Towel Folding Robot

CNET News March 31, 2010

Towel-folding robot won’t do the dishes
by Tim Hornyak

If you hate folding laundry, you might like what you see in a recent video from researchers at the University of California at Berkeley. They programmed a robot to fold towels.

The researchers used Willow Garage’s PR2, a general-purpose humanoid robot with two seven-axis arms and a wheeled base. In an ICRA 2010 paper, they present a cloth-grasping algorithm for getting the robot to pick up and fold towels it hadn’t previously analyzed.

Fitted with four stereo cameras, PR2 was able to successfully figure out, grasp, and fold 50 single towels, as well as a pile of five towels, though it sometimes took more than one attempt to get a hold of a towel properly. It had an 81 percent grasp success rate.

It first twisted the towel to find a corner, grasped it, then found another corner, and folded it by using the edge of a table.

The video shows PR2 doing quite a neat job, but it doesn’t show how long it took. The most time-consuming part of the procedure was detecting a point to grasp.

The paper says the robot took an average of 1,478 seconds on each towel. That’s nearly 25 minutes to pick up, fold, and stack a towel. Not bad if you have all week to do the laundry.

Still, the experiment shows that general-purpose humanoid robots, with all-purpose manipulators, can be successfully programmed for practical tasks around the home. The Berkeley team says the procedure could be used for detecting grasp points on different types of clothing, so PR2 could theoretically deal with that pile of clean (yet now-wrinkled) T-shirts, jeans, socks, and underwear in your laundry basket.

Note: This video is 50x real speed.

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EE Times Robotics Edition

EE Times March 29, 2010 Electronic Edition is all about robotics. See it on line at:

http://www.nxtbook.com/nxtbooks/cmp/eetimes_robotics_20100329/index.php#/1/OnePage

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Video of Prototype and Final UofM Robot

Here are two videos of the University of Memphis SoutheastCon 2010 effort.

The first video is of our prototype to test the mechanical steering system of the bot.

The video below was of a test run during SoutheastCon itself with the final design. Since this was a solar powered robot, there is a long delay before the robot actually moves while it charges up the capacitors that store the energy produced by the solar cells (this was edited from the video

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SoutheastCon 2011

Next years SoutheastCon 2011 Robotics competition that will be held in Nashville TN March 17 – 20, 2011 was announced this past Sunday.

The general objective is to locate “victims” in a building that has been in an earthquake. Robots will have to navigate though rooms and around obstacles to locate and then display and say the victims location as specified by a grid system. Victims will be identified by an electronic signal and IR flashes.

The contest is being run by students at Tennessee Tech University and they have posted the preliminary Competition Rules on their website.

Both University of Memphis and Christian Brothers University are already coming up with ideas for their designs for their robots for this event.

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IEEE SouthEastCon 2010

Both the University of Memphis and Christian Brothers University Competed in the Hardware (Robotics) Competition at SouthEastCon 2010 held in Concord, NC this past weekend.

The object was to create a solar powered robot (no other power source was allowed).

Both schools robots were functional but, like many of the competitors, had power issues during the competition. Only a few of the schools that competed actually were able to move, let alone score a significant number of points by going through or over the obstacles.

UofM Robot getting set up on competition field

Christian Brothers University Robot

For all the pictures taken at this event where over 30 universities from around the South Eastern US competed goto http://ceth-uofm.info/spring_2010/Southeastcon_2010/Conference/

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Memphis Universities off to SouthEastCon

Both Christian Brothers University and the University of Memphis are sending teams to this weekends IEEE SouthEastCon in Concord, NC to compete in the region’s Hardware Competition This year’s contest is to build an autonomous solar powered robot to run an obstacle course.

I will be attending as the Faculty Advisor for the UofM team and hope to put up pictures from the event (depending on internet availability).

Good luck to both Memphis area teams!

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Go Robotics Give Away

To celebrate their 10th birthday, GoRobotics is giving away $250 in prizes. Go to their website for details, but hurry, the give away ends on March 31!

1st Place Prize – Orangutan B-328 Robot Controller (donated by Pololu), 2x 24V 195 RPM Gear Motors (donated by Super Droid Robots), and The LEGO MINDSTORMS NXT Idea Book (donated by No Starch Press) – worth $100

2nd Place Prize – Arduino Duemilanove, Tamiya Gear Box and Sport Tires (donated by Zagros Robotics), and The Unofficial LEGO MINDSTORMS NXT Inventor’s Guide (donated by No Starch Press) – worth $75

3rd Place Prize – Herbie the Mousebot Kit (donated by Solarbotics), and LEGO MINDSTORMS NXT Thinking Robots (donated by No Starch Press) – worth $75

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Bluff City Bots – Team Photo

The Bluff City Bots competed in the Bayou Regional First Robotics Competition back on March 4-7.

There record at the event was 4-4-2. Good going team!

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UofA’s Entry for SouthEastCon

Below is a video of UofA’s (University of Alabama?) entry for the IEEE SouthEastCon 2010 Hardware Competition to be held next week in Concord, NC.

I know of two teams from Memphis who will also be competing (Christian Brother’s University and the University of Memphis).

[note: the video playback starts 90 sec in so you don’t have to wait for the robot to charge up via the solar panels]

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TRON Returns

Just saw the first trailer for “TRON Legacy” which will come out in Dec 2010.

If you are not as old as me, you might not remember the original TRON which came out in 1982 and was the first movie to use extensive computer graphics. Although very cheesy by today’s standards, this lead to the computer graphics used in almost every movie produced today.

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