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Showing posts with label artificial intelligence. Show all posts
Showing posts with label artificial intelligence. Show all posts

Thursday, 23 May 2013

Life In (With) A Vacuum

Feeling lonely?  Talk to your vacuum cleaner.  I am serious.... Korean makers LG have recently released details of their Roboking, a robot vacuum cleaner.

Saying "Sit!" to a dog is bad enough but shouting "Suck!" in an authoritative tone to a vacuum cleaner could well be misinterpreted by your neighbours.

You need to clap your hands twice to get the wretched thing to stop its activities so practising a bit of hi-tech Morris dancing wouldn't go amiss.

"Moreys daunce" by the way is believed to have had its very early origins in the European Courts of the 16th Century, and possibly also has a reference to Moorish practices, although the evidence is patchy.  What we do know for sure is that there is no Asian tradition of men putting knotted handkerchiefs on their heads and dancing round in a circle.

But putting Artificial Intelligence to practical use is very much an Asian tradition. Samsung Electronic also has a voice activated vacuum cleaning robot called the New Smart Tango - note the dance reference in its title.

And while the Korean have been cleaning up with their robots, the Japanese have been training theirs as pets.

Who can forget the embryonic "Tamagotchi";  a handheld digital pet which graced our shelves in the 1990's. We have come a long way from key chain-sized virtual pets that "age".  Later models of the Tamagotchi even had a final 'seniors' mode.  Presumably this state occurred before they were eventually buried at the back of someone's drawer, completely forgotten as the next tech craze took over.

NEC  has a personal robot called "PaPeRo"('Partner-type Personal Robot') which has face recognition and detection.  It also has the ability to make a mental notes of your preferences as well as being able to walk, talk ( about 200 words) and master a whole range of human expressions. And yes, it too can dance!
The PaPeRo Robot
Nidhal Guessoum who is an associate dean at the American University of Sharjah believes that:

"We are indeed at a crucial moment in human history: Artificial intelligence threatens to produce machines that will surpass us in too many ways; genetic engineering threatens to “upgrade” humans, which may perhaps help us compete with robots. Technology will soon challenge our ethics, indeed our whole sense of humanness".

He may well be correct in this assumption but think of the money we will save in pet food.
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Tuesday, 6 November 2012

Baa, Baa, Electric Sheep

Coming as I do from a country that has more sheep than people, the thought of 'electric sheep' generating art is a source of endless fascination!

Scott Draves a.k.a. Spot is a Google Engineer and visual and software artist living in New York City and has a PhD in Computer Science. Draves is the creator of the Electric Sheep, a continually evolving abstract animation.

It is described as a form of artificial life where the software recreates "the biological phenomena of evolution and reproduction though mathematics. The system is made up of man and machine, a cyborg mind with 450,000 participant computers and people all over the Internet".


As a collaborative abstract artwork project Draves' wants to demonstrate that “computers can be that soft and beautiful and have that spark of life".

What makes it particularly novel is that much of the action happens while your computer is in sleep mode.  When these computers "sleep", the Electric Sheep comes on and the computers communicate with each other by the internet to share the work of creating morphing abstract animations known as "sheep".




Electric Sheep is run by thousands of people all over the world, and can be installed on any ordinary PC or Mac. To build further upon the engagement factor of the project, the human participants guide the survival of the fittest by voting for their favorite animations in the flock.

You can also design your own sheep and submit them to the gene pool.  If you would like to view the most popular sheep in the flock you can do so here.

This blend of the organic with the inorganic and mathematics with the visual art is great for those who are up to the coding challenge.  More importantly it blurs the lines between what have traditionally been silo-ed disciplines.

The results are simply "Baaaaaaaaaaaaaautiful".
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