Showing posts with label Contests. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Contests. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 23, 2015

Congrats KAIST friends!

Was 2007 when I had the pleasure and honor to meet Jun Ho Oh, professor of mechanical engineering at the Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology, who led the KAIST Team, who won in June 2015 the worldwide recognized DARPA Robotics Challenge (DRC) and its first prize of 1 Million Dollars.

Professor Ho Oh, came on 2007 from South Korea to Campus Party, the biggest LAN event in the world, were I was leading the organization of the Robotics Area (CampusBot), with his team from KAIST and Albert Hubo Robot. In that moment Hubo had a fully motorized Einstein face, able to reproduce not only mouth movements but face expressions. 

I found in Professor Ho Oh not only a brilliant mind now worldwide recognized, but also a very nice, sincere and friendly person, that was managing his team with a very close implication and understanding. Their robot did what was expected. In the picture I’m with him and with our respective robots: Hubo and Sam.


Professor Ho Oh and his team continued working in Hubo robot and improved it in order to perform real tasks in a real world. Therefore they won the prize. They deserved it. 

DARPA organized the DRC after the Fukushima disaster in Japan, expecting to advance the field of disaster robotics. The DRC Finals called for 23 teams of semi-autonomous robots partly controlled by human operators. The robots created by universities and companies included legged robots, wheeled robots, and hybrids robots as well. The following image shows the DRC Finals team standings, being on first position Hubo of TEAM KAIST from South Korea, on second position Running Man (Atlas) of Team IHMC Robotics from the Institute of Human and Machine Cognition in Florida/USA and on third position Chimp of Tartan Rescue Team from Carnegie Mellon University in Pennsylvania/USA.


The Robots had to perform things like drive a car, open a door, drill a hole in a wall, walk up stairs, open a valve and tread uneven ground. Also the Internet network that teams used to communicate with their robots at times didn’t work for 30 seconds or more, to simulate real-life conditions. Therefore this was a very difficult set of tasks to complete. Most of the robots didn’t perform some of the tasks, even most of them fell down sometime during the execution. But from my point of view it was a very interesting competition. People criticize that most of the robots failed, but most of the people don’t understand how difficult is to make robots perform like humans in real world. 

We made a world for humans. Everything in this world is prepared for humans (stairs, chairs, doors, vehicles), and this is the reason why most of the robots at DRC where humanoid robots, just to ease the execution of the tasks, but really is not a question of creating robots exactly like humans. There are better options, and teams like KAIST understood it when they decided to give HUBO the possibility of moving using legs or wheels, as well as being able to rotate its torso 180 degree. This couple of things between others showed that KAIST team did something great: Thinking very creatively, trying to find ways to even improve the human body limitations in some ways. My congratulations to the KAIST team. I wish them the best!

Recommended Links:

Wednesday, September 16, 2009

Robot World 2009. The South Korean Robotics exhibition

This is an article I wrote for an Northamerican journal after I returned from South Korea:


Robot World 2009

The South Korean Robotics exhibition


In 2003 South Korea, a country located between China and Japan, identified the intelligent robot industry as one of its new growth industries. Since then the efforts of this country has made possible to include Korea in the list of the ten most advanced countries in the area of intelligent robotics. In fact, the objective of this country is to be the most important developer of intelligent robots in the world by next decade.  

The exhibition


This year we attended the fourth edition of Robot World, one of the most important robotics exhibition events in Asia, where more than 100.000 visitors came to the city of Busan at South Korea to see the most advanced developments of this country.  More than 60 companies and research organizations participated in this event, than combined an expo area, a robot competition and a conference congress.


The interesting thing of this exhibition was the presence of robots for very different applications, from industrial robots, to educational robots, not forgetting other applications like military, social, disability, civil, entertainment or medical. Also the presence of Universities, R&D institutions and companies gave a wide offer between the state of the art robotics and more commercial solutions.

The robots


One of the robots that most surprised us was the quadruped from Kitech (Korea Institute of Industrial Technology), that seemed to be a version of the BigDog from Boston Dynamics. This four legged robot was designed to walk on rough terrain mainly for payload transport.

quadruped from Kitech

Kitech also showed their Korean singer woman robot and other wheeled robots for home duties.

Korean singer woman

In the same way as the quadruped from Kitech was the development of the quadruped from the Pohang Institute of Intelligent Robotics called PQ1-PIRO for research purpose in dynamic walking. Previous researches on dynamic walking of quadruped robots have used only walking pattern called central pattern generator (CPG). In this research, different from walking generation with only CPG, a instinctive stability measure called landing accordance ratio, is used for increasing dynamic stability. In addition, dynamic balance control and control to adjust walking trajectory for increasing dynamic stability measure is also used in this robot.

PQ1-PIRO

The Pohang institute also showed their research in underwater autonomous cleaning robots (Piro-U2), capable of working at 10m depth and able to clean 100 tons of dust per hour. This 300 kg robot use underwater cameras for the autonomous navigation.

Piro-U2

Another development of the Pohang Institute was Popo, a wheeled humanoid with a cat like face for museums, and other public events where the robot could be a point of information for the visitors. With its interactive screen, the visitors could see where they are, what to visit and get more information of any activities in the venue.

Popo

The Center for Cognitive Robotics Research (an area of KIST, Korea Institute of Science and Technology) showed their humanoid Mahru III, a walking robot that is an evolution of other previous versions. Every hour there was a demonstration of the robot walking and interacting with people.

Mahru III

Also we saw demonstrations of the Mahru-M, that is a wheeled version able to prepare the breakfast for its human pals. Very interesting when we wake up lazy on a Sunday morning.

humanoid Mahru-M from KIST

KETI (Korea Electronics Technology Institute) showed several of their developments, like the humanoid Kebox still in development, the service robot Kebo, or a wheelchair able of climbing stairs.

Kebox from Keti
Kebo from Keti
wheelchair from Keti
Other interesting wheelchair was the one from Ntrex company, that used omnidirectional wheels. This kind of wheels allowed the driver to move in any direction by the use of a unique joystick.

wheelchair from Ntrex
Robotech company showed their small Life Care robot Hali and the human sized PGR-4, an information service robot that we found also in a museum at South Korea. The main difference we found in this robot was the possibility of using two screens: One at the chest and another optional one over the head. This last was more or less in front of the eyes of the human user. This 95kg robot uses a PC Core 2 Duo platform with windows XP. Like the roomba cleaning robots, this robot could find its charge unit and take a breath of electricity when batteries become exhausted.


PGR-4 and Hali from Robotech

We found many other information service and telepresence robots offered by other Korean companies in this event. This shows an increasing interest in this area.

In a professional service area we found some interesting fire fighting remotely controlled vehicles. Hyundai Rotem company showed a couple of quite large fire fighting platforms prepared for fires where firemen have difficult access.  As well DRBFatec showed some medium size robots for the same purpose.

Hyundai Rotem

DRBFatec
Additionally they were companies developing the more common robots seen everywere, like educational and entertainment robots, floor cleaning robots, and parts, like motors, sensors and all this stuff.

In summary they were more than 60 Korean companies and other research institutions showing their last researches and products. A window to the state of the art in that country.

The contest


We also attended the IRC 2009, the international robot contest organized by Kitech as part of the same event.

It was a four days contest where 3.000 teams with 6.000 participants demonstrated their abilities in the eight competitions:

·         Grand Challenge (Performing missions),
·         Robotpiad (cleaning robot competition),
·         Humanoid (Fighting, Dance, Survival, Basketball, Skill Performance, Curling, Obstacle, Relay),
·         Intelligent SoC Robot War (SoC Tank Robot: A game in which tank robots attack enemies through an image recognition system with laser cannons, SoC Taekwon Robot: Two-legged humanoids attack each other using Taekwondo moves through an image recognition system),
·         FIRA challenge Cup (Football game of robots made in same form),
·         Robot festival (Line-tracer and other competitions for collegian),
·         Robot Olympiad and
·         Busan Robot Contest (Exhibiting and evaluating family-made robots)




It was really incredible to see the amount of small children participating in this kind of contests with very advanced robots. This is due to the education at schools in Korea, where they learn robotics as part of their ordinary education.

Conclusions


South Korea, a country that used to be far away from the technology is becoming one of the most advanced countries as technology producer, mainly in the area of robotics. This country is betting for the technology as a top priority driver for their future. They take care of the education, the research institutions, the technology transfer between universities and companies and the relationship between companies. Korea is preparing a very fast growth in this area that will undoubtedly surprise us sooner than we expect. Stay tuned.

Alejandro Alonso-Puig
Quark Robotics
www.quarkrobotics.com

Robot World website: http://www.robotworld.or.kr/

Thursday, November 17, 2005

Week of the Science and Technology. University of Cadiz (Spain)


From the 9th till the 11th of Noviembre 2005 there was at the Engineering School of Cadiz (Spain), the 2nd Week of the Science and Technology.

Opening of the event by D. Arturo Morgado Estévez, Research Deputy Manager at the University of Cadiz.

Between the activities of the event they were conferences, workshops and robotics demonstrations in three days were students and other interested people filled up the venue.

TV2 TV channel covered the event and interviewed Alejandro Alonso. See video (spanish):



They were the following conferences:
  • Space RoboticsAlejandro Alonso Puig (Quark Robotics)
  • Robotics contests, Eurobot and HispabotJulio Pastor Mendoza (UAH)
  • Robotics VisionAntón Civit Balcells (University of Seville)
  • Extrange robotsAlejandro Alonso Puig (Quark Robotics)
  • Robotics activities at UCA. Association AMUCAArturo Morgado Estevez (UCA), José Pichardo Gallardo (AMUCA)
  • Robotics projects from studens of E.S.I. Daniel Berdugo, Rafael González and Daniel Quintero (AMUCA)

Alejandro Alonso during one of his conferences

Robots Electrococo and Campanolo, presented at the Eurobot competition

Daniel Berdugo shows a leg of his future humanoid

Melanie-III

Julio Pastor during a conference

Juan González with some of the robots shown

Antón Civit during his conference about robotics vision

From left to right. Juan González (IEArobotics/UAM), Ricardo Gómez (Ifara), Andrés Prieto (Ifara), Alejandro Alonso (Quark Robotics), Julio Pastor (UAH), Oscar González (UAH), Antón Civit (University of Seville) and Arturo Morgado (UCA)

Laboratory were it was the workshop


Juan González, coordinator of the workshop, helping some students.





People at the event

Andrés Prieto during the robotics demonstration


Sunday, July 31, 2005

CampusBot 2005 Robotics area at Campus Party (Valencia-Spain)

The past month of July was celebrated the ninth edition of Campus Party. As a premiere there was a new area of robotics called CampusBot, that had 200 participants who during one week enjoyed in activities such as conferences, round tables, exhibitions of robots, competitions and a workshop of robots assembly.


Robotics area during the robots assembly workshop. at the top end "The cube of CampusBot", were was the stage for conferences, round tables and robotics shows. 

The event was carried out from the 25th to the 31st of July, 2005 in the Fair of Samples of Valencia (Spain) and was coordinated by  Alejandro Alonso Puig.



They were first class speakers, like:

Professor. Kevin Warwick, Professor of Cybernetics at the University of Reading (United Kingdom), who spoke about the implants that he had at neural level for the control of robotic hands and other devices, or reception of signals from external sensors, like its ultrasonic cap for blind people.

Professor. Kevin Warwick gives instructions to a volunteer on the use of his ultrasonic system

Professor. Miguel Ángel Salichs, Professor and Director of the Department of Systems Engineering and Automatization of the University Carlos III of Madrid.

From left to right, Professor Miguel Angel Salichs with his assistants: Ana Corrales, David García, Rafael Rivas, Ramon Barber, Javier Gorostiza, and Elena Delgado. At the right is Alejandro Alonso. In the middle is the personal robot "Maggie" 

PhD. Elena García Armada, who worked in the Leg Laboratory of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), being dedicated at the moment to the investigation and development of legged robots in the Industrial Automation Institute of Madrid that belongs CSIC.

PhD. Elena García  Armada (IAI-CSIC) and Alejandro Alonso

PhD. Arturo Morgado Estévez, Assistant Research Director of the School of Industrial Engineers of the University of Cadiz. Specialized in robotics hardware.

Julio Pastor Mendoza, Robotics Lecturer at the University of Alcalá de Henares. Leading coordinator of the robotics contests "Alcabot" and "Hispabot" (National Robotics Award) as well a Spanish connection for the European Robotics Contest "Eurobot".

Juan González Gómez, Robotics Lecturer at the "Universidad Autonoma de Madrid". Leading research fellow on modular robots.

Top. From left to right. Juan González (Iearobotics), PhD. Arturo Morgado (UCA)
Bottom. From left to right. Iván González (UAM), Julio Pastor (UAH) and Alejandro Alonso (Quark Robotics)

PhD. Javier de Lope Asiaín, PhD in Computer science by the Polytechnical University of Madrid. Lecturer of Artificial intelligence in the Faculty of Computer science of the Polytechnical University of Madrid. Member of the research group on autonomous cars coordinated by the Industrial Automation Institute of Madrid (CSIC).

From left to right. Ricardo Gómez (IFARA), Javier De Lope (UPM),  Alejandro Alonso (Quark Robotics), Jose Pichardo (AMUCA), Andrés Prieto-Moreno (IFARA) and Juan González (Iearobotics)

PhD. Juan Carlos Pérez, PhD in Computer science by the Polytechnical University of Valencia. Research Director the Information Technology Institute of Valencia (ITI). Responsible of the area of vision, and lecturer of the Computing and Information Systems Department. Member of the DISCA vision group, who gave a lecture about Robotics and Linux, with demonstrations of a couple of robots based on Linux.

José Luis Martínez Fraile, creator of the well-known Seguritron robot, that surprised the participants to the event.

From left to right. PhD. Juan Carlos Pérez (ITI), José Luis M. Fraile (Seguritron), Juan González (Iearobotics) and Alejandro Alonso (Quark Robotics)
The mass media coverage was spectacular, by in television as by radio and press, appearing in the main national television networks, both in in direct or differed programs.



It was of main interest the robots assembly workshop coordinated by Juan González, where participants assembled and programmed 63 SkyBot robots of Ifara Technologies, that later could take to their house to continue progressing.

At the end of the workshop of 5 days of duration (2 hours daily), there was a competition called "mogollón", where the participants of the workshop could compete with their just assembled robots. In such competition the winner robot was the first in leaving an enclosure whose edges were defined by a black tape on a white surface.

Photo of group with the participants to the competition "mogollón"
Also it was awarded the best tuning robot between those assembled at the workshop.

The last day they were two competitions of Xtreme Robotrackers and Sumo Fighters, with awards of 1200€, 500€ y 200€ for first, seconds and third positions of each modality.

First, second and third award of the competition "Xtreme Robotrackers" were given to Ángel Sánchez, Iván Rubí and Antonio José Villena respectively. All from Malaga (Spain).

Sunday, May 1, 2005

ROBOLID'05 - Robotics at the University of Valladolid (Spain)

The Association of robotics of the University of Valladolid (AMUVa), presided by Javier Herrero de La Cal, celebrated this las month of April 2005 the annual contest ROBOLID

In this event they were contests, conferences and exhibitions of robots. The robot Melanie III was there, being shown during the conference “These Estrange Robots” of  Alejandro Alonso Puig. 


Conference of  Alejandro Alonso Puig


Next, Juan González (IeaRobotics) gave a lecture on apodal robots, presenting his robots Cube Revolutions y Multicube. 

From left to right: Juan González, Alejandro Alonso, Fernando Remiro and one of his undergraduates

ROBOLID is the regional robotics contest of Castilla-León and is qualifying phase of the European Prize of Robotics  EUROBOT

They were competitions of Sumo (3Kg), MiniSumo (1/2 kg), trackers and Sprinters.

They were participants of all ages, with robots of great quality, demonstrating that the age is never a constrain to make a good robot and that the imagination can compensate the limitation of resources perfectly.

There was also a prize to the most innovating robot than was given to David Velasco from AMUVa for his robot robot "Cíclope". A sprinter with extreme speed, good design, very small size and simplicity. Equipped with only one sensor and a control of analog type (without microcontroller).  

Some robots of David Velasco compared with a Euro coin.
From top to bottom: "Neptuno", "X-43A" and "Cíclope"

This event was in addition a good opportunity to be with new and old friends like Juan GonzálezFrancisco CarabazaFernando Remiro, Javier Herrero, David Velasco, Jose Luis M.Fraile, Daniel Álvarez, Alberto Calvo and Eva María Fernández.

Alejandro Alonso and Francisco Carabaza with Melanie-III

Thanks to: Association of robotics of the University of Valladolid (AMUVa) and very specially to its President Javier Herrero and David Velasco due to their constant attention during all our stay.

From left to right: Javier Herrero, David Velasco, Alejandro Alonso, Alberto Calvo, Daniel Álvarez and Juan González