Welcome Guest. | Log In| Register | Membership Benefits
June 12, 1998 (10:04 AM EDT)

Sony Proposes Open Architecture For Robots

Sony Proposes Open Architecture For Robots

By Yoshiko Hara ,

The folks who brought you the Walkman are readying what they hope will be the next big fad in personal entertainment: robots. Sony has proposed its freshly minted Open Robot (Open-R) architecture as an open platform for a market niche that does not yet exist.

"Sony wants to create a very new entertainment robot market," said Toshi T. Doi, president of Sony's D21 Laboratory, which pursues digital technologies for the coming century. "We have developed the Open-R architecture and want to invite many companies to join the entertainment robot arena based on the format."

Entertainment robots, as Sony defines them, are consumer products designed just for play. Sony researchers demonstrated robots scampering after a ball, kicking it, and exhibiting other behaviors sophisticated enough to give people the illusion they were playing with a puppy or a kitten. The little tykes walked, sat, stood up, lay down, and rolled over on their backs.

The prototype robot is about the size of a very small puppy -- roughly 3 pounds and 5-by-10-by-9 inches. It runs on a 64-bit MIPS reduced instruction set computer processor with 8 megabytes of dynamic RAM and a newly developed integrated circuit. This core system controls attached hardware modules such as head, legs, hands, and tail, each with motors and a control chip of its own.

A 180,000-pixel charge-coupled device sensor works as the robot's eye, and a microphone and speaker do duty as ear and voice. Application programs are implemented by way of PC cards.

Tomorrow's Toy
Although Sony has not yet made a marketing plan, Doi said the company is aiming to have some form of robot product out before the end of this century. "We have no idea how big the market will be," he said.

Built around Sony's proprietary Aperios real-time operating system, the Open-R architecture makes it possible to change a robot's body by exchanging hardware modules -- substituting a wheel for the back legs, for example. The central processing unit communicates with each module through the 12-MHz, 12-megabit-per-second Open-R bus, and makes an optimum setting based on the parameters stored in the module. Therefore, the modules support hot plug, sort of like an electronic Mr. Potato Head.

"There are various applications available in PC card form, such as wireless LAN. Open-R robots can make use of them as is," said Doi.

Sony developed a chip of about a half million gates that integrates a digital signal processor and graphics-processing engine for signal and IF processing. Sony does not yet have a practical plan of how it will license the architecture or offer the chip, according to Doi.

Sony will stage exhibition soccer games using the prototype robots at RoboCup '98, an academic conference on robot technology to be held in Paris July 4 to 8. Sony has provided robots to research groups at three universities -- Carnegie-Mellon in Pittsburgh; Osaka University in Japan; and to a university in Paris -- and the three teams are developing software. In the exhibition games, three robots on a single team will match with another group's robots independently, without any remote control.


CAREER CENTER
Ready to take that job and shove it?
SEARCH
Function:

Keyword(s):

State:
SPONSOR
RECENT JOB POSTINGS
CAREER NEWS
Go beyond Google and get vertical. These specialized search sites will help you find the business information you need -- fast.

Ari Balogh was named to the post of chief technology officer as the companys for a "realignment" of employees.

Advertisement


TechSearch for related stories



Specialty Resources

Featured Microsite


Microsites

Featured Topic

Additional Topics

Crush The Competition

TechWeb's FREE e-mail newsletters deliver the news you need to come out on top.

Techencyclopedia

Get definitions for more than 20,000 IT terms.

Techwebcasts

Editorial and vendor perspectives


Vendor Resources


Focal Points