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    They Have Robots On The Internet Now?
    By News Staff | March 11th 2013 09:57 AM | 7 comments | Print | E-mail | Track Comments

    Researchers have developed a cloud-computing platform,  the RoboEarth Cloud Engine, that allows robots connected to the Internet to directly access the powerful computational, storage, and communications infrastructure of modern data centers for tasks and learning.

    This continues their work towards creating an Internet for robots. The new platform extends earlier work on allowing robots to share knowledge with other robots via a WWW-style database, greatly speeding up robot learning and adaptation in complex tasks.

    The developed Platform as a Service (PaaS) for robots allows to perform complex functions like mapping, navigation, or processing of human voice commands in the cloud, at a fraction of the time required by robots' on-board computers. By making enterprise-scale computing infrastructure available to any robot with a wireless connection, the researchers believe that the new computing platform will help pave the way towards lighter, cheaper, more intelligent robots.

    "The RoboEarth Cloud Engine is particularly useful for mobile robots, such as drones or autonomous cars, which require lots of computation for navigation. It also offers significant benefits for robot co-workers, such as factory robots working alongside humans, which require large knowledge databases, and for the deployment of robot teams." says Mohanarajah Gajamohan, researcher at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology (ETH Zurich) and Technical Lead of the project.

    "On-board computation reduces mobility and increases cost," says Dr. Heico Sandee, RoboEarth's Program Manager at Eindhoven University of Technology in the Netherlands, "With the rapid increase in wireless data rates caused by the booming demand of mobile communications devices, more and more of a robot's computational tasks can be moved into the cloud."

    High-tech companies that heavily rely on data centers have been criticized for creating fewer jobs than traditional companies (Google and Facebook employ less than half the number of workers of General Electric or Hewlett-Packard per dollar in revenue) but the researchers don't believe that this new robotics platform should be more cause for alarm. According to one report by the International Federation of Robotics and Metra Martech entitled "Positive Impact of Industrial Robots on Employment", robots don't kill jobs but rather tend to lead to an overall growth in jobs.




    Comments

    MikeCrow
    I'm surprised more people haven't thought about storing the brains of the robot remotely, it seems pretty obvious.
    Never is a long time.
    Ralph
    Remote intelligence via internet is a powerful idea. Nevertheless, some fast local processing will still be required for any tasks that must be performed more quickly than information can make a round trip to the cloud and back. This minimum time for an exchange is known as "latency," and even the fastest networks have some irreducible amount of it. Even assuming computers which respond with negligible delay, there is still the speed of light between robot and cloud to take into account.
    Gerhard Adam
    Networking simply isn't reliable for anything of real-time importance.  Besides latency you have the issue of packet order, re-transmissions, error-handling, etc.  These all represent even more processing power that has to occur at the robot-level to ensure the reliability of the data being received.

    Even using a caching mechanism, the latency becomes more apparent during initial loads.
    Ralph
    The robot will have to do something non-critical while waiting for detailed instructions from the sky. But even slow information is usually better than no information.
    Hank
    Or just a time-wasting activity. Toasters became popular once we had all-the-time electricity, electric companies started marketing products to use it. So we may create a market for non-critical apps no one really needs but can be convinced they do?
    Want more no-nonsense, independent science? Buy Science Left Behind
    Gerhard Adam
    We already have thousands of those kinds of robots.  They're called "politicians".
    Michael Martinez
    "I have a bad feeling about this."  -- Obi-wan Kenobi