Spot, the robotic "dog" design from Boston Dynamics, has had a busy pandemic, between counseling patients and enforcing social distancing guidelines. Now, a new partnership with a New Zealand robotics firm is setting up the four-legged automaton for a new line of work: farming.
Technically, the partnership is much bigger than that. Rocos specializes in the remote monitoring and operation of robot fleets. By working together, the capabilities of Boston Dynamics robots like Spot will expand thanks to human operators who can manage their performance from a great distance.
Think of the farming thing as a proof-of-concept. A video released by Rocos shows Spot exploring rough terrain, inspecting crops, and herding sheep – all of which is meant to serve as a demonstration of the various ways remote operation can be used to put robots to work.
"Equipped with payloads like heat, LIDAR, gas and high resolution camera sensors, Spot navigates rugged environments to capture data in real time - feeding this data back into existing business systems, wherever they are located ," the Rocos news announcement reads, before offering some examples.
"In the energy sector this provides real-time anomaly detection as well as access to historic digital records for comparison. In agriculture, farmers can access information such as more accurate and up-to-date yield estimates. This provides access to a new category of automation, and a safer, more efficient business."
Automation has been creeping into industrial spaces for many years now and the coronavirus pandemic has only accelerated that shift. As the illness has come for warehouse and assembly line workers, who all tend to operate in close quarters, the question of how and where robots can step in to help has become louder and more pressing.
We were already starting to see robots pop up in supermarkets before the pandemic threat really started having an impact in the United States. Amazon is also reportedly looking at installing robots in its warehouses.
SEE ALSO: This Boston Dynamics lookalike robot dog just wants to be our petNot everyone is on board with throwing open all the doors to using robots as replacements for human labor, of course. Amazon in particular has faced harsh criticism in recent months for what many have described as unsafe warehouse working conditions. The move toward automation in general seems inevitable, but Amazon's will face particular scrutiny over any such decision due to the stories that have come out.
Individual company stories aside, the march toward automation continues on. Boston Dynamics' partnership with Rocos ought to speed that along, given the capabilities of robots like Spot and all the potential ways remote operation could put them to work.
Copyright © 2023 Powered by
See Boston Dynamics' robodog herd sheep and explore in New Zealand-寸地尺天网
sitemap
文章
212
浏览
26868
获赞
3
This alignment test will tell you if you're a stupid horny baby
People online love a good alignment test. They also love to say "I'm baby." Here's something that coColeco: Gone But Not Forgotten
For those growing up in the 1980s, the name "Coleco" stirs up nostalgic memories of a gaming era lonHow to Keep Using Internet Explorer in Microsoft Edge with IE Mode
This year, Microsoft finally and officially retired Internet Explorer, the legacy web browser. If yo27 Years of Tomb Raider & Lara Croft
Few video game characters have become more famous than the games that featured them. Lara Croft is oArtists on Twitter are drawing their favorite shipping dynamics for this new meme
Once you've binge-watched enough Netflixshows, you start to see a pattern in the characters you get27 Years of Tomb Raider & Lara Croft
Few video game characters have become more famous than the games that featured them. Lara Croft is oWe Asked GPT Some Tech Questions, Can You Tell Which Answers Are Human?
ChatGPT and its wordsmith capabilities are all over the news, and for good reason. The large languagThe State of Self
Science fiction has promised self-driving vehicles for decades, with images of families getting swepFacebook bans far right ‘Boogaloo’ accounts from its platform
Facebook is cracking down on the Boogaloo movement.On Tuesday, the social media giant announcedthatNvidia DLSS 3 Revisit: We Try It Out in 9 Games
After its big splash, today we're taking a second look at Nvidia's DLSS 3 technology to see what hasThe Sims: 22 Years and Counting
Every gamer who was alive at the turn of the millennium has either played, or at the very least hearThe Dark Web: Exploring the Hidden Internet
In the realm of the Internet, few things carry as infamous a reputation as the Dark Web. Widely utilBarbie may not be out of the closet yet, but her fans sure are
Has there ever really been a gaydoll? Well, yes and no. In 1977, "Gay Bob," marketed as the world'sHow to Keep Using Internet Explorer in Microsoft Edge with IE Mode
This year, Microsoft finally and officially retired Internet Explorer, the legacy web browser. If yo5 Ways to Connect Your Old Storage Devices to a New PC
When your computer breaks down, or when you need to upgrade to a new faster machine, you may think t