Essentially, they are making robots. Fortunately for them and for me, the New York Times scooped me on this story by one day, so I can use them to explain what the company's doing.
. . . a Silicon Valley robotics research group, said that its experimental PR2 robot, which has wheels and can travel at speeds up to a mile and a quarter per hour, was able to open and pass through 10 doors and plug itself into 10 standard wall sockets in less than an hour.When J1 told me the robot could open doors and plug itself in, I was less than impressed. I've seen enough robots on television and movies to 'know' that ain't no big deal. But, apparently it is:
I did some writing after lunch and then walked round Palo Alto while J1 had a meeting.But roboticists said that the Willow Garage robot was the first to integrate the ability to do a number of operations in a real-world environment.
“There are other groups that have opened doors before,” said Andrew Ng, a Stanford roboticist with several students who have gone to work for the company. But, Mr. Ng said, this seemed to be the first robot able to repeatedly and reliably open doors and plug itself in.
William L. Whittaker, a Carnegie Mellon University roboticist and the winner of a Defense Department urban challenge robot driving contest last year, said it was “unprecedented” for a robot to navigate in a building reliably and repeatedly recharge itself. “These guys are the real deal,” he said.
A lot of the homes in the area do not
have lawns. But most look like they have pretty pricey gardeners to keep these alternative landscapes looking good.
Where the ground isn't watered, the grasses are totally dried out.
Here's Kona waiting to go home.
And apparently Anchorage is no longer the most expensive city for gas.
What a cute little dog! All those great pics, and he makes me say, "Awww!"
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