Free search and download videos

findvideotoday.com

Aldebaran Robotics' Nao

Author: Admin
11 19th, 2008

Read more at http://www.botjunkie.com/ and http://www.aldebaran-robotics.com/


amazing video of 4 boys and girls dancing to urban hiphop sounds like a robot! i have never seen such body movements! // echt krasses tanzvideo - 4 jungs und mädels bewegen sich zu hiphop beats wie ein roboter, aber wie! unglaubliche körperbewegungen! edit: the dancers names are given as salah (the guy with the hat) & damon vs. claire & magalie. they are supposed to be french. edit: comments say, that the music is a remix of petey pablo's "club banger" (instrumental 0:00-3:10) and xzibit "multiply" (5:00-7:33)

11 19th, 2008

Lecture by Professor Oussama Khatib for Introduction to Robotics (CS223A) in the Stanford Computer Science Department. In the first lecture of the quarter, Professor Khatib provides an overview of the course. CS223A is an introduction to robotics which covers topics such as Spatial Descriptions, Forward Kinematics, Inverse Kinematics, Jacobians, Dynamics, Motion Planning and Trajectory Generation, Position and Force Control, and Manipulator Design. Complete Playlist for the Course: http://www.youtube.com/view_play_list?p=65CC0384A1798ADF CS 223A Course Website: http://cse.stanford.edu/class/cs223a/ Stanford University: http://www.stanford.edu/ Stanford University Channel on YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/stanford


At a recent robotics competition in Boston, Steve Wozniak, the co-founder of Apple was one of the judges. We caught up with him and asked him some questions on a variety of topics.


for more, go to http://daily.mahalo.com/

11 19th, 2008

Visit http://tiger.tv/more_info/?211 to learn more about the Data Robotics Drobo Storage Robot Enclosure. If you're passionate about creating and collecting digital content, but not about storing it, we've designed the Drobo Storage Robot Enclosure just for you. The Drobo is the first storage system to take the pain out of keeping your content safe. Avoid the hassles of complex RAID setups or managing multiple external hard drives. Attach Drobo to your Mac or PC and let it manage your storage needs, so you don't have to. Combine four hard drives into one large storage pool. You can start with two drives, then move up to four. Upgrade drive size, speed, even manufacturer at any time. Mix and match as you need, or as you like. Drobo—it does everything for you.

11 19th, 2008

Albert Einstein Robot video Installlation for the Smithsonian in NY.

11 19th, 2008

Lecture by Professor Oussama Khatib for Introduction to Robotics (CS223A) in the Stanford Computer Science Department. Professor Khatib shows a short video on a device called The Hummingbird, and then begins Manipulator Kinematics. CS223A is an introduction to robotics which covers topics such as Spatial Descriptions, Forward Kinematics, Inverse Kinematics, Jacobians, Dynamics, Motion Planning and Trajectory Generation, Position and Force Control, and Manipulator Design. Complete Playlist for the Course: http://www.youtube.com/view_play_list?p=65CC0384A1798ADF CS 223A Course Website: http://cse.stanford.edu/class/cs223a/ Stanford University: http://www.stanford.edu/ Stanford University Channel on YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/stanford


Google Tech Talks July 7, 2008 ABSTRACT Urbi is a middleware for concurrent and distributed programming, based on a new parallel and event-driven script language called 'urbiScript'. Using a familiar and easy-to-use syntax, the language offers several concurrent abstractions rooted in the language semantics, together with an integrated scheduler and a distributed component architecture called UObject, based on C++ or Java. urbiScript acts as an orchestrator to build interactions/behaviors between distributed UObjects. Successful applications of Urbi are now mostly in robotics, especially in the upcoming Robocup'08 events, but extensions to video games and complex systems programming are envisioned. Graphical tools have recently been added to the Urbi suite to create hierarchical finite state machines and to provide advanced debugging features. J.C. Baillie, the author of Urbi, will give a detailed technical presentation of the key aspects of this new technology, and show demonstrations of the "Urbi Studio" graphical tools with the Aibo robot. See http://www.gostai.com/ Speaker: Dr. Jean-Christophe Baillie Dr. Jean-Christophe Baillie graduated in Computer Science and Physics from the Ecole Polytechnique, Paris. He received the PhD in Artificial Intelligence from University of Paris 6 and Sony Computer Science Lab and then founded the Cognitive Robotics Lab in ENSTA/ParisTech. During 4 years he worked on developmental robotics research with an extension of the Talking Heads experiment initiated by Luc Steels (Sony CSL). During the course of his researches, he designed Urbi as a tool to control complex robotics systems like the Aibo. In 2006, he founded Gostai, to further develop the Urbi technology and he is now directing the company, while keeping an active part in the R activities. He received in 2007 the "Pierre Faurre" award from the Polytechnique Foundation.

11 19th, 2008

Lecture by Professor Oussama Khatib for Introduction to Robotics (CS223A) in the Stanford Computer Science Department. Professor Khatib shows a short video on the Brachiation Robot, then goes into a lecture on Frame Attachment. CS223A is an introduction to robotics which covers topics such as Spatial Descriptions, Forward Kinematics, Inverse Kinematics, Jacobians, Dynamics, Motion Planning and Trajectory Generation, Position and Force Control, and Manipulator Design. Complete Playlist for the Course: http://www.youtube.com/view_play_list?p=65CC0384A1798ADF CS 223A Course Website: http://cse.stanford.edu/class/cs223a/ Stanford University: http://www.stanford.edu/ Stanford University Channel on YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/stanford

11 19th, 2008

Lecture by Professor Oussama Khatib for Introduction to Robotics (CS223A) in the Stanford Computer Science Department. Professor Khatib shows a short video on The Robotic Reconnaissance Team, then begins lecturing on Dynamics. CS223A is an introduction to robotics which covers topics such as Spatial Descriptions, Forward Kinematics, Inverse Kinematics, Jacobians, Dynamics, Motion Planning and Trajectory Generation, Position and Force Control, and Manipulator Design. Complete Playlist for the Course: http://www.youtube.com/view_play_list?p=65CC0384A1798ADF CS 223A Course Website: http://cse.stanford.edu/class/cs223a/ Stanford University: http://www.stanford.edu/ Stanford University Channel on YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/stanford

11 19th, 2008

Lecture by Professor Oussama Khatib for Introduction to Robotics (CS223A) in the Stanford Computer Science Department. Professor Khatib shows a short video on Flexible Microactuators and continues lecturing on Kinematics and Spatial Descriptions. CS223A is an introduction to robotics which covers topics such as Spatial Descriptions, Forward Kinematics, Inverse Kinematics, Jacobians, Dynamics, Motion Planning and Trajectory Generation, Position and Force Control, and Manipulator Design. Complete Playlist for the Course: http://www.youtube.com/view_play_list?p=65CC0384A1798ADF CS 223A Course Website: http://cse.stanford.edu/class/cs223a/ Stanford University: http://www.stanford.edu/ Stanford University Channel on YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/stanford

11 19th, 2008

Lecture by Professor Oussama Khatib for Introduction to Robotics (CS223A) in the Stanford Computer Science Department. Professor Khatib shows a short video on a robot playing beach volleyball, then continues The Jacobian. CS223A is an introduction to robotics which covers topics such as Spatial Descriptions, Forward Kinematics, Inverse Kinematics, Jacobians, Dynamics, Motion Planning and Trajectory Generation, Position and Force Control, and Manipulator Design. Complete Playlist for the Course: http://www.youtube.com/view_play_list?p=65CC0384A1798ADF CS 223A Course Website: http://cse.stanford.edu/class/cs223a/ Stanford University: http://www.stanford.edu/ Stanford University Channel on YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/stanford

11 19th, 2008

Lecture by Professor Oussama Khatib for Introduction to Robotics (CS223A) in the Stanford Computer Science Department. Guest lecturer Krasimir Kolarov (co-writer of the lecture notes along with Professor Khatib) presents Trajectory Generation. CS223A is an introduction to robotics which covers topics such as Spatial Descriptions, Forward Kinematics, Inverse Kinematics, Jacobians, Dynamics, Motion Planning and Trajectory Generation, Position and Force Control, and Manipulator Design. Complete Playlist for the Course: http://www.youtube.com/view_play_list?p=65CC0384A1798ADF CS 223A Course Website: http://cse.stanford.edu/class/cs223a/ Stanford University: http://www.stanford.edu/ Stanford University Channel on YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/stanford


Robots have been proven to deliver a host of benefits in a wide variety of applications. Manufacturers introducing robots to their production processes have typically seen a significant transformation in their productivity and efficiency. The International Federation of Robotics recently undertook a survey that identified the top 10 reasons that manufacturers invest in robots. ABB has now built on that survey and developed a Guide to help you better understand the "10 good reasons for investing in robots" with real-life case studies from companies and integrators who exemplify each one of the reasons. The 10 good reasons range from reducing operating costs, improving product quality and consistency, as well as the quality of work for employees, to increasing production output rates, product manufacturing flexibility and reducing material waste and increasing yield.

11 19th, 2008

Lecture by Professor Oussama Khatib for Introduction to Robotics (CS223A) in the Stanford Computer Science Department. Professor Khatib shows a video on Walking Machines then goes into his first topic -- Kinematics. CS223A is an introduction to robotics which covers topics such as Spatial Descriptions, Forward Kinematics, Inverse Kinematics, Jacobians, Dynamics, Motion Planning and Trajectory Generation, Position and Force Control, and Manipulator Design. Complete Playlist for the Course: http://www.youtube.com/view_play_list?p=65CC0384A1798ADF CS 223A Course Website: http://cse.stanford.edu/class/cs223a/ Stanford University: http://www.stanford.edu/ Stanford University Channel on YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/stanford

11 19th, 2008

Lecture Series on Robotics by Prof. C. Amarnath, Department of Mechanical Engineering, IIT Bombay. For more details on NPTEL visit http://nptel.iitm.ac.in

11 19th, 2008

Read more at http://www.botjunkie.com/ and http://people.csail.mit.edu/jamesm/swarm.php

11 19th, 2008

Made for Informatics 161 at UCI. A young programmer decides to learn how to program using robots instead of the traditional computer science education.

11 19th, 2008

This is awesome.

11 19th, 2008

MSFT Launches New Robotics Developer Toolkit. In this video Tandy Trower and MIT's Huggable robotic venture.


http://tiltul.com/ Aldebaran Robot using Microsoft Robotics Studio. Robo Development Conference Santa Clara CA November 18, 2008 -2 TilTul http://www.tiltul.com/ - Automate the Web.

robotics compitition

Author: Admin
11 19th, 2008

NAHS first robotics compotition

History of Robotics

Author: Admin
11 19th, 2008

http://connectedlife.wm.wizzard.tv/rss The term robot comes from the word robota meaning serf labour and was first popularized in a 1920 Czech play by Karel Capek called Rossums Universal Robots. French inventor, Jacques de Vaucanson is credited with creating the worlds first true robot in 1738, but early pioneers also include Japanese craftsman Tanaka and inventor Nikola Telsa. Elmer and Elsie, the first electronic autonomous robots were created by William Walter in Bristol, England in 1948 and 1949. But the Uni-mate, was the first truly modern, digitally operated, programmable, and teachable robot. It was invented in 1954 by George Devol, who later went on to co-found the world's first robot company. General Motors employed the very first industrial robot in a New Jersey factory in 1961. And we can trace advances in robotics technology from the Unimate to WABOT-1, the first anthropomorphic robot in 1973, to Hondas ASIMO, now considered to be the most advanced humanoid robot in the world. While todays robots help us build automobiles, act as practice patients for dentists, and even help surgeons perform operations, future advances will likely continue to make our lives easier in ways we haven't even imagined yet.

11 19th, 2008

Friendly Robotics Robomow - Verkaufsvideo Deutsch