Wednesday, April 15, 2020
Wired Hands - A Brief Look At Robotics Essays - Robot,
  Wired Hands - A Brief Look at Robotics      NEWSCIENCE    Two years ago, the Chrysler corporation completely gutted its  Windsor, Ontario, car assembly plant and within six weeks had  installed an entirely new factory inside the building. It was a  marvel of engineering. When it came time to go to work, a whole  new work force marched onto the assembly line. There on  opening day was a crew of 150 industrial robots.    Industrial robots don't look anything like the androids from  sci-fi books and movies. They don't act like the evil Daleks or  a fusspot C-3P0. If anything, the industrial robots toiling on  the Chrysler line resemble elegant swans or baby brontosauruses  with their fat, squat bodies, long arched necks and small heads.  An industrial robot is essentially a long manipulator arm that  holds tools such as welding guns or motorized screwdrivers or  grippers for picking up objects.    The robots working at Chrysler and in numerous other modern  factories are extremely adept at performing highly specialized  tasks - one robot may spray paint car parts while another does  spots welds while another pours radioactive chemicals. Robots  are ideal workers: they never get bored and they work around the  clock. What's even more important, they're flexible. By  altering its programming you can instruct a robot to take on  different tasks. This is largely what sets robots apart from  other machines; try as you might you can't make your washing  machine do the dishes. Although some critics complain that  robots are stealing much-needed jobs away from people, so far  they've been given only the dreariest, dirtiest, most soul-  destroying work.    The word robot is Slav in origin and is related to the words for  work and worker. Robots first appeared in a play, Rossum's  Universal Robots, written in 1920 by the Czech playwright, Karel  Capek. The play tells of an engineer who designs man-like  machines that have no human weakness and become immensely  popular. However, when the robots are used for war they rebel  against their human masters.    Though industrial robots do dull, dehumanizing work, they are  nevertheless a delight to watch as they crane their long necks,  swivel their heads and poke about the area where they work.  They satisfy "that vague longing to see the human body reflected  in a machine, to see a living function translated into mechanical  parts", as one writer has said.    Just as much fun are the numerous "personal" robots now on the  market, the most popular of which is HERO, manufactured by  Heathkit. Looking like a plastic step-stool on wheels, HERO can  lift objects with its one clawed arm and utter  computer-synthesized speech. There's Hubot, too, which comes  with a television screen face, flashing lights and a computer  keyboard that pulls out from its stomach. Hubot moves at a pace  of 30 cm per second and can function as a burglar alarm and a  wake up service. Several years ago, the swank department store  Neiman-Marcus sold a robot pet, named Wires.    When you boil all the feathers out of the hype, HERO, Hubot,  Wires et. al. are really just super toys. You may dream of  living like a slothful sultan surrounded by a coterie of metal  maids, but any further automation in your home will instead  include things like lights that switch on automatically when the  natural light dims or carpets with permanent suction systems  built into them.    One of the earliest attempts at a robot design was a machine,  nicknamed Shakey by its inventor because it was so wobbly on  its feet. Today, poor Shakey is a rusting pile of metal sitting  in the corner of a California laboratory. Robot engineers have  since realized that the greater challenge is not in putting  together the nuts and bolts, but rather in devising the lists of  instructions - the "software - that tell robots what to do".    Software has indeed become increasingly sophisticated year by  year. The Canadian weather service now employs a program  called METEO which translates weather reports from English to  French. There are computer programs that diagnose medical  ailments and locate valuable ore deposits. Still other computer  programs play and win at chess, checkers and go.    As a results, robots are undoubtedly getting "smarter". The  Diffracto company in Windsor is one of the world's leading  designers and makers of machine vision. A robot outfitted with  Diffracto "eyes" can find a part, distinguish it from another  part and even examine it for flaws. Diffracto is now working on  a tomato sorter which examines colour, looking for no-red - i.e.  unripe - tomatoes as they roll past its TV camera eye. When an  unripe tomato is spotted, a computer directs a robot arm to pick  out the    
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