SPACE TRAVEL SPACE DAILY SPACE WAR TERRA DAILY MARS DAILY SPACE MART GPS DAILY ENERGY DAILY
  Space Travel News  
Get Our Free Newsletters Via Email
  
Search All Our Sites at SpaceBank
Unique Exhibit Provides Glimpse Of Robotic Future

file photo
by Staff Writers
York, UK (SPX) Feb 20, 2006
Picture a computer with no keyboard, mouse or monitor... just projected light, and a space that behaves like magic. But this is no figment of the imagination. It is Robot Ships, a unique exhibit, designed and produced by the Department of Electronics at the University of York, which will be unveiled this week at Connect, the new science and technology gallery at the Royal Museum in Edinburgh.

Robot Ships, which goes live on 16 February 2006, uses the technology of Video Augmented Environments to create a tabletop ocean. Simply by touch, users can help or hinder robotic boats to work together to clean up oil spills, caused by virtual ocean tankers running aground on islands in the tabletop ocean.

The autonomous seeker robots search for toxic spills which are then cleaned by cleaning ships. The exhibit illustrates how robots of the future will co-operate in a way that is based on the behaviour of living things.

Connect forms part of National Museums of Scotland's 15 year vision for the development of its flagship Edinburgh site. It will be a free and permanent addition to the Royal Museum and uses a unique blend of iconic historical objects, multimedia and interactive exhibits to cover topics ranging from energy and power, space technology and transport to robots and genetics. It has been designed to have wide appeal, particularly for families and schools as an important new educational resource.

Robot Ships was commissioned by Connect Gallery project manager, Lyndsey Clarke, following the success of earlier Video Augmented Environments produced in the Electronics Department at York.

The York project team - Justen Hyde, John Mateer, Dan Parnham, John Robinson and Steve Smith - created the exhibit, working with a furniture designer, a graphic designer, a learning consultant, audio-visual professionals and the museum.

Professor Robinson said: "The technology behind Robot Ships is computer vision - a video camera watches everything that happens on the table and real-time processing works out how the boats' world is affected.

"Earlier public 'video augmented environments' have been in carefully controlled lighting, usually in darkened rooms. But Robot Ships must work continuously in a gallery whose ceiling is mainly a large skylight. This meant we had to devise new video analysis methods to adapt reliably to changing illumination and shadows."

Creating Robot Ships has provided new research insights that the team is already using in other video augmented environments. Robot Ships also relies on "OpenIllusionist", an Open Source programming library invented by team members Dan Parnham and Justen Hyde.

Related Links
University of York, Department of Electronics
Royal Museum in Edinburgh

Worlds Pledge To Halve Hunger By 2015 An Empty Promise
St Louis MO (SPX) Feb 20, 2006
Almost 200 countries agreed in 1990 to cut worldwide hunger in half by 2015. That commitment is now looking like an empty promise -- all talk and no action -- according to a Cornell University expert on world hunger. If business proceeds as usual, just as many people will be hungry in the world -- 800 million -- in 2015 as there were 16 years ago, said Per Pinstrup-Andersen, Cornell's Babcock Professor of Food, Nutrition and Public Policy and the 2001 Food Prize laureate.

   Add to Delicious





Memory Foam Mattress Review

Newsletters :: SpaceDaily Express :: SpaceWar Express :: TerraDaily Express :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News
  • Eads Astrium-ISRO Alliance Sealed
  • Earthlink To Partner With EchoStar
  • Wireless World: $30 Billion In TV Phones
  • Civilian Sector Biggest Space Customer

  • Florida Tech, FSRI Receive $1.3 Million Federal Grant For Space Research
  • Researchers Make Long DNA Wires For Future Medical And Electronic Devices
  • One Small Step Means Giant Leap For Spinal Cord Research
  • Tiny Self-Assembling Cubes Could Carry Medicine, Cell Therapy

  • Spacehab Files Court Complaint For Losses On Space Shuttle Mission
  • Boeing Troubleshooting Experts Fix Space Shuttle In-Flight Anomalies
  • NASA Awards Shuttle/Space Station Engineering Support Contract
  • Happy Anniversary Shuttle Crawlers

  • Schools In Japan Receive SuitSat Signal
  • RF's Flight Control Center Conducts Manoeuvre To Adjust ISS Orbit
  • Station Crew Outting No Walk In Park
  • NASA To Send New Oxygen Generating System To ISS

  • EADS CASA Will Supply 12 C-295 To Portuguese AF
  • First F-35 Exits Lockheed Martin Factory
  • Goodrich To Develop Tech For STOVL F-35 Joint Strike Fighter Clutch
  • F-15K Releases Multiple JDAMs For Integration Test

  • Aerojet Demonstrates Rocket Propulsion For Ship-Based Gun Launchers
  • Despite Risks And Pitfalls Entrepreneurs Explore The Final Frontier
  • Rocket Racing League Announces Mark-1 X-Racer Team
  • Rocket Racing League Fans To Name First Rocket Racer

  • Lockheed Martin-Built EchoStar X Satellite Launched Successfully
  • Arianespace And Roscosmos Sign Contract For Soyuz Operations At Guiana Space Center
  • Russia, France Sign Deal On Soyuz Missile Launches
  • Plesetsk To Launch 8 Satellites, 2 ICBMs In 2006

  • Rockwell Collins Demonstrates Autonomous Vehicle
  • Northrop Grumman Increases Endurance Of MQ-5B Hunter UAV
  • Brazil Creates Protected Amazon Zone Twice The Size Of Belgium
  • EDO To Develop Weapon-Release System For Predator UAS

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2006 - SpaceDaily.AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA PortalReports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additionalcopyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement