Archive for the 'Hi tech' Category




Funny humping robot

Sunday 11 November 2007 @ 12:19 pm

Finally, a robot with a useful purpose! Meet Hector, the world’s first robotic porn star.

The song is: Mr. Bungle - “Golem II: Bionic Vapour Boy”

Golem II: the self-perfecting
Lie-rejecting
Human mind correcting

Totem of the living
Self-organized, wrought from the clay
Our king by night, our slave by the day

Giga-giga-gilgamesh

What do you know?
Watch the human life show
OK let’s go

O my double
He can pop your bubble
That means trouble

Stronger than a lion
Golem II: the bionic paper boy

Self-perfecting
World-inspecting
Lie-detecting

Our instructions
His induction
Big production

Golem II: the bionic puppet boy

Giga-gilgamesh
Gigagigagigagiga
Beast of burden

Spirit lifting
Master of shape-shifting
Seamless drifting

Shining spotlight
Screaming mobs and stage fright
You get it right

Building a new zion
Golem II: the bionic vapour boy

War-directing
Mind-inspecting
Man-correcting

Our instructions
His induction
Big production

Golem II: the bionic vapour boy

Popularity: 29%



Crazy Japanese Hip-hoppers

Wednesday 22 August 2007 @ 6:02 pm

They’re crazy people, but we love them!

Official definitions and classifications of robots
Countries have different definitions of what it means to be a robot.
The Robotics Institute of America (RIA) officially recognizes four classes of robot:
A: Handling devices with manual control
B: Automated handling devices with predetermined cycles
C: Programmable, servo-controlled robots with continuous of point-to-point trajectories
D: Capable of Type C specifications, and also acquires information from the environment for intelligent motion
In contrast, the Japanese Industrial Robot Association (JIRA) recognizes as many as six classes:
1: Manual - Handling Devices actuated by an operator
2: Fixed Sequence Robot
3: Variable-Sequence Robot with easily modified sequence of control
4: Playback Robot, which can record a motion for later playback
5: Numerical Control Robots with a movement program to teach it tasks manually
6: Intelligent robot: that can understand its environment and able to complete the task despite changes in the operation conditions
Wikipedia

Popularity: 17%



The Incredible Human Slinky

Friday 17 August 2007 @ 10:16 am

To the last moment I guessed - what the hell is this?
Funny thing/guy ;)

Slinky History
In the 1940s, Richard James, a US $50-a-week marine engineer stationed at the Cramp shipyards in Philadelphia, observed a torsion spring fall off a table and roll around on the deck (a torsion spring has no compression or tension). He told his wife: “I think there could be a toy in this.” With a US$500 loan, the couple ran tests, experimented with materials, and produced four hundred units of the toy. Betty James did some dictionary searching and came up with the name “Slinky”.
In November 1945, Richard and Betty James, through an arrangement with Gimbels in Philadelphia, were granted permission to set up an inclined plane in the toy department and demonstrate the spring’s battery-less “walking” abilities. The James’ business grew rapidly. In 1948 they built a factory for twenty employees in suburban Philadelphia, and a decade later, headquarters were set up in Hollidaysburg, Pennsylvania, where the factory remained for thirty years. As the company expanded, so did the product line. New Slinky toys, including Slinky Jr. and the Slinky Dog, were developed while non-coiled toys such as building kits were added to the inventory. However, Slinky has remained the core product of James Industries.
Commercials for the Slinky featured the memorable jingle: “It’s Slinky, it’s Slinky, for fun it’s a wonderful toy. It’s Slinky, it’s Slinky, it’s fun for a girl and a boy.
During the Vietnam War, Slinkys were also used as mobile radio transmitters.
Wikipedia

Popularity: 16%




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