Humanoid 'Pepper' Robot Needs US Android Programmers (usatoday.com)
An anonymous reader quotes a report from USA Today: Japan-based SoftBank Robotics announced Wednesday at Google I/O, the company's annual developer's conference, that it is opening a new Pepper-focused outpost in San Francisco and unveiling an Android SDK, or software development kit, in the hopes of enticing programmers to write code for the robot. Asked if SoftBank will roll out at SDK for iOS developers, Carlin says he wouldn't rule anything out but "for the moment Android is the pervasive language." Pepper is a white hard-plastic robot with humanoid features such as large eyes and arms as well as a display screen for a chest. The robot is said to be able to read human emotions by processing visual and vocal inputs through its various microphones and cameras. Its purpose is to be "much more than a robot, he is a genuine humanoid companion created to communicate with you in the most natural and intuitive way," according to the company's website. Pepper already has been deployed commercially in Japan, where it is used to greet customers at 140 SoftBank Mobile stores as well as help take orders at fast food eateries and discuss car model details at dealerships. Carlin says programmers working on Pepper-related tech will get access to "a best in class developer portal" that includes a developer forum, links to robotics workshops, access to SoftBank's engineering team and scientific details about Pepper. Google CEO Sundar Pichai announced the Tensor Processing Unit (TPU) at Google I/O, which the company claims advances machine learning capability by a factor of three generations.
We don't like the overseas time zones and with H1B's we can chain them to the job.
Such big, innocent trusting eyes.
Oh man, they're going to eat you up. I can't wait to see the depravity they inflict on Pepper.
Also, WTF, no legs?! This is 2016, a robot should be able to walk around like God and Lewis Padgett intended!
the preceding comment is my own and in no way reflects the opinion of the Joint Chiefs of Staff
It looks about as humanoid as some toys by Fisher Price.
File under 'M' for 'Manic ranting'
First thing I am going to program for this robot is have it shoot nerf guns any anyone it perceives as sad. It will then Speak: "Turn that frown upside down meatbag".
We'll sure be able to afford cell phones, fast food and new cars when our jobs are automated!
It will then Speak: "Turn that frown upside down meatbag".
Followed by "You have twenty seconds to comply."
If you think Java is bad now, look at all the Java stuff that been deprecated.
It's been slow, but it has been getting better.
Comment removed based on user account deletion
"Bender" mode.
"Win treats sysadmins better than users. Mac treats users better than sysadmins. Linux treats everyone like sysadmins."
The OP is about a robot but the editor note is about TPU's which are never mentioned in the OP or article.
no seriously, do you not remember this?
Anons need not reply. Questions end with a question mark.
Reading about humanoid robots needing American android programmers got me really confused.
Help! I'm a slashdot refugee.
That is, of course, the whole point.
Once they spend however many years it takes to work the bugs out of this sort of thing, the obious hope is that it will be able to lie to you much better than a human could, because it will never, ever have any of the tells a human does... but it will be able to send the signals that trick your monkey brain into thinking it's your friend. Better yet, it will be good at misleading you without technically lying. It will never forget to upsell, and it won't just be following a fixed script. It will be superb at manipulating you to get the maximum amount of money out of you, and it will never, ever feel remorse at talking you into a bad deal, no matter how obviously poor and naive you are.
Not just at car dealerships, either. The creepiest thing so far along those lines is the cloud-connected talking Barbie doll.
Here's a link to the documentation, as it seems to be kind of hard to find through Google: https://android.aldebaran.com/... Note that the SDK contains a virtual robot so you can use it even if you do not have a Pepper.
Well, I do not know about a "better" way, but some of the tools in the Pepper SDK (like the robot simulator) are standalone executables so you could certainly manage to run them independently. On the ther hand there is no doc for doing this, so you would need some messing arround to figure it out.