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Ann R. Thryft
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Re: Taking a page from gamers
Ann R. Thryft   6/22/2012 12:31:27 PM
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Chuck, I think the ShapeTape almost deserves its own story, although it's not really used in apps we cover. Those include motion-capture techniques for animated movies: I've seen two that use a similar (if not the same) technology, and both were considered ground-breaking. One is the animated film based on Beowulf with Angelina Jolie playing Grendel's mom, and the other was A Scanner Darkly, based on a Philip K. Dick novel.

Ann R. Thryft
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Re: HUMAN GESTURES
Ann R. Thryft   6/22/2012 12:12:31 PM
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Thanks, Bob. Glad you like my articles on robots. Some truly amazing things are being done in robotics. I think you're right: we may need Asimov's 3 laws sooner than we realize: I just submitted a story on a swimming robot. Of course, if you think the future is going to go more along the lines of the Terminator story-line, then it may be already too late, lol.

Charles Murray
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Re: Taking a page from gamers
Charles Murray   6/21/2012 9:23:58 PM
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The ShapeTape truly is amazing, especially in terms of its real-time capabilities. Thanks, Ann.  

bobjengr
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Platinum
HUMAN GESTURES
bobjengr   6/21/2012 7:27:14 PM
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Truly amazing!  I am also amazed at the speed in which the robotic system duplicates the movement of the shape tape and the degrees of freedom exhibited by the arm.   If the robots get much more sophistificated we will have to make sure the designers employ Asimov's Three Laws of Robotics:

  1. A robot may not injure a human being or, through inaction, allow a human being to come to harm.
  2. A robot must obey the orders given to it by human beings, except where such orders would conflict with the First Law.
  3. A robot must protect its own existence as long as such protection does not conflict with the First or Second Laws.

I suspect we have a long way to go but it seems to me the progress  is consistent and steady.  Great article Ann.

Ann R. Thryft
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Re: Taking a page from gamers
Ann R. Thryft   6/21/2012 11:54:13 AM
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Chuck, here's a link to a page that describes how ShapeTape works, although not in much detail: http://www.measurand.com/shapetape.htm

Ann R. Thryft
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Blogger
Re: Something interesting to be considered.
Ann R. Thryft   6/21/2012 11:53:21 AM
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flared0ne, I did see the Leap announcement, but so far it's not a real product yet. If they can do what they say they want to do, it may leave Kinect technology in the dust. Also, as we stated in my article: ShapeTape was used only to test the A*Star system. It will not be required to use it: that's what Kinect is for.

Mydesign
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Platinum
Robots in Disater Area
Mydesign   6/21/2012 2:11:50 AM
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Ann, I think this is a great achievement and revolutionary thought, where robots can be used in a very human friendly way. I think it may be able to detect the remote motions also, where we can use such technologies is disaster areas.

Charles Murray
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Re: Taking a page from gamers
Charles Murray   6/20/2012 6:57:34 PM
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Great story, Ann. I'm not familiar with ShapeTape sensing. How does it work?

proent@pd.jaring.my
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Iron
Like a Chinese Puppet Opera
proent@pd.jaring.my   6/20/2012 6:02:34 PM
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It is visualising an idea like the Chinese Puppet Opera Show. This is a new achievement, applications of this creation yet to determine. Remote handling an explosive item ?

flared0ne
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Platinum
Something interesting to be considered.
flared0ne   6/20/2012 5:13:56 PM
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Nice to see gesture recognition is getting up to speed and developing some traction in public awareness. Given the several mentions of various Kinect sensor implementations, it seems fair to mention another "disruptively innovative" technology which handles all the tasks this article describes. Look for and check out the threads of commentary, info etc which were started when a company named Leap Motion made an announcement on May 21st.

Key elements of their announcement: an inexpensive sensor device which enables position-detection, motion-detection, and gesture recognition -- with a reproducible position-detection accuracy of 0.01mm (i.e., ten micrometers, one wavelength of long-wavelength-range IR), anywhere within a "recognition space" volume of eight cubic feet. And a movement detect-and-report latency below the threshold for human perception -- USB comm latency and your monitor's refresh rate are the bottlenecks there (I'm still hoping to hear a stat for maximum trackable position rate-of-change, re effective point-measurement-rate). And an API which uses perhaps 5% of the CPU time on a nothing-to-write-home-about generic PC.  ...Hey, my jaw dropped too.

I am just one of many hopeful entries in their (still open) pool of developer applicants, with thousands scheduled to be selected to receive an SDK and a free Leap device in the next three months or so. Their obvious intention is to "crowd-source" a base of useable applications by the time the device is commercially available in the first part of 2013. Devices can be pre-ordered now, for the impatient.

Look for their website, their facebook page, their YouTube videos, and their forums. Because of patents pending, complete specs and technique info have not yet been released, but there has been some fairly credible guessing going on.

Important to note: The Leap technology will be making OUR reality "machine readable" -- If you can SEE something, you can use it as an input for consideration. No tape required. Anticipate interesting times.

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