Two Takes Balanced

Google-owned Boston Dynanics creates a Karate Kid robot

via Dailymail
2 min read
Nov 11, 2014
Read Original Article

TECHi's Analysis

108 words

Google-owned robotics lab Boston Dynanics has debuted new video of its 6’2″ Atlas robot, also known as “Ian.” The hulking mass of metal, which weighs a whopping 330 lbs, has been programmed to recreate a key scene from the 1984 film The Karate Kid. Ian is part of an ongoing robotics project that seeks to create automatons that can replace humans in hazardous roles like firefighting. Ian has already demonstrated a variety of abilities, including traversing difficult and uneven terrain, carrying objects such as firehoses, and even to get into a car and drive it. It can also use both its hands and feet to climb over the most treacherous obstacles.

VS

Dailymail's Report

199 words

For fans of the cult film the Karate Kid, it is a familiar pose. However, in the latest video from the US military team developing a two legged fighting robot, the buildup to ‘crane kick’ is seen in a new way. The researchers taught the robot to stand on one leg – recreating a key scene from the film in the process. The Atlas robot created by Google-owned firm Boston Dynamics is a formidable figure at 6ft 2in tall and weighing in at 330lb. The robot boasts 28 hydraulically actuated joints and stereo vision, and is one of the most advanced robots ever created. However, it’s not just karate – Ian has another trick up his sleeve – software written by the Florida Institute for Human and Machine Interaction which allows him to drive a car. ‘To achieve this level of maneuverability in robots, researchers at IHMC look toward nature,’ the team say. ‘Inspired by the speed of cheetahs, the endurance of horses, the maneuverability of monkeys, and the versatility of humans, IHMC researchers are on a quest to develop legged robots that are fast, efficient, and graceful, with the mobility required to access many of the same places that humans can.’

TECHi's Verdict: Balanced

TECHi weighs both sides before reaching a conclusion.

NOTE: TECHi Two-Takes are the stories we have chosen from the web along with a little bit of our opinion in a paragraph. Please check the original story in the Source Button below.

More from Dailymail Co Uk

Microsoft has created an artificially intelligent weather reporter
Microsoft has created an artificially intelligent weather reporter

Providing us with further proof that nobody's job is safe from the robot takeover, Microsoft has unveiled a new artificial…

Microsoft is working on a program that can predict crimes
Microsoft is working on a program that can predict crimes

Science fiction has explored the idea of predicting crimes or people's likelihood to commit them numerous times, most notably in…

Smartphone sales are growing more slowly than ever before
Smartphone sales are growing more slowly than ever before

Researchers from the International Data Corporation have released a rather surprising forecast for the future of the smartphone industry, one which…

Facebook is making it easier to recover from painful breakups
Facebook is making it easier to recover from painful breakups

Dealing with painful breakups is hard enough as it is, but Facebook tends to make them infinitely worse by showing you…