Slashdot Mirror


Epson's 12 Gram Flying Robot

fraxinus-tree writes "Epson has developed a very small (8.6g w/o battery) flying device, something like a bluetooth-controled palm-top helicopter." Since it can carry 5 grams for only 3 minutes, I can't imagine much practical use, but it's still neat.

12 of 385 comments (clear)

  1. Faked? by garcia · · Score: 3, Insightful

    After watching the video the first time I decided to watch it again and pay closer attention to the attendant's eyes.

    It's almost as if she wasn't seeing the item flying in front of her. I felt like I was watching a poorly done movie + animated character sequence.

    I don't doubt this item exists but I do have serious doubts about the origin of the video provided.

  2. Old Story From Nov 18, 2003 by landoltjp · · Score: 3, Insightful

    (blah! I hate when perssing "return" posts the story automatically)

    This story was posted quite a while ago here.

    It's still a cool little gizmo, though. I'd love one for Christmas!

  3. 3 minutes and video - I Spy! by wowbagger · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This can fly for 3 minutes and can return video images.

    Consider flying this (covertly) into a hostage situation, then shutting down the motor - how long could it return video then?

    Or corporate espionage - fly this between the drop ceiling and the real ceiling, land over the boardroom.

    Oh hell yes, I can see a lot of uses right now for this.

  4. Practical use? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    5 grams? 3 minutes?

    1 botulinus toxin flask...

  5. Re:Looks like a DiVinci Drawing by slackerboy · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Except that Leonardo's drawing was of a machine with a single screw-like rotor. This little guy appears to have two coaxial counter-rotating blades. I think the similarities are coincidental.

    --
    Things to do today: See list of things to do yesterday
  6. Re:The video looks very fake to me ... by brainstyle · · Score: 2, Insightful

    1 - Blue screen background .. very easy manipulation can take place in front of a blue screen.

    Well, if the whole robot is a CG effect, there'd actually be no reason for the bluescreen - it'd be moving on top of the background plate. Bluescreen is generally used to key out portions of a movie to composite it on top of something else. If you're compositing on top of a plate, you don't need to key anything out.

    Mind you, if they removed some strings that were guiding a real vehicle, and maybe composited just the moving blades in, then yeah, it'd be easier with a solid background.

    --
    "Why can't everyone just be straight with me?"
    "Because we live in a bendy world, dear."
  7. God damn crack smoker! by g00bd0g · · Score: 3, Insightful

    This is not a fake. I have been following this mans progress since he invented the Pixel micro heli like 6-7 years ago. I myself have several micro heli's and have seen many even smaller projects!

    Check your facts!

    Go read the micro-heli forums at www.ezonemag.com instead of spouting unsubstantiated claims.

    Lemme guess you think the moon landing was a fake and the earth is flat?

  8. Re:TERRORISM by b4rtm4n · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Hopefully you'll give Douglas Adams credit for that!

    "For thousands more years the mighty ships tore across the empty wastes of space and finally dived screaming on to the first planet they came across--which happened to be the Earth -- where due to a terribble miscalculation of scale the entire battle fleet was accidently swallowed by a small dog"

    --
    "goatse? What's that? Anyone have a link?" - AC
  9. Autonomous Applications by Embedded+Geek · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Many posters have posted ideas about using this thing as a simple remote controlled helicopter (reconisance, corporate espionage, etc). While that's kinda neat, it misses the real value of this thing.

    If it can fly autonomously (not possible yet if you have to add more equipment like balance or barometric sensors and blow the thing's payload - but you can put the brainpower in the base station), it opens up a whole new world of possibilities. It could fly point to point in a warehouse on a security patrol, recharging at stops along the way. Automated inspections (attics, structual beams in large buildings, etc) could be done in detail with less strain on a manual pilot - you building inspector just watches the monitor and doesn't bother trying to fly the thing.

    The big thing, of course, is adapting this technology to be used outside. Think of a swarm of these released from roadside base stations to check freeway bridges, dams, or structures, minutes after an earthquake. Or a version that works in fluid (really, a submarine) checking ship hulls for damage - on infestations of foreign organisms like zebra mussels - as they steam into port.

    --

    "Prepare for the worst - hope for the best."

  10. Re:Epson the arms dealer? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Set 1000 loose on a bunch of terrorists holding up in a holy-site like say, oh I don't know, a mosque in Iraq?
    Surely, instead of terrorist you meant to say Iraqi citizens living in Iraq and hold-up in their local Mosque, the one they and their families have built and participated in for a thousand years

    I'm sure that was just a minor typo on your part.
  11. Can't imagine much practical use? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful
    Since it can carry 5 grams for only 3 minutes, I can't imagine much practical use, but it's still neat.
    The first airplane carried only the weight of one man, and for only 12 seconds. That wouldn't seem to have much practical use, either, would it? :)
  12. Re:Epson the arms dealer? by Teahouse · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Surely I said what I meant. Anyone who uses a house of worship as a military bunker to hide in, kills and snipes from it's minarets, and holds a whole town hostage (whose people also built the mosque)simply because they are being left out of the decision making can not be considered a good, "Iraqi Muslim". There is a name for that, it's called a terrorist, not a Muslim, not an Iraqi. Grow up.

    --
    "Curiosity killed the cat, but for a while I was a suspect."- Steven Wright