July 03, 2006
Those aren't the droids you are looking for
Sony's newest humanoid robot, QRIO, walks on two legs, has incredible balance, dances, recognizes people's faces and voices, and can carry on a conversation. He can communicate with people based on his own judgments, expressing his feelings through movements, conversation and the use of lights.
QRIO is also Internet-ready, so it can read you your e-mail, do online research for you, and post pictures it takes through its camera eyes to the Internet. Of course, without good security firewalls, robots connected to the Internet could potentially be taken over by hackers and used to spy in a home. But I guess that's a problem all Japanese robots will have to solve if they're ever to go international.
Anyway, Sony is emphatic they'll never give up commercializing humanoid robots. QRIO's project director even said, "What we expected of AIBO (Sony's earlier robot dog) was for it to take on the role of a pet. QRIO, on the other hand, might exist on the level of a child."
Sounds good. But just remember that even if these robots can't communicate well with people yet, it doesn't mean they won't learn to communicate well with each other. (Just kidding! I think QRIO's cute!)
See QRIO in action here: http://www.sony.co.jp/SonyInfo/QRIO/ Watch the English version. It has several sections in Flash.
QRIO is also Internet-ready, so it can read you your e-mail, do online research for you, and post pictures it takes through its camera eyes to the Internet. Of course, without good security firewalls, robots connected to the Internet could potentially be taken over by hackers and used to spy in a home. But I guess that's a problem all Japanese robots will have to solve if they're ever to go international.
Anyway, Sony is emphatic they'll never give up commercializing humanoid robots. QRIO's project director even said, "What we expected of AIBO (Sony's earlier robot dog) was for it to take on the role of a pet. QRIO, on the other hand, might exist on the level of a child."
Sounds good. But just remember that even if these robots can't communicate well with people yet, it doesn't mean they won't learn to communicate well with each other. (Just kidding! I think QRIO's cute!)
See QRIO in action here: http://www.sony.co.jp/SonyInfo/QRIO/ Watch the English version. It has several sections in Flash.