Toyota Unveils Helpful Human Support Robot
cylonlover writes "Toyota has unveiled a new assistant robot designed to help the disabled live more independently. Called the Human Support Robot (HSR), it represents the latest initiative in Toyota's Partner Robot program and is intended to help out around the home by fetching things, opening curtains, and picking up objects that have fallen to the floor. The HSR can be controlled using a simple graphical user interface via tablet PC. It can also wear a tablet atop its head, which would allow caregivers and family members to communicate with the robot's owner over Skype or other services. But unlike recent telepresence robots including the recently announced iRobot RP-VITA, the HSR has an arm and gripper for doing the simple tasks we often take for granted."
That's where the real money would be.
I'm still waiting for the paranoid android.
Is there a coffee maker attachment?
It would help society more if it actually killed them.
Is this an all-electric robot, or have they abandoned those, too, in favor of hybrids?
Go watch Robot and Frank, great movie, even if it's pretty obvious that the assistance robot is a person in a robot suit.
http://robotandfrank-film.com/
Design for Use, not Construction!
If the person is disabled enough to require the use of this robot, the caregiver should be on-site. They shouldn't NEED to use Skype to talk to the disabled person.
General Relativity: Space-time tells matter where to go; Matter tells space-time what shape to be.
Please contact customer support if the robot asks if you have stairs.
Toyota is a Japanese company so we should refer to their version of 'Clippy" as (*in a Mike Meyers' Japanese accent) "Crippy".
If cheap enough, I could see this little fella being used as a successor to the doomba..
Sorry, I don't read sites called "Jizz Mag" at work.
If the robot came with an attached blood pressure cuff, pulse oximeter, and a few other things, it could also be applied to telemedicine. Since getting to the doctor's office is a huge challenge for many disabled folks, this could be a great opportunity. The telemedicine thing has and is currently being done, so this would really just be enhancing the robot with functionality that has already been prototyped, tested, and, in some cases, already deployed. If we're going to do this, let's go for the gold. Picking things up and enabling better communication is a great start, but becoming an all-around health companion and lifeline would take this to the next level and perhaps help it see uptake outside of robot-loving Japan.
Can it pick up the control tablet if I drop it?
... if they develop an UNhelpful support robot, they can make a killing staffing call centers with it.
Riiiight... 'cuz, you know, building in a webcam and LCD would just be... obtuse.
An enigma, wrapped in a riddle, shrouded in bacon and cheese
Can you fuck it?
It looks like you're trying to surf the internet. Would you like help?
1) Yes
2) No
3) Get me a beer
4) Google "Kill Clippy"
5) I saw what you did in front of the computer last night. Shame if your girlfriend were to find out
Eternity: will that be smoking, or non-smoking? I Corinthians 6:9-10
Hmm... My dogs do all of this. And they work on the farm too guarding and herding our livestock. Probably a lot cheaper and longer lived than this robot. Still, I guess robots must start somewhere.
If not, they must not be Sirius.
Does it have a finger that lights up when it extends its "neck" ?
- I stole your sig.
The robots start taking over our jobs. My girlfriend of 10 years does exactly this: assisting the disabled at home with normal everyday tasks.
Remember those helpful reps who "Sir" you with a "Sorry but we can't". Now you can beat the crap out of them.
..."designed to help the disabled live more independently."
By making them depend on a robot?
Fail.
This is a Fools Folly.
Toyota need to focus on designing and producing automobiles that are economical, efficient and effective.
I see that Japan is indeed in deep trouble.
I can see these being really popular in Korea.
Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
"The Caretaker", by Ken Liu, recently featured on escape pod is quite relevant.
Toyota Veils Unhelpful Human Support Robot
Than the unhelpful robot, which aparently just repeatedly tells you to fuck off