Coffee and eggs the recipe for robot technique

The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) has funded some strange projects in its work to develop new technology for the United States military. But perhaps none quite so strange as using coffee grains to pick up an egg.

DARPA provided some of the money for a newly published study involving researchers at universities in Chicago and New York and the iRobot corporation (who produces the Roomba robotic vacuum cleaner). They’ve produced a robotic arm which, rather than having a claw-like device at the end, has a balloon filled with coffee grounds.

The device works because the surface of coffee grains changes under pressure. As Hod Lipson, one of the researchers explained, ” When they are not pressed together they can roll over each other and flow. When they are pressed together just a little bit, the teeth interlock, and they become solid.” Rice and sand have similar qualities but are heavier.

That’s the reason why vacuum-packed coffee feels much more solid than when the grains are loose. That effect is recreated in the robot by air being sucked out of the balloon. This effectively “solidifies” the balloon, holding its shape and allowing it to hold on to any object it was surrounding.

There are some practical benefits to the device, beyond simply being awesome. It works well even with objects that human aren’t able to handle such as coins (which are fiddly, particularly when laid down) or eggs (which need a relatively precise and controlled degree of grip to avoid messy results.) While the robot might seem an over-engineered solution when you think of the “hassle” for a human to pick up one such object, it could make a major difference in assembly lines such as egg packing or coin sorting.

The researchers also say the technique could be used for handling sensitive objects as part of a bomb disposal team’s work. Though I must admit I’d be tempted to drop the bomb just to smell that freshly roasted coffee goodness (albeit with a rubbery aroma.)

The results of the study have been published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Science. The researchers say there’s no reason why the device couldn’t be manufactured commercially right away.

C-3PO and R2-D2 break in an electronics store [Video]

Watch what unfolds as C-3PO and R2-D2 land on earth and decide to break in an electronics store.



ORCS! – The Movie [Video]

They are savage, bestial and barbaric. They are mythical, medieval, and warmongering. They are monstrous, sadistic creatures devoid of human emotion…They are ORCS! Hordes of rampaging orcs! And they’re here to kill us all! The fate of the world is left up to two park rangers. Can they defend us?

Ohhhhhhh, so that’s where all those unemployed orcs went after Peter Jackson was done with the LOTR movies…

[Via Topless Robot]

Fake Science: How Do Cakes Rise?

Edit: Just got an email from someone saying it was irresponsible of us to post this here, so for all you people with no brains: DON’T DO THIS AT HOME. Mercury is highly poisonous!

[Via Fake Science]

Privacy And The Internet: A Helpful Venn Diagram

Is there such a thing as privacy on the Internet? Let’s visualize the concept with a simple venn diagram.

Hmmm, nope. No privacy online. Sorry folks.

[Via Flickr (CC)]

Sayonara to the Sony Walkman

Last year I wrote a celebratory article to mark the 30th anniversary of the first Sony Walkman going on sale. Today I write with a heavier heart as I bring you the sad news that the last cassette Walkman has left Sony’s Japanese factories.

The company has now revealed that it has not made any new units since April and will not be doing so in the future. In other words, once retailers’ current stock goes, that’s it for the Walkman cassette player in Japan. Conflicting reports suggest the company may license the brand to Chinese manufacturers for sales to customers in developing markets.

The final sales count for the cassette Walkman is around the 220 million mark. The entire range, which included digital music players, has sold 385 million units so far. As a comparison, the iPod range is believed to have hit 260 million in April this year, the point at which the last cassette Walkman was made.

The Walkman range did manage to outsell the iPod range in Japan this August, though that’s partly because of potential iPod buyers waiting for new models.

For memories of the Walkman in more happier times, check out our 30th anniversary piece from last year. And for a complete history of the models, check out Walkman Central, which includes some Sony portable cassette players from before the Walkman brand launched.

All that remains is to compile a 90 minute mixtape to honor the fallen technology. I’ll kick it off with Cliff Richard’s Wired For Sound. What’s your suggestion?