Coming Soon: Robot Housekeepers and More
Added 22nd Feb 2012At CES this year, vendors showed off their robotic inventions. One of them is the Samsung Navibot, a robotic floor sweeper, that has a camera and speaker. Let’s say you’re at work and you connect, via an app, to your Navibot floor sweeper. You can adjust the camera position on the unit, as well as control its movement via the controller. By shifting the camera’s position around the room, you could discover that the dog is asleep on the couch. Your next step is to shout into your tablet’s microphone “bad doggy”—and presumably the dog will jump off the couch once it hears your voice coming from the Navibot.
But there is another category of drone-like devices that rely more on human controls and may find a place in the workplace and home, if you can get past their seemingly out-of-body experience.
In the ocean of vendors at CES, was Mantaro, a firm that’s selling a device that doesn’t sweep floors, but could act as your physical substitute at a business meeting.
The company’s just released product is called TeleMe. An Apple iPad 2, iPhone 4 or 4s or an Android tablet can be fitted in a holder on the unit. The holder can be adjusted to either standing or sitting height. At the base are wheels, motor and battery.
The remote user communicates via Skype over the tablet or iPhone but can also control, via a PC, the movement of the unit. It can, for instance, follow an aging parent around the house.
That unit costs $1,500 (about Rs 70,500) today, but Declan Murphy, a director of the company and an engineer, believes the price can be dropped to $1,000 (about Rs 47,000) by the end of the year. “In two years’ time this is going to be the most popular Christmas present for mom and dad,” he said.
A more expensive unit from this company is the MantaroBot, which has its own camera and more capability to scan an area. It can also be equipped with a laser pointer that can be controlled remotely. Both units connect to Wi-Fi networks.
On a factory floor, for instance, a manager could guide the MantaroBot around and engage employees via the camera and built-in screen. It could also be used at conferences.
Murphy said the device is being used by a university in Chile to allow an instructor in the US to remotely teach students.
This tablet sits on a holder that can be adjusted to either standing or sitting height. It also has wheels and a motor for moving around.
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