inaction, allow a human being to come to harm.
    2. A robot must obey the orders given it by human beings except where such orders would conflict with the First Law.
    3. A robot must protect its own existence as long as such protection does not conflict with the First or Second Law.

    From Handbook of Robotics, 56th Edition, 2058 A.D., as quoted in I, Robot. In Robots and Empire (ch. 63), the "Zeroth Law" is extrapolated, and the other Three Laws modified accordingly:

    A robot may not injure humanity or, through inaction, allow humanity to come to harm.

    Unlike the Three Laws, however, the Zeroth Law is not a fundamental part of positronic robotic engineering, is not part of all positronic robots, and, in fact, requires a very sophisticated robot to even accept it.

    Asimov claimed that the Three Laws were originated by John W. Campbell in a conversation they had on December 23, 1940. Campbell in turn maintained that he picked them out of Asimov's stories and discussions, and that his role was merely to state them explicitly.

    The Three Laws did not appear in Asimov's first two robot stories, "Robbie" and "Reason", but the First Law was stated in Asimov's third robot story "Liar!", which also featured the first appearance of robopsychologist Susan Calvin. (When "Robbie" and "Reason" were included in I, Robot, they were updated to mention the existence of the first law and first two laws, respectively.) Yet there was a hint of the three laws in "Robbie", in which Robbie's owner states that "He can't help being faithful, loving, and kind. He's a machine - made so." The first story to explicitly state the Three Laws was "Runaround", which appeared in the March 1942 issue of Astounding Science Fiction.

    Information borrowed liberally from the Isaac Asimov FAQ.

  6. ASP != Microsoft by mortonda · · Score: 3, Informative
    You know, it is possible to have ASP pages written in perl, on a Linux server, with Apache and mod_perl? Take a look at Apache-ASP. It runs pretty smooth - I'm sure it could withstand a /.'ing.

    Of course, the site could very well be running Microsoft stuff... I was just pointing out that ASP doesn't necessarily imply it.

  7. I'm impressed. by Animats · · Score: 2, Informative
    Asimo is a beautiful piece of work. It took ten years and three previous models to get this far.

    There are four major humanoid robot projects; Honda, Sony, Waseba University, and a Korean company that keeps a low profile. MIT also has a project, but it's not in the same league.