Hemlock Public Schools opens new STEM and robotics center – MLive.com

SAGINAW COUNTY, MI - Hemlock Public School District officially celebrated the opening of its Lockwood STEM Center, a new facility that will play home to First Robotics teams from Saginaw Countys rural school districts.

The facility includes a regulation-sized area for robotics competitions, a machining lab, storage space and more opportunities available to students from the Merill, Swan Valley, St. Charles, Freeland and Hemlock school districts.

Hemlock broke ground on the 60-by 80-foot facility in May 2020 and finished most of the construction in late September. Hemlock Semiconductor Operations donated $100,000 to fund the space and also matched an additional $25,000 to encourage contributions by other local businesses and stakeholders.

Members of Hemlocks Gray Matter robotics team performed a drone flyover to cap off the national anthem, beginning a ribbon-cutting ceremony that officially opened the facility.

This STEM center is our baby, said Hemlock Public School District Superintendent Don Killingbeck. This is paramount for helping the next generation be ready for the opportunities as they come to them.

In addition to Killingbeck and Tom Lockwood, the districts technology director and namesake of the facility, State Rep. Rodney Wakeman, R-Saginaw Township, and Hemlock Semiconductor Vice President of Manufacturing Andy Ault made remarks at the ribbon-cutting. Attendees were then invited inside to view the new space.

At HSC, we recognize that these students are critical to our future workforce, Ault said. Our students deserve access to learning materials and programs that will secure a bright future for them.

When Hemlock High School senior Matthew Schaffner got into robotics in middle school, he started in a tiny room above the school library. Now, piloting a large bot on the competition field in the new facility, he said having the Lockwood Center is a blessing. He plans to attend Michigan State University in the fall and study mechanical engineering.

Its just a wonderful place to be part of a community, Schaffner said. I never knew that school could be so fun and still give you so much opportunity.

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Hemlock Public Schools opens new STEM and robotics center - MLive.com

Craig Malloy to Join Vecna Robotics as Chief Executive Officer – Business Wire

WALTHAM, Mass.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Vecna Robotics, the autonomous mobile robot (AMR) and workflow orchestration company, today announced the appointment of Craig Malloy to Chief Executive Officer. In his role, Malloy will focus on the organizational and operational needs to scale and meet the growing demand for the companys world-class robotic platforms and orchestration software. Founder Daniel Theobald will resume his role as Chief Innovation Officer to further advance Vecna Robotics market-leading technology. Theobald will also continue to serve as the Executive Chairman of the Board.

Malloy brings 25 years of experience in founding, scaling and leading global technology companies in venture capital, publicly traded and private equity environments, including Lifesize, Bloomfire and ViaVideo. Before entering the corporate world, he served as a Lieutenant, Surface Warfare Officer and Nuclear Weapons Officer in the United States Navy. Malloy holds a bachelors degree from the United States Naval Academy and a Masters of Business Administration from the University of California, Los Angeles Anderson School of Management.

In addition to delivering world-class products that make customers lives easier, Vecna Robotics has always put a premium on employing good people who are committed to making the world a better place. I couldnt think of anyone more suited to continue to execute this vision and lead this talented team than Craig, said Theobald. Craig has an impressive track record in scaling businesses across the globe, and his leadership will be integral to Vecna Robotics next stage of growth.

Daniel is unequivocally one of the worlds foremost roboticists and automation experts. At his request, we ran a thoughtful process to find a similarly exceptional CEO to lead Vecna Robotics through the next phases of growth, said Trevor Zimmerman, co-founder and managing partner of Blackhorn Ventures, lead investor for Vecna Robotics Series B fundraising round. Were delighted to have found that leader. Craig and Daniel are already proving to be a formidable combination, driving value for our customers and shareholders.

The chief executive appointment comes after a momentous year for the company. In March, Vecna Robotics was named to Fast Companys prestigious list of the Worlds Most Innovative Companies for 2021, ranking fourth in the logistics category. Additionally, the company recently partnered with other robotics organizations to publish the worlds first autonomous mobile robot interoperability standards, which enable robots from different vendors to speak the same language and work together cooperatively. The companys success has continued into 2021, having more than doubled its customer base in the last six months.

Its an incredibly exciting time to serve the robotics and automation market. Now, more than ever, materials handling companies require solutions that deliver greater flexibility and resilience to survive and compete in a rapidly changing global market, said Malloy. I have been building technology companies for a long time, and I couldnt be more impressed with the technology, talent, customer portfolio, and culture of innovation that Daniel and his team have built. I am thrilled to step into this role on such a solid foundation as we continue to scale Vecna Robotics to new heights.

To learn more about Vecna Robotics, visit https://www.vecnarobotics.com/.

About Vecna Robotics

Vecna Robotics is the autonomous mobile robot (AMR) and workflow orchestration company that helps distribution, warehousing, and manufacturing organizations streamline their materials handling and logistics operations. Pivotal, the companys proprietary orchestration engine, integrates with existing warehouse management systems for a coordinated approach that maximizes throughput, operational efficiency, and human and robot collaboration. Vecna Robotics robots are backed with 24/7 US-based live support and proactive monitoring for an industry-leading 99%+ uptime. For more information, visit http://www.vecnarobotics.com. Follow us on Twitter and LinkedIn.

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Craig Malloy to Join Vecna Robotics as Chief Executive Officer - Business Wire

Oakland University ‘s IGVC fuels the inspiration behind autonomous robotics teams – The Oakland Press

Its competitions like the Intelligent Ground Vehicle competitionat Oakland University that drive college and university autonomous robotics teams to excel.

We have seven different competitions, said Andrew Strazds, a senior from Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University in Daytona, Florida, during Mondays finals taking place in a parking lot at the south end of the campus.

This is the only one that wasnt cancelled because of COVID-19. he added, after doing a demonstration with the robot he and his team had built.

Dark clouds had moved in and the rain sent most of the other teams scrambling for cover. Being from Florida, where rain is common, Strazds team went the extra mile to ensure that their robot could withstand the wind and rain.

In fact, they named their robot, RAIN, which is also the acronym for Robot for Advanced Intelligent Navigation.

This addition alone earned them points in the competition.

They are one of the few schools that did a good job of weatherproofing, said Bernie Theisen, who was among the judges at the annual event that challenges engineering students to design autonomous vehicles and compete in a variety of unmanned mobility competitions including Auto-Nav, in which vehicles complete an outdoor course in full autonomous mode while negotiating obstacles.

It demonstrates what weve learned, said Strazds. Its really nice to see everything working, or not.

Im tweaking ours for a better performance, said Lloyd Brombach, a computer science student at Wayne State University who was joined by his teams mentor, Abhilash Pandya. Vernoica, as the robot was named needed to go faster, so Brombach had to make adjustments to the computer program.

Jerry Lane who was instrumental in creating the event for students said the teams work all year on the vehicles before attending the competitions.

They design it. They develop it, build it, test it, fix it, and then compete, he said.

Since its start more than 15-years-ago, IGVC has been highly praised by participating faculty advisors as an excellent multidisciplinary design experience for student teams. Not only do they get to see their vehicles in action, but also get the opportunity to meet other students with similar interests. Some schools also extend senior design course credits for student participation.

Among the guests in attendance for the competition was Michael Cadieux, director of the U.S. Army Combat Capabilities Development Command (DEVCOM) Ground Vehicle Systems Center (formerly U.S. Army TARDEC) at the Detroit Arsenal in Warren. Cadieux brought his children out to see robotics in action.

Robotics is a lot cooler when you see it in person, said Cadieuxs 12-year-old son.

To view the list of winners or find out more about the competition visit igvc.org/teams.htm

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Oakland University 's IGVC fuels the inspiration behind autonomous robotics teams - The Oakland Press

Eanes ISD to tackle summer bond projects, wrap up work on robotic and wrestling spaces – Community Impact Newspaper

Eanes ISD is scheduled to complete its new aquatics facility by the end of December. (Rendering courtesy Eanes ISD)

The summer break traditionally serves as a time for Eanes ISD to tackle campus projects and renovations, and this year is no exception, according to EISD Chief Operations Officer Jeremy Trimble.

We have a lot going on this summer, Trimble told trustees during a June 8 board meeting.

Among the scheduled projects are several safety upgrades, primarily at Hill Country Middle School and West Ridge Middle School, which will see fire alarm replacements and upgrades to the public address system. Other safety projects include work on an emergency notification system and the installation of perimeter fencing at multiple campuses.

All summer projects are funded through the districts $80 million 2019 bond program, for which $8 million was dedicated to safety and security projects.

EISD will also continue work on a $5 million districtwide initiative to retrofit buildings with motion-sensor LED lights. Trimble said these upgrades will present cost savings through a rebate provided by EISDs utility provider.

Technology upgrades are a large district initiative this summer, according to Trimble. Classroom Smart Boards, which are interactive whiteboards, will be replaced by mounted flat-panel computers.

Among the most highly anticipated projects are the district's three instructional and extracurricular facility projects.

Students will soon have access to a new $10.3 million aquatic center, a $2.3 million wrestling facility and a newly renovated $2.91 million robotics center.

Trimble said construction crews are making great progress on the robotics center, which should be completed by the end of July. While work on the wrestling project was slightly offset by the heavy rainfall experienced in March, Trimble said EISD has a goal to finish that space by the first day of the 2021-22 school year. Barring any changes, the aquatics facility will become available for students by the end of December.

Trimble also spoke to significant increases in construction costs both nationally and in the Austin area. Luckily, he said EISDs current projects will not be impacted by this trend.

The construction industry, both residential and nonresidential, has been really impacted by the pandemic but also the freeze that Texas had completely shut down the plants, Trimble said, citing information from the Associated General Contractors of America.

The district first broke ground on its extracurricular projects in September, and Trimble said construction crews have already obtained the necessary materials such as steel, which has seen a 63% increase in cost since March 2020.

Superintendent Tom Leonard said EISD noticed these cost increases in Austin prior to the COVID-19 pandemic and therefore pushed to begin their bond projects as soon as possible.

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Eanes ISD to tackle summer bond projects, wrap up work on robotic and wrestling spaces - Community Impact Newspaper

FIRST Wisconsin: New nonprofit will focus on science, technology and building robots – Wisbusiness.com

MILWAUKEE Inspiring young Wisconsinites to learn about and possibly pursue careers in science and technology, including robotics, is the goal of a new nonprofit formed by a diverse group of leaders from industry and academia.

WisconsinFIRSTRobotics, Inc. will organize after school sessions and competitions for students 4-18 throughout Wisconsin. WisconsinFIRSTRobotics, Inc. is affiliated withFIRST(For Inspiration and Recognition of Science and Technology), a global nonprofit organization created to inspire young people to be the science and technology leaders of the future.

WisconsinFIRSTRobotics, Inc. will offer mentor-based programs that build science, engineering and technology skills.

The goal is to inspire innovation, and foster well-rounded capacities in young people, including self-confidence, communication and leadership, said Jeff Fenstermaker, chairman of WisconsinFIRSTRobotics, Inc. FIRSThas astrongrecordon STEM learning and skill-building and we are excited to bring those opportunities to Wisconsin.

Fenstermaker said thatFIRSThas a global support system of mentors, coaches, volunteers, alumni and sponsors that include over 200 Fortune 500 companies. He said young people will work in teams to conduct research, fundraise, design and build robots and then compete and celebrate at local, regional and international events.

The sequence ofFIRSTprograms begins with FIRST LEGO League and includes Discover (ages 4-6), Explore (ages 6-10) and Challenge (ages 9-14), followed by the FIRST Tech Challenge serving grades 7-12, and FIRST Robotics Competition, serving high school-aged youth (grades 9- 12).FIRSTestimates in 2019-2020, the programs reached over 679,000 young people worldwide.

The goal of WisconsinFIRSTRobotics, Inc. is to grow the presence ofFIRSTso that every student in the stateis provided an opportunity to participate in aFIRSTprogram through their schools, clubs, or youth organizations.

Populations underrepresented in STEM fields are a particular area of focus.

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FIRST Wisconsin: New nonprofit will focus on science, technology and building robots - Wisbusiness.com

Neurosurgery Surgical Robots Market: Rapid Increase in the Number of Robotic Surgery to Drive the Market – BioSpace

Neurosurgery is the procedure of diagnosis and treatment of neurological disorders, such as, Alzheimers disease, Parkinsons disease, strokes, aneurysms, degenerative diseases, and trauma to the spinal cord and brain.

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Neurosurgery surgical robots help surgeons in performing complex surgeries with more flexibility and precision. Robotic surgeries offer many advantages, such as, fewer complications in terms of pain and blood loss, lower risk of surgical site infection, quick recovery, and smaller scars. Neurosurgery surgical robots are mostly preferred in minimally invasive surgeries for better precision.

Mechanical arms and camera arms are the widely used robotic surgical systems. Compared to other types of minimally invasive surgeries, robotic surgery provides better view and more precision to the surgeons. The surgeon controls the system through a computer console placed in the operating room. The console has a camera that provides detailed 3D images of the operating site.

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The global neurosurgery surgical robots market is primarily driven by increase in incidence of neurological disorders, growth in geriatric population, and rise in the number of neurosurgery performed. Also, rapid increase in the number of robotic surgery, rise in minimally invasive surgeries, and increase in the purchasing power of hospitals are expected to boost the growth of the global neurosurgery surgical robots market during the analysis period.

Furthermore, rise in adoption of technologically advanced health care devices and advancement in health care are projected to boost the growth of the global neurosurgery surgical robots market in the next few years. Aging is associated with a large number of diseases and disorders. Majority of elderly people suffer from neurological disorders.

According to the Administration for Community Living, geriatric population (of 65 years or older) in the U.S. stood at 46.2 million in 2014. Therefore, increase in aging population is likely to drive the global neurosurgery surgical robots market during the forecast period. Furthermore, existing market players are deploying advanced techniques and strategies to develop novel processes for manufacturing of technologically enhanced neurosurgery surgical robots. This is anticipated to propel the demand for neurosurgery surgical robots for diagnosis of diseases during the forecast period. However, high cost of neurosurgery surgical robots and lack of skilled professions are expected to restrain the growth of the neurosurgery surgical robots market in the next few years.

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The global neurosurgery surgical robots market can be segmented based on component, end-user, and region. Based on component, the neurosurgery surgical robots market can be bifurcated into systems, accessories, and services. In terms of end-user, the market can be divided into hospitals and ambulatory surgical centers.

In terms of region, the global neurosurgery surgical robots market can be segmented into North America, Europe, Asia Pacific, Latin America, and Middle East & Africa. North America accounted for the leading share of the global market in 2017 owing to rapid progress in the health care industry as well as high adoption of advanced health care devices in the region.

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Increase in prevalence of neurological disorders and presence of a large number of manufacturers in the region are expected to boost the neurosurgery surgical robots market in North America during the forecast period. Asia Pacific and Latin America are likely to be highly lucrative markets for neurosurgery surgical robots in the near future. The neurosurgery surgical robots market in these regions is projected to grow rapidly during the forecast period, owing to large population base, increase in the number of hospitals, and rise in government investment for the advancement of health care in the regions.

Key players operating in the global neurosurgery surgical robots market include Auris Surgical Robotics, Inc, Smith & Nephew Plc., Stryker Corporation, Intuitive Surgical, Inc., Renishaw plc, KUKA AG, Mazor Robotics, Medtronic plc, THINK Surgical Inc., and Zimmer Biomet Holdings Inc.

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Neurosurgery Surgical Robots Market: Rapid Increase in the Number of Robotic Surgery to Drive the Market - BioSpace

McDonald’s automated drive-thru is just the latest sign of robots taking over fast-food – Yahoo Finance

Fast-food's biggest players are letting the robots right in through the front door as they seek out ways to overcome rising wages and worker shortages.

McDonald's CEO Chris Kempczinski disclosed at a recent Wall Street conference the company is testing automated voice ordering for its drive-thru. The tests are being conducted at about 10 locations in McDonald's backyard of Chicago, IL.

"We have over the last several years spent a lot of money that shows up in the G&A line, looking at better ways to automate the kitchen," Kempczinski said. "And this is could we do automated fryers, could you do automated grills. I mean let's push the envelope on how you can go with automation."

The Golden Arches isn't alone in welcoming the robots.

Here are four other big fast-food chains that are testing creative, tech-driven ways to get you that burger, taco, pizza or chicken sandwich even quicker.

The pizza giant said in April it struck a deal with self-driving delivery company Nuro. The deal saw the launch of autonomous pizza delivery (via the machine pictured above) in Houston. Select customers in the city who place an order on Domino's website can choose to have their pizza delivery by Nuro's R2 robot.

Domino's has been promoting its Nuro test aggressively in its latest round of TV advertising.

The robot is the first autonomous on-road delivery vehicle with a regulatory approval by the U.S. Department of Transportation, Domino's points out.

Looks like a quick easy way to get a pizza without having to interact with a delivery driver. Or maybe soon a burrito, too. Also in April, Chipotle disclosed it invested in Nuro.

Taco Bell opened a tech-forward new location in New York City's Times Square in late April. And this Taco Bell is built mostly for one thing only: Get your food super quickly and get back out into the party scene.

Take note of all the touch screens for food and drinks in the image above. There will likely be minimal interaction with an employee (as they are in the back making the food, not taking orders).

Story continues

The chicken sandwich maker is dabbling in autonomous delivery as well alongside Domino's and Chipotle.

Chick-fil-A is testing robot delivery in California via a new tie-up with robotics outfit Kiwibot, Restaurant Business reports. Three Chick-fil-A locations around Santa Monica are making available delivery with Kiwibot's four-wheeled semi-autonomous rovers (like those seen above).

An executive at Kiwibot told Restaurant Business a delivery would take 30 minutes and cost $1.99.

White Castle was among the first in the fast-food industry to begin testing robots in any interesting capacity, launching a robotic fry cook test at one location in July 2020 (see below) with Miso Robotics. The robot's name: Flippy.

In October 2020, White Castle expanded its partnership with Miso Robotics to 10 locations, Yahoo Finance sister publication TechCrunch reported.

Brian Sozzi is an editor-at-large and anchor at Yahoo Finance. Follow Sozzi on Twitter @BrianSozzi and on LinkedIn.

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McDonald's automated drive-thru is just the latest sign of robots taking over fast-food - Yahoo Finance

Mumbai innovator develops 3 robots to assist healthcare workers, patients amid COVID – The Tribune India

Mumbai, June 10

A Mumbai-based innovator Santosh Hulawale has developed three robots to assist healthcare workers and patients amid the ongoing pandemic.

Santosh, with the help of his eight-member team, has developed a Multiple Service Robot (MSR), a Service Humanoid Robot (SHR), and a Disaster Management robot (DMR).

According to the innovator, the robots have been developed completely in India.

Santosh claimed that the MSR can be custom pre-programmed for any kind of health facility.

If we want the robot to deliver a particular type of food or medicine to particular patients, we can feed the same in its program. In fact, the robot does not need human intervention, he said.

Regarding the SHR, he said, Basically, it is a humanoid robot, which can be used to give a more human-like experience to the patients. Apart from delivering food, water and medicines it can interact with patients not only vocally but also physically. The robot can dance, shake hands, give a high-five, wave goodbye and can help in entertaining the people in quarantine.

The DMR can carry a weight of up to 200 kgs.

It can also carry patients from ambulances to the hospitals or quarantine centres and back, and those with physical disabilities to the restroom and back, Santosh said.

Santosh has been working in the field of robotics for the last 20 years. I have designed 48 robots and have developed 18 such robots, he said. (ANI)

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Mumbai innovator develops 3 robots to assist healthcare workers, patients amid COVID - The Tribune India

Feedback invited on robotics centre in Neerabup – PerthNow

Plans for a robotics, drone and automated equipment testing facility in Neerabup are out for consultation.

The City of Wanneroo has invited feedback on DevelopmentWAs plans for the Australian Automation and Robotics Precinct in Neerabup industrial area until July 2.

The application seeks to use 51ha in the Meridian Park industrial estate off Flynn Drive for a research and development centre for industrial and mining equipment.

Last August, the State Government announced $20 million for the facility , which is expected to attract more industry to the area.

A report prepared by Taylor Burrell Barnett for DevelopmentWA said the site would be used for testing, research and development, and training in autonomous, remote operations and robotics.

The AARP is intended to be a world-class facility serving as a development and testing ground, it said.

It will provide opportunities for local industry and business sectors to test a range of technologies.

Existing and proposed industrial development in Meridian Park will ensure that, in future, the AARP can be supported by complementary industries.

In turn, the AARP could attract industry to the locality.

The report said earthworks at the site would finish this year, and testing ground operations in the first stage of project was due to start in 2022.

It said more permanent buildings and structures would be delivered as a second stage.

Future access to the site is proposed from Pederick Road and Greenwhich Parade extensions.

Visit wanneroo.wa.gov.au to make a submission.

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Feedback invited on robotics centre in Neerabup - PerthNow

MiRoCLOUD is a simple to use AI robotics creative coding home learning tool for all – Yahoo Finance

TipRanks

Lets talk about risk and the big picture. Its an appropriate time, as the big risk presented by the COVID-19 pandemic is finally receding thanks to the ongoing vaccination program. COVID is leaving behind an economy that was forced into shutdown one year ago while in the midst of a great expansion, boosted by the deregulation policies. While the new Biden Administration is busy reversing many Trump policies, at least for now the economy is rebounding. And this brings us to risk. A time of economic growth and rebound is a forgiving time to move toward risk investments, as general economic growth tends to lift everything. Two strategists from JPMorgan have recently chimed in, promoting the view that the markets fundamentals are still sound, and that small- to mid-cap sector is going to keep rising. First, on the general conditions, quant strategist Dubravko Lakos-Bujas wrote, Although the recent technical selloff and short squeeze is receiving a lot of attention, we believe the positive macro setup, improving fundamentals and COVID-19 outlook, strength of the US consumer, as well as the reflation theme remain the bigger forces at play. Not only should this drive further equity upside, but it remains favorable for continued rotation into economic reopening Building on this, Eduardo Lecubarr, chief of the Small/Mid-Cap Strategy team, sees opportunity for investors now, especially in the smaller value stocks. We stick to our view that 2021 will be a stockpickers paradise with big money-making opportunities if you are willing to go against the grain Many macro indicators did fall in January but SMid-Caps and equities in general continued to edge higher, Lecubarr noted. And if you are prone to look at high-risk, small- to mid-cap stocks, youll find yourself drawn to penny stocks. The risk involved with these plays scares off the faint hearted as very real problems like weak fundamentals or overwhelming headwinds could be masked by the low share prices. So, how should investors approach a potential penny stock investment? By taking a cue from the analyst community. These experts bring in-depth knowledge of the industries they cover and substantial experience to the table. Bearing this in mind, we used TipRanks database to find two compelling penny stocks, according to Wall Street analysts. Both tickers boast a Strong Buy consensus rating and could climb over 200% higher in the year ahead. CNS Pharmaceuticals (CNSP) We will start with CNS Pharmaceuticals, a biotechnology company with a focus on the treatment of glioblastomas, a class of aggressive tumors that attack the braid and spinal cord. These cancers, while rare, are almost always terminal, and CNS is working a new therapy designed to more effectively cross the blood-brain barrier to attack glioblastoma. Berubicin, CNSs flagship drug candidate, is an anthracycline, a potent class of chemotherapy drugs derived from the Streptomyces bacteria strains, and used in the treatment of a wide variety of cancers. Berubicin is the first drug in this class to show promise against glioblastoma cancers. The drug candidate has completed its Phase 1 clinical trial, in which 44% of patients showed a clinical response. This number included one patient who showed a Durable Complete Response, defined as a demonstrated lack of detectable cancer. Following the success of the Phase 1 study, CNS applied for, and received, FDA approval of its Investigational New Drug application. This gives the company the go-ahead to conduct a Phase 2 study on adult patients, an important next step in the development of the drug. CNS plans to start the mid-stage trial in 1Q21. Based on the potential of the companys asset in glioblastoma, and with its share price at $2.22, several analysts believe that now is the time to buy. Among the bulls is Brooklines 5-star analyst Kumaraguru Raja who takes a bullish stance on CNSP shares. Until now, the inability of anthracyclines to cross the blood brain barrier prevented its use for treatment of brain cancers. Berubicin is the first anthracycline to cross the blood-brain barrier in adults and access brain tumors Berubicin has promising clinical data in a Phase 1 trial in recurrent glioblastoma (rGBM) and has Orphan drug designation for treatment of malignant gliomas from the FDA. We model approval of Berubicin for treatment of recurrent glioblastoma in 2025 based on the Phase 2 data with 55% probability of success for approval. We model peak sales of $533 million in 2032, Raja opined. CNS pipeline also includes WP1244 (novel DNA binding agent) that is 500x more potent than daunorubicin in inhibiting tumor cell proliferation is expected to enter the clinic in 2021 In vivo testing in orthotopic models of brain cancer showed high uptake of WP1244 by brain and subsequent antitumor activity, the analyst added. To this end, Raja rates CNSP a Buy, and his $10 price target implies room for a stunning 350% upside potential in the next 12 months. (To watch Rajas track record, click here) What does the rest of the Street have to say? 3 Buys and 1 Hold add up to a Strong Buy consensus rating. Given the $8.33 average price target, shares could climb ~275% in the year ahead. (See CNSP stock analysis on TipRanks) aTyr Pharma (LIFE) The next stock were looking at, aTyr Pharma, has a focus on inflammatory disease. Its leading drug candidate, ATYR1923, is a Neuropilin-2 (NRP2) agonist, working through the receptor proteins expressed by the NRP2 gene. These pathways are important for cardiovascular development and disease, and play a role in the inflammatory lung disease pulmonary sarcoidosis. In December, the company reported that the drug candidate had completed enrollment of 36 patients in a Phase 1b/2a clinical trial, testing the drug in the treatment of pulmonary sarcoidosis. Results of the current study are expected in 3Q21, and will inform further trials of ATYR1923, including against other forms of inflammatory lung disease. On a more immediate note, in early January the company announced top-line results of another Phase 2 clinical involving ATRY1923 this time in the treatment of patients hospitalized with severe respiratory complications from COVID-19. The results were positive, showing that a single dose of ATYR1923 (at 3 mg/kg) resulted in a 5.5-day median recovery time. Overall, of the patients dosed in this manner, 83% saw recovery in less than one week. Covering LIFE for Roth Capital, 5-star analyst Zegbeh Jallah noted, We like the risk profile here, with two shots on goal, and updated data details from the COVID study is expected in the coming months. Also announced recently, is that data from aTyr's Pulmonary Sarcoidosis program, will be reported in 3Q21 the success of either of these studies could result in a doubling or more of the market cap as these opportunities appear to barely be accounted for by investors. In line with his optimistic approach, Jallah gives LIFE shares a Buy rating and his $15 price target suggests an impressive 277% potential upside for the coming year. (To watch Jallahs track record, click here) Other analysts are on the same page. With 2 additional Buy ratings, the word on the Street is that LIFE is a Strong Buy. On top of this, the average price target is $13.33, suggesting robust growth of ~236% from the current price of $3.97. (See LIFE stock analysis on TipRanks) To find good ideas for penny stocks trading at attractive valuations, visit TipRanks Best Stocks to Buy, a newly launched tool that unites all of TipRanks equity insights. Disclaimer: The opinions expressed in this article are solely those of the featured analysts. The content is intended to be used for informational purposes only. It is very important to do your own analysis before making any investment.

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MiRoCLOUD is a simple to use AI robotics creative coding home learning tool for all - Yahoo Finance

Universal Robots Safety Expert Recognized in 20 Exceptional Women in Robotics and Automation List by SME – Yahoo Finance

Roberta Nelson Shea, Universal Robots Global Technical Compliance Officer, is celebrated today by SME, the professional association committed to advancing manufacturing. SME is recognizing 20 successful female leaders working to broaden the use of robotics and automation in the smart manufacturing market globally. Nelson Shea made the list based on a lifelong career furthering the belief that productivity and robotics safety can be combined.

The international group of remarkable women on SMEs list published today represent a comprehensive cross section of technologies in robotics and automation. The list was developed by U.S.-based Smart Manufacturing magazine published by SME in consultation with several leaders across the robotics and automation industries.

This press release features multimedia. View the full release here: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20210204005733/en/

Roberta Nelson Shea joined Universal Robots as Global Technical Compliance Officer in 2016. She is recognized as a global authority on robotic safety standards and has long blazed the trail for women in a traditionally male-dominated industry. (Photo: Business Wire)

The list highlights the work of Roberta Nelson Shea, who joined Universal Robots (UR) as the companys Global Technical Compliance Officer (GTCO) in 2016. She has long blazed the trail for women in a traditionally male-dominated industry; Nelson Shea was the first woman to serve on the Board of Directors of Robotic Industries Association (RIA) where she also participates in mentoring diversity efforts to get women more involved and recognized.

"From an engineering and management standpoint, women were and continue to be in the minority in the robotics industry. Fortunately, we are starting to see this slowly changing," she says. "Since joining UR, I see more female engineers in software development, coding and user interface than I saw before."

According to Robert Willig, executive director and CEO of SME, the industry still has miles to go in balancing diversity in manufacturing. "Those with the knowledge, creativity and drive to raise the level of technology and innovation can achieve success," he says. "This group of women has not only the vision to create new products and in some cases even new product categories they also have the technological background and the business acumen to bring them to market and a willingness to teach others the processes necessary to make the next generations successful in our industry."

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Nelson Shea chaired the U.S. National Robot Safety Committee for 23 years, spent 40+ years within manufacturing automation, and is recognized as a global authority on robotic safety standards most recently as Convenor of the ISO working group for industrial robotic safety (ISO/TC 299 WG3).

Collaborative robots or cobots remain the fastest growing segment of industrial automation, projected to grow at a Compound Annual Growth Rate (CAGR) of 30.37% during 20202025. UR leads the cobot market, having recently celebrated the sale of its 50,000th cobot. The emergence of robots that work alongside human workers and their importance in advanced manufacturing has brought robotics safety into the spotlight, says Nelson Shea:

"Im deeply honored to receive this recognition from SME. Robotics safety might be regarded as sort of the ugly stepchild in the industrial automation industry. It was not as sexy or jazzy as artificial intelligence, neural networks and other developing technologies within robotics," she says. "UR changed this. When you have humans and robots working within the same space instead of separated as was the case with traditional industrial robot applications safety becomes much more complex and the nuances are very different. Safety now might mean that the robot slows or changes position compared to simply stopping. My overall mission is to demystify robotic safety and make sure the deployment barriers are broken down. I am an advocate of global harmonization of safety requirements to reduce costs of designs, manufacturing, and compliance."

At UR, Nelson Shea works closely with R&D colleagues in the safety aspects of new UR products and use scenarios. She also fields questions from customers wondering if UR cobots can be used in specific applications in accordance with the robotics safety standards. "I really enjoy working at UR, the caliber of their engineers is superlative. Its a very innovative environment where were constantly pushing the envelope to provide a better and easier-to-use robot."

Nelson Shea was previously honored by the American Society of Safety Professionals as being one of the top 100 Women in Safety over the past 100 years. "I deeply believe that automation can be done in a safe way that works well for the people interfacing with the equipment while having high productivity," she says. "Having a strong robot safety standard has contributed to the success of the industrial robotics market," she concludes citing a favorite quote from John Lizzi, executive director of robotics at GE Global Research: "We see robots, and specifically industrial robotics, as moving through three phases: robots as tools to robots as partners and, ultimately, to robots that sustain the things we care about."

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Download photos of Roberta Nelson Shea here.

About Universal Robots

Universal Robots (UR) was founded in 2005 to make robot technology accessible to all by developing small, user-friendly, reasonably priced, flexible collaborative robots (cobots) that can be safe to work side by side with people. Since the first cobot was launched in 2008, the company has experienced considerable growth with the user-friendly cobot now sold worldwide. The company, which is a part of Teradyne Inc., is headquartered in Odense, Denmark, and has regional offices in the United States, Germany, France, Spain, Italy, UK, Czech Republic, Poland, Hungary, Romania, Russia, Turkey, China, India, Singapore, Japan, South Korea, Taiwan and Mexico. For more information, please visit http://www.universal-robots.com.

View source version on businesswire.com: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20210204005733/en/

Contacts

Company contact: Joe CampbellSenior Manager, Strategic Marketing & Applications Developmentjoca@universal-robots.com 1-844-GO-COBOT

Media contact: Mette McCallMcCall Mediamette@mccallmedia.net +1-415-800-3517

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Universal Robots Safety Expert Recognized in 20 Exceptional Women in Robotics and Automation List by SME - Yahoo Finance

WSU partners with Netherlands, Washington growers to improve orchard robotics, automation | WSU Insider | Washington State University – WSU News

In development at WSU's Center for Precision & Automated Agricultural Systems, robotic pruners, pickers, and other high-tech automated tools are among objectives of the newly announced international collaboration.

By Seth TruscottCollege of Agricultural, Human, and Natural Resource Sciences

Washington State University scientists are joining forces with researchers, fruit growers, and technology companies in the Netherlands and Washington State to solve major tree fruit challenges through orchard automation and robotics.

On Feb. 3, 2021, Andr-Denis Wright, dean of WSUs College of Agricultural, Human, and Natural Resource Sciences, joined representatives from the Washington Tree Fruit Research Commission, Washington State Department of Agriculture, Netherlands Ministry of Agriculture, Nature and Food Quality, Wageningen University & Research, and other partners in a virtual signing of the Fruit Orchard of the Future Collaboration Agreement.

The agreement helps establish a public-private consortium speeding new tree fruit technologies using an industry-developed concept called Next Fruit 4.0. Its part of a broader AgFoodTech collaboration between the Netherlands, California, and Washington State, which aims to get innovations to market faster and meet high-level goals in health, sustainability, and prosperity.

Automation and robotics could help tree fruit growers in the U.S. and the Netherlands address the challenges from an increasingly hard-to-find orchard labor force, as well as greater demand for sustainability, environmental health, and food safety.

Our College is proud and excited to partner with Washington tree fruit growers and our counterparts in the Netherlands in bringing new technologies to fruition, Wright said. Globally, producers face many of the same hurdles. The practical solutions being developed through this international coalition hold promise for more robust, healthy, and efficient industries in both countries.

Technology implementation into orchards has to accelerate to enable our states tree fruit industry to remain viable and prosper into the next decade, said Ines Hanrahan, Washington Tree Fruit Research Commission executive director.

We view international public-private partnerships, such as the Orchard of the Future collaboration, as essential building blocks to successfully develop orchards for the future, added Commission Chair Jim Doornink.

Additional partners to the agreement include the Dutch Fruit Growers Association, Dutch technological association FME, Oregon State University, and more than a dozen Dutch and U.S. companies and organizations.

The Fruit Orchard of the Future collaboration aims to connect universities in both nations for joint programs, create a network of local field labs and testing grounds, set up exchanges for education and research, connect companies and growers, and build access to funding.

Participating scientists will develop prototypes including a robot for pruning and harvesting pears, a precision sprayer for fruit crops, sensors and algorithms to collect data on apples and pears, and decision models for apples and pears based on collected data and expert knowledge.

The project draws on the knowledge and resources of WSU Extension, WSUs Tree Fruit Research & Extension Center (TFREC) at Wenatchee Wash., the Irrigated Agriculture Research and Extension Center (IAREC) and Center for Precision & Automated Agricultural Systems (CPAAS) at Prosser, Wash., and WSUs AgWeather Network.

WSU Associate Professor Manoj Karkee, a Prosser-based specialist in field robotics and automation, said the partnership will help build expertise and knowledge from a variety of perspectives, while making the team of scientists more competitive for U.S. and European research funding.

A range of geographic and environmental variations provided by the collaboration will also help the team maximize experimental window for specific crops and cropping systems, Karkee said. Such a wider infrastructure helps ensure that the tools, technologies and systems we develop will be versatile, reliable, and practically adoptable.

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WSU partners with Netherlands, Washington growers to improve orchard robotics, automation | WSU Insider | Washington State University - WSU News

Twenty women making their mark in robotics & automation – Advanced Manufacturing

One woman set up the Australian Centre for Robotic Visionthe worlds first such centerand then led efforts to create Australias first Robotics Roadmap. One co-founded a robot vacuum cleaner company and changed housework forever. Another, in Stockholm, is working with the United Nations in disease and natural disaster response. Yet another is helping close the skills gap in manufacturing. If there is a common thread found in the women Smart Manufacturing identified as making their mark in robotics and automation, it is a heightened awareness of the impact humans have on the planet without trying, as well as the positive impact we can have with concerted efforts. They see robots and drones as Jills of all trades that serve as helpful companions in education, health care and aging, as eyes that open new worlds in ocean depths, as positive-impact devices and as what (when paired with other automation technology) can enable indoor farming and sustain the things we care about. The 20 women profiled here are helping create a better world. On behalf of humanity, the magazine thanks them for their hard work, sharp minds and true grit. Because community building is so important, we are thrilled to see that Amy Elliott, Gillan Hawkes, Elena Messina, Roberta Nelson Shea and Nicole Renee Williams are members of SME.

Le Matre was inspired to become an engineer while reading The Mysterious Island, a Jules Verne tale of American Civil War escapees who used teamwork, scientific knowledge, engineering and perseverance to build a colony from scratch on an uncharted Pacific island. This was an interesting metaphor of how people are able to change the world and make it a better place by engineering new devices, she said. Making the world better is a theme that permeates her thinking: I strongly believe that as engineers, we have a moral obligation to change the world to make it a better place. As humans, by design, we have a negative impact on earth. Therefore, it is our duty to build things that may balance that. I believe that by focusing on Green IT, clean data centers, energy-efficient components, we can create positive-impact devices and make the world a better place. Unfortunately, the first positive-impact device she built, a retail and hospitality robot named Heasy, lived a short life before a fire destroyed the business in October 2019.

Yakoob was inspired to pursue a career in robotics and automation by the Daleks, an extraterrestrial race from the British television program Dr. Who, and by R2-D2 and C-3PO from the Star Wars movies. Since then, my fascination and curiosity have always steered methrough high school and beyondin identifying and selecting subjects and courses that brought me closer and closer to understanding the workings of my childhood robotic heroes. Having been in the field, shes eager to dispel the thought that robotics and automation are fields only for men. The skills required to be successful can be attained irrespective of what gender you are, she said. Yakoob sees a role for herself and her robots beyond manufacturing, including health care, hospitality and farming: I would like to contribute toward applying robotics in assistive technologies, such as smart prosthetics, in improving the quality of life for the increasingly growing senior population and applying robotics and automation in enabling indoor farming, making healthy, affordable food available to all.

Nelson Shea lives by advice that is helpful to anyone: Get involved in trade organizations. For her, becoming involved in developing standards for robotics safety provided terrific networking opportunities. Clearly a joiner, Nelson Shea is a lifetime member of SMEand enjoys benefits like great conferences, networking, and speaking opportunities, she said. Partly through her efforts, Nelson Shea said the United States took the lead on robot safety. I was part of a team of people who deeply believedthat automation could be done in a safe way that would work well for the people interfacing with the equipment while having high productivity, she said. I believe that having a strong robot safety standard contributed to the success of the industrial robotics market. There is more to come, she said, citing a quote from John Lizzi, executive director of robotics at GE Global Research. We see robots, and specifically industrial robotics, as moving through three phases: robots as tools to robots as partners and, ultimately, to robots that sustain the things we care about.

Hawkes spotted the shift to people ordering online for home delivery early. She knew it would be a major growth area. That allowed her to leverage my path to go into supply chain management, but traditional tactics werent exciting, she said. The innovation was happening in robotics and automation. I wanted to be a part of that. Hawkes joined 6 River Systems (6RS) in 2018 and got to work improving its services and warehouse products. This made 6RS well positioned to support its customers when the pandemic hit. I am proud to have contributed to not only improving efficiencies but maintaining safety in our customers workplaces and keeping the supply chain moving, she said. Next, Hawkes would like to democratize robotics and automation in the marketplace. If 6RS could have touchpoints in large fulfillment centers, shopping centers and even in small local businesses, she said, I would consider that a massive achievement.

About eight years ago, Lau began looking for more impactful work. Inspired by a project at Willow Garage that enabled people with quadriplegia to program robots, Lau joined the robotics research lab for about a year and subsequently turned her professional attention to robots. She started a service robot company with several Willow alum and then established her own firm. While I had spent my life up to that point developing software, I realized that robotics had immense potential to improve peoples lives on a daily basis, she said. Unlike software, which is confined to a screen, robots live out in the human world. Today, Laus robots provide mistake-free, data-driven layout at construction sites that is derived from building information modeling software, improving productivity and the lives of workers, designers and engineers. Our next milestone is truly scaling up our robotics product to get it on every commercial construction site in the U.S., she said. Scaling a robotics product requires a different set of skills, and a different organization versus building the first prototype.

Wises entry into the robotics industry was serendipitous. She joined a team sponsored by Willow Garage founder Scott Hassan building an autonomous vehicle for the DARPA Urban Challenge in 2007. After the vehicle did an autonomous lap around the parking lot of the robotics R&D firm, Hassan soon offered her a job. That kind of real-world demonstration echoes in Wises career accomplishment: building autonomous mobile robots at her company, Fetch Robotics, that function in factories and high-volume distribution centers. In robotics, you can do almost anything one time in a lab and make a video of it, she said. The real challenge is making it work 24/7, with a 99.99 percent reliability rate. Thats what customers want, and thats really hard to do. Her advice to the next generation of female roboticists is to learn to program and join a startup. Women have very difficult career paths in front of them, and they need to put themselves in environments where they have an opportunity to excel outside of regular corporate structures, she said.

Masciantonios work focuses on closing the skills gap in manufacturing. Using ARM-determined competency building blocks, skills profiles and career pathways, she is working to create a nationwide system that matches the competencies and roles required by manufacturers to the education programs and career pathways of the workforce. With ARMs system, students can determine where their strengths are and which capabilities they need to acquire for a successful career in manufacturing. The next step, to be delivered later this year, is to include capabilities to test and certify workers in robotic career pathways. We will create mechanisms for creatively observing and testing their mastery of the competency building blocks, according to ARMs Industry 4.0 Competency Framework, she said. This will facilitate matching between the job seeker and employer. It feels great knowing that the work we accomplish each day helps to strengthen the U.S. economy, serve our warfighters and bring our national manufacturing capabilities to higher levels of maturity, she said.

Caron has worked and studied in French, English and Czech. But impossible to automate doesnt seem to be in her lexicon. In fact, her teams most recent accomplishment was a breakthrough in inspection and removing tedious tasks that others thought were impossible to automate. That recent achievement may help in her teams goal of having all GE Aviation sites think of automation and robotics whenever they introduce a new part or process. That would accelerate their adoption and help maximize their potential impact. We are involved in enabling the sites to reliably and efficiently build and maintain engine components using the latest technology, and we are opening up new possibilities for engineering to refine their designs, she said. Having the sentiment that we are contributing to the advancement of the technology that has an impact on so many people is very rewarding. Looking ahead, she has great hope for AI. It will solve complex issues that are preventing automation and robotics from being suited for the challenges, she said.

Moneza is so fascinated by machines that she finds her thrills by scrutinizing the workings of her ride at Universal Studios rather than passively enjoying it. I try to look through the darkness and see what type of robot they are using and try to understand the rail and the projection systems that make the ride exciting, she said. It genuinely interests me, and I like seeing how things work. Is it any wonder, then, that she sees new opportunities for automation in the aerospace industry for repetitive tasks like drilling, painting, composite fabrication and ultrasonic inspection? She also wants to see more automation in data collection and interpretation. This will allow us to make informed decisions in a timely manner and make changes to design and processes where it is necessary, she said. Even with her fervor for automation, she sees a downside in the workers left behind when machines become automated. This is something that needs to be addressed so we can continue to compete and be at the cutting edge of manufacturing technology, she said.

As a girl, Keay did not envision a career in techeven though her family acquired their neighborhoods first PC. Now, she wants to see a thriving and sustainable robotics industry in Australia. This means not only supporting creators of robotics and robotics-related technologies but also supporting government and corporates to adopt robotics, she said. Robotics is part of the broader AI and technology sector and cannot succeed unless we have support for both AI and the tech sector more broadly. Six years ago, she set up the Australian Centre for Robotic Vision, the worlds first such center. She led efforts to create Australias first Robotics Roadmap in 2018 and last year established a firm to represent the industry sector. In 2019, she made it her mission to bring the Grace Hopper Celebration of Women in Computing to Australia as the Hopper Down Under. She now leads her Australian states AI hub.

Laudas career path demonstrates the value of internships. In high school, her math teacher encouraged her to become an engineer. But it wasnt until she apprenticed for a diesel engine maker that the assembly line and CNC machines sparked her interest. I went back to college a few years later. I was eager to become a manufacturing engineer, she said. During her career at agriculture machinery and equipment maker AGCO, she led a small team of engineers that created a tool to allow manufacturing engineers at plants in the U.S., Italy and Brazil to collaborate remotely in creating a Manufacturing Bill of Materials, the Bill of Process and the electronic work instructions for a new harvesting combine. Many steps within that tool are fully automated, and the concept reduced the planning efforts at the sites up to 80 percent, she said. The next big goal is to generate a true digital twin of our factories, by merging the virtual with the real operations, and collect smart data that can instantly be turned into higher productivity, safety and quality, she said.

When Greiner saw the original Star Wars movie in 1977, she was immediately smitten. The object of her interest was not Luke Skywalker or Han Solo; It was R2-D2. The girl who drew her inspiration from one of director George Lucas leading actor bots would grow up to be a pioneer in developing robots that can take over mundane or dangerous tasks from humans. She is now the CEO of a weed-controlling, solar-powered robot startup. She previously co-founded iRobot and co-designed its Roomba robotic vacuum cleaner. Roomba has captured about 20 percent of the North American vacuum market. Other Greiner accomplishmentsthe Packbot military robot and the persistent aerial reconnaissance and communications tethered drone systemhave been credited with saving the lives of soldiers and civilians alike. Greiner predicts we will see robots taking over home maintenance jobs, such as lawn mowing, leaf collecting and snow removal. I see continued adoption of robots, driving the virtuous cycle of invention, development and manufacture, she said.

Samsioe sees untapped potential in drones to help solve real-life challenges in natural disasters, disease outbreaks and other situations. For example, GLOBHEs network of crowddroning pilots provide aerial images that, once analyzed, help track mosquito-breeding sites in Malawi for malaria-mitigation efforts. An advanced unmanned aerial vehicle pilot with a masters degree in international disaster management, Samsioe cites as her companys most significant accomplishments its work with the United Nations in disease and natural disaster response and a recently signed contract with a global telecom company. The telecom-related work is to inspect communication towers, helping to keep communities connected as a result. Clearly owning her own success, she said, While many wait for the future to happen, I tend to create the future and get partners and clients onboard the journey. Her frustration is with progress that happens slowly. For example, shes pushing and waiting for beyond visual line of sight (BVLOS) drone flights to become legal at scale so drones truly can provide additional value for societies.

As an If/Then Ambassador for the American Association for the Advancement of Science, Elliott is featured in original entertainment and media content. She was overall runner-up in The Big Brain Theorys one-season run on the Discovery Channel. She was an on-camera science expert for the Science Channels Outrageous Acts of Science. And she was featured in a 2012 Wired article about a 3D-printing vending machine she and her team designed and configured while studying at Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University. The machine, DreamVendor, included four MakerBot Thing-o-Matic printers that printed users uploaded design files. Of course, it being a first-generation design, there were several kinks in the system, Elliott said. However, it was a really fun project, and it proved the concept. She has since earned her doctorate in mechanical engineering and wants to bring automation and robotics to additive manufacturing. Even though the machines can build amazing things, there is still quite a lot of manual labor required after the part is built, she said.

For Ciprian, working in robotics means solving an evolving, thought-provoking engineering problem. It is always exciting because youre constantly doing something new, she said. The field is very dynamic, which makes it fun. It is also productive: She led the electrical design of an automated guided vehicle/industrial robot, which took a year from start to finish. Having fun at work is a bonus for her on top of being able to work in such a multidisciplinary field. For example, the power architecture is tightly involved with the mechanical loads of the robot, she said. Also, losses, emissions, temperature profiles and communication robustness are all interrelated. Moreover, it is a field where I can see our contributions to humankind happening in real time. The future of industry will include fleets of robots working collaboratively with humans, she believes, with AI playing a more involved role in tasking. Her advice to other female engineers is to be generous: Socialize your achievements and those of your female colleagues, she said.

Messina is rooted in measurement science and its role in driving research and engineeringand from there her vision for the future of robotics takes off. She wants to see the paradigm of robots as partners and assistants to humans extended and expanded versus seeing them as worker replacements. For this to happen, the world needs more intuitive interaction mechanisms for programming, coordination and communicating status, as well as greater intelligence and dexterity on the part of robots. Robots will no longer need to be taught every move, but rather can be instructed at a high level, similar to how humans who collaborate together agree on a joint task, she said. Similarly, robots will be able to execute their tasks either independently, able to detect changes or failures and recover from them on their own, or, if working jointly with humans, able to safely perform the tasks through observing the humans status, understanding verbal and non-verbal cues. The ultimate result will be the democratization of the use of robotics among enterprises, she said.

When she had two years left to finish her masters in engineering and technology management, Spiten began taking extra courses in entrepreneurship and robotics to figure out where she was headed career-wise. I found the [masters degree] curriculum to have too little hands-on training, she said. How would I know what to specialize in without trying out, and applying theory onto, real problems? She enrolled in a program that included an internship with a startup making underwater drone kits. She wrote her thesis on environmental ocean monitoring with the use of drones, and her career took shape. I started Blueye Robotics with three co-founders, to make the ocean available in new waysand to everyonedriven by the belief that you only take care of what you know and care about, she said. She is now advising the World Wildlife Fund on ocean plastics. As Sir David Attenborough once told me, she said, its not about whether we will survive, but what kind of world we will survive in.

Having earned a masters in manufacturing engineering, Williams has a wealth of book knowledge. But since at least her undergrad years, her education also included practical experience. It was some of that experience, specifically programming a robot in V++ to perform a simple shape-sorting task, that got Williams her first job at Boeing and ignited her passion for working with robotic and automation systems. My first job was programming and supporting a gantry robot doing automated fiber placement that used an Adept [Controls] control, she said. This was very exciting. Although her work focuses on controlling robots, shes also focused on people, including colleagues and the next generation of techies. She has participated in many leadership programs at Boeing, including the Employee Mentoring and Robotics Club. Outside of work, shes been a FIRST Robotics Competition volunteer for 10 years. Her message to girls in FIRST is to get involved early, stay active and embrace every learning opportunity. Its the hardest fun youll ever have, she said.

Breazeal once dreamed of being an astronaut. But she instead chose academia where she could continue to push the envelope in robotics and AI research. Her work is about autonomous robots as a ubiquitous, human-centered technology. I want to contribute the reality of a robot in every home that delivers meaningful value and delight to families, she said. Her biggest accomplishment to date is Jibo, the first social robot featured on the cover of Time. Jibo has since been acquired by another firm. There is tremendous opportunity for social robots as personalized, helpful companions in education, healthcare, aging and wellness. These are areas where emotional engagement, humanized social support and decision support in a personalized way could help address challenges of scalable, affordable, effective interventions for human users that can augment and extend what human professionals provide, she said.

Curry appeared headed for a career as a chemist, but as she worked in the lab, she realized fixing broken equipment was more to her liking than running analyses. So she returned to school for industrial electronics. I was accepted into an internship program at a pharmaceutical nutritional company, which is how I began my career in manufacturing, she said. I have been exposed to various types of automation, including robotics, and have enjoyed working in manufacturing for all of my career. At the pharmaceutical nutritional company, Curry and her team automated hard-wired relay circuitry to PLC systems. This helped improve troubleshooting and reduced repair time. It was amazing to be part of what was emerging technology at the time, she said. The fun didnt stop there. At Toyota, we have teams working on AI and augmented reality to help improve efficiency and eliminate redundant and non-value-added work, she said. I believe this type of technology can be coupled with robots to improve the efficiency of work for employees.

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Twenty women making their mark in robotics & automation - Advanced Manufacturing

NTHU Researchers Take Robotics to the Next Level – Yahoo Finance

TipRanks

Lets talk about risk and the big picture. Its an appropriate time, as the big risk presented by the COVID-19 pandemic is finally receding thanks to the ongoing vaccination program. COVID is leaving behind an economy that was forced into shutdown one year ago while in the midst of a great expansion, boosted by the deregulation policies. While the new Biden Administration is busy reversing many Trump policies, at least for now the economy is rebounding. And this brings us to risk. A time of economic growth and rebound is a forgiving time to move toward risk investments, as general economic growth tends to lift everything. Two strategists from JPMorgan have recently chimed in, promoting the view that the markets fundamentals are still sound, and that small- to mid-cap sector is going to keep rising. First, on the general conditions, quant strategist Dubravko Lakos-Bujas wrote, Although the recent technical selloff and short squeeze is receiving a lot of attention, we believe the positive macro setup, improving fundamentals and COVID-19 outlook, strength of the US consumer, as well as the reflation theme remain the bigger forces at play. Not only should this drive further equity upside, but it remains favorable for continued rotation into economic reopening Building on this, Eduardo Lecubarr, chief of the Small/Mid-Cap Strategy team, sees opportunity for investors now, especially in the smaller value stocks. We stick to our view that 2021 will be a stockpickers paradise with big money-making opportunities if you are willing to go against the grain Many macro indicators did fall in January but SMid-Caps and equities in general continued to edge higher, Lecubarr noted. And if you are prone to look at high-risk, small- to mid-cap stocks, youll find yourself drawn to penny stocks. The risk involved with these plays scares off the faint hearted as very real problems like weak fundamentals or overwhelming headwinds could be masked by the low share prices. So, how should investors approach a potential penny stock investment? By taking a cue from the analyst community. These experts bring in-depth knowledge of the industries they cover and substantial experience to the table. Bearing this in mind, we used TipRanks database to find two compelling penny stocks, according to Wall Street analysts. Both tickers boast a Strong Buy consensus rating and could climb over 200% higher in the year ahead. CNS Pharmaceuticals (CNSP) We will start with CNS Pharmaceuticals, a biotechnology company with a focus on the treatment of glioblastomas, a class of aggressive tumors that attack the braid and spinal cord. These cancers, while rare, are almost always terminal, and CNS is working a new therapy designed to more effectively cross the blood-brain barrier to attack glioblastoma. Berubicin, CNSs flagship drug candidate, is an anthracycline, a potent class of chemotherapy drugs derived from the Streptomyces bacteria strains, and used in the treatment of a wide variety of cancers. Berubicin is the first drug in this class to show promise against glioblastoma cancers. The drug candidate has completed its Phase 1 clinical trial, in which 44% of patients showed a clinical response. This number included one patient who showed a Durable Complete Response, defined as a demonstrated lack of detectable cancer. Following the success of the Phase 1 study, CNS applied for, and received, FDA approval of its Investigational New Drug application. This gives the company the go-ahead to conduct a Phase 2 study on adult patients, an important next step in the development of the drug. CNS plans to start the mid-stage trial in 1Q21. Based on the potential of the companys asset in glioblastoma, and with its share price at $2.22, several analysts believe that now is the time to buy. Among the bulls is Brooklines 5-star analyst Kumaraguru Raja who takes a bullish stance on CNSP shares. Until now, the inability of anthracyclines to cross the blood brain barrier prevented its use for treatment of brain cancers. Berubicin is the first anthracycline to cross the blood-brain barrier in adults and access brain tumors Berubicin has promising clinical data in a Phase 1 trial in recurrent glioblastoma (rGBM) and has Orphan drug designation for treatment of malignant gliomas from the FDA. We model approval of Berubicin for treatment of recurrent glioblastoma in 2025 based on the Phase 2 data with 55% probability of success for approval. We model peak sales of $533 million in 2032, Raja opined. CNS pipeline also includes WP1244 (novel DNA binding agent) that is 500x more potent than daunorubicin in inhibiting tumor cell proliferation is expected to enter the clinic in 2021 In vivo testing in orthotopic models of brain cancer showed high uptake of WP1244 by brain and subsequent antitumor activity, the analyst added. To this end, Raja rates CNSP a Buy, and his $10 price target implies room for a stunning 350% upside potential in the next 12 months. (To watch Rajas track record, click here) What does the rest of the Street have to say? 3 Buys and 1 Hold add up to a Strong Buy consensus rating. Given the $8.33 average price target, shares could climb ~275% in the year ahead. (See CNSP stock analysis on TipRanks) aTyr Pharma (LIFE) The next stock were looking at, aTyr Pharma, has a focus on inflammatory disease. Its leading drug candidate, ATYR1923, is a Neuropilin-2 (NRP2) agonist, working through the receptor proteins expressed by the NRP2 gene. These pathways are important for cardiovascular development and disease, and play a role in the inflammatory lung disease pulmonary sarcoidosis. In December, the company reported that the drug candidate had completed enrollment of 36 patients in a Phase 1b/2a clinical trial, testing the drug in the treatment of pulmonary sarcoidosis. Results of the current study are expected in 3Q21, and will inform further trials of ATYR1923, including against other forms of inflammatory lung disease. On a more immediate note, in early January the company announced top-line results of another Phase 2 clinical involving ATRY1923 this time in the treatment of patients hospitalized with severe respiratory complications from COVID-19. The results were positive, showing that a single dose of ATYR1923 (at 3 mg/kg) resulted in a 5.5-day median recovery time. Overall, of the patients dosed in this manner, 83% saw recovery in less than one week. Covering LIFE for Roth Capital, 5-star analyst Zegbeh Jallah noted, We like the risk profile here, with two shots on goal, and updated data details from the COVID study is expected in the coming months. Also announced recently, is that data from aTyr's Pulmonary Sarcoidosis program, will be reported in 3Q21 the success of either of these studies could result in a doubling or more of the market cap as these opportunities appear to barely be accounted for by investors. In line with his optimistic approach, Jallah gives LIFE shares a Buy rating and his $15 price target suggests an impressive 277% potential upside for the coming year. (To watch Jallahs track record, click here) Other analysts are on the same page. With 2 additional Buy ratings, the word on the Street is that LIFE is a Strong Buy. On top of this, the average price target is $13.33, suggesting robust growth of ~236% from the current price of $3.97. (See LIFE stock analysis on TipRanks) To find good ideas for penny stocks trading at attractive valuations, visit TipRanks Best Stocks to Buy, a newly launched tool that unites all of TipRanks equity insights. Disclaimer: The opinions expressed in this article are solely those of the featured analysts. The content is intended to be used for informational purposes only. It is very important to do your own analysis before making any investment.

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NTHU Researchers Take Robotics to the Next Level - Yahoo Finance

Students find virtual robotics opportunities during the pandemic – Wicked Local

Olivia Crisafi, Victor Han, Erin Crisafi and Camille Gammack| Special to the Concord Journal

In a traditional season, the GearTicks, Lincolns high school robotics team, meet nearly every day in their coachs basement: designing the robot in CAD software, programming the robot in Java and organizing outreach events with our community. This year, they have been forced to adapt to new methods of sharing ideas, working together and designing, all from home.

One solution they figured out was fairly simple. Three times a week, during their usual scheduled in-person meeting times, the GearTicks all join a Google Meet and discuss their ideas, progress and goals. Different parts of the robot come together at different team members' homes, and gradually their robot starts to resemble a robot built any other year.

The greater challenge came with switching community STEM events to a virtual setting. In previous years, the GearTicks held STEM nights, created and mentored FIRST teams of other levels and attended STEM events. With every traditional option indefinitely on hold, the GearTicks began to plan ways to make STEM accessible even during the pandemic.

One of our favorite outreach events every year is our Legopalooza, said Prerna, a junior on the team. We love the opportunity to share our love for STEM with the students and see the work theyve done throughout their season.''

The Lincoln Legopalooza has been a space to celebrate STEM learning for the towns FLL Explore robotics teams. In past years, the event has been held in the Brooks Gym, and Lego robotics teams from Lincoln and surrounding towns gather to present their Lego models to a group of reviewers, and win custom laser cut trophies. Just as the GearTicks have been able to move online, they have carried one of their favorite events online with them. This year, the GearTicks third annual Lincoln Legopalooza will be held virtually at the beginning of April. Teams will be able to virtually present their Lego models and participate in fun virtual activities!

The Lincoln Legopalooza is the culmination of the FLL Explore season. FLL Explore is a fun, easy-to-run program that introduces young children to the world of robotics. FLL Explore teams, composed of two to six kids ages 6 to 10, build a model out of Legos and program a moving component with simple block programming. A full, easy-to-understand curriculum is provided by FIRST, so the program can be run by a mentor (a parent, grandparent, etc) with no technical background. FIRST provides meeting guides for coaches and workbooks (engineering notebooks) for team members.

FLL Explore is a great opportunity for children to learn teamwork skills, build self-confidence, knowledge and life skills while having fun! This program is perfect to run as a family, with a group of close friends, or even virtually following in the GearTicks footsteps.

If your child is interested in FLL Explore, contact the GearTicks; there is still time to participate in FLL Explore and the Legopalooza! The GearTicks have experience with the FLL Explore program and have offered mentorship for anyone interested in starting a team. They can be contacted at hello@gearticks.com. More information about FLL Explore can be found at http://gearticks.com/fll-explore, https://youtu.be/Sq6w3jYVR8k and http://firstinspires.org/robotics/fll/explore/challenge-and-season.

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Students find virtual robotics opportunities during the pandemic - Wicked Local

Company Aims to Produce Thousands of Humanoid Robots in 2021 – VOA Learning English

A Hong Kong-based robotics company says it plans to mass produce thousands of humanoid robots in 2021.

Hanson Robotics says four different humanoid models will start leaving factories during the first half of the year. One of the four is a robot named Sophia, which has received worldwide attention in recent years for looking and speaking in a very human-like way.

The companys founder and CEO, David Hanson, told Reuters the COVID-19 pandemic has increased demand for robots designed to assist and engage with humans. The world of COVID-19 is going to need more and more automation to keep people safe.

He noted that in the past, many of the companys robots were built by hand. But now, Hanson Robotics is beginning to expand its manufacturing operations.

Hanson said there are currently 24 models of Sophia, which will be used as a basis for creating many other kinds of models. While not providing an exact number, Hanson said the company aims to sell thousands of robots by the end of 2021.

The company says it plans to market its humanoid robots as helpful assistants in the healthcare field. For example, they can be used to take temperature readings to identify possible sickness or perform physical exercises with older people.

Such social robots are powered by machine learning methods and artificial intelligence (AI). They use cameras and sensors to recognize human faces and activities. The robots are built with tools to help them develop their own form of social and emotional intelligence over time.

During a demonstration at the companys lab, one of the Sophia models identified some of the activities it could assist humans with.

Social robots like me can help take care of the sick or elderly in many kinds of healthcare and medical uses.

Hanson said he believes robotic solutions to the pandemic are not limited to healthcare. He said the companys robots are so human-like, they could also serve the public in retail settings or in the airline industry.

The humanoids can be so useful during these times where people are terribly lonely and socially isolated, Hanson said.

I can help communicate, give therapy and provide social stimulation, even in difficult situations.

Johan Hoorn is a social robotics professor at Hong Kongs Polytechnic University. His research has included work on Sophia. He said that, although the technology is still developing, the pandemic could speed up relationships between robots and humans.

I can infer the pandemic will actually help us get robots earlier in the market because people (will) start to realize that there is no other way, Hoorn said.

Products from other major developers in the industry are helping fight the pandemic as well. SoftBank Robotics humanoid robot Pepper was deployed in Europe to identify people who were not wearing face coverings. In China, robotics company CloudMinds helped set up a robot-run field hospital for COVID-19 patients in Wuhan.

The use of robots was already on the rise before the pandemic. The International Federation of Robotics said in a report last year that worldwide sales of professional-service robots had jumped 32 percent between 2018 and 2019.

Im Bryan Lynn.

Reuters reported this story. Bryan Lynn adapted the report for Learning English. Ashley Thompson was the editor.

We want to hear from you. Write to us in the Comments section, and visit our Facebook page.

_______________________________________________________________

engage v. to get and keep someones attention, interest, etc.

automate v. to use machines and computers instead of people to do work

artificial intelligence n. the power of a machine to copy intelligent human behavior

retail n. the activity of selling products to the public in shops and on the internet

sensor n.

isolate v. to put or keep (someone or something) in a place or situation that is separate from others

therapy n. treatment for a physical or psychological condition

stimulation n. the act of making some feel interested and excited

infer v. to guess that something is true because of information that you have

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Company Aims to Produce Thousands of Humanoid Robots in 2021 - VOA Learning English

A robotic dog that can learn points to the future – Yahoo Finance

The robotic dog had to learn how to recover from a fall

First the dog is kicked over, then pushed over, then shoved with a stick. Each time it gets back to its feet.

But don't rush to call the animal welfare authorities - it's a robotic dog undergoing training at Edinburgh University.

Alex Li is the Head of the Advanced Robotics Lab at the university and is among those leading the way in applying artificial intelligence (AI) to robotics.

The AI that controls his dog can cope with situations it has never seen before, like slippery surfaces or stairs.

And if you have ever watched internet footage of robots falling over, then you will appreciate how difficult that is to achieve.

So how did Mr Li and his team train their dog, called Jue-ying, or at least the AI that controls it?

Mr Li likens the process to the way young children are taught to play football. First, they will probably be taught individual skills like passing, dribbling and shooting.

Once they have mastered those basics then they might be let loose in simple matches, where they will learn how to put those skills together to win a game.

That way of learning, which is so natural to humans, is something that companies and researchers are trying to replicate in machines.

The robotic dog was initially taught two skill sets - fall recovery and trotting and walking, and each of those was developed in a different artificial neural network.

Neural networks rely on layers of thousands or millions of tiny connections between nodes, clusters of mathematical computations and can adapt as they are trained.

Those first two skill sets were used as the basis to create others - in total eight neural networks.

If those eight are the players in a football team then the final task was to create a coach - an AI which could bring their skills together to solve certain problems, like getting up from different positions and walking to a target.

The beauty and potential usefulness of the technique is that the robotic dog could be introduced to completely new scenarios, like navigating stairs or a rocky surface, and could make lightning-quick adjustments to stay upright and continue to its goal.

Story continues

It might not sound like much but, Mr Li hopes the method can be developed so that robots can complete much more complex tasks.

"Of course locomotion is cool, you can see the robots running around getting kicked in and getting up. But by the end of the day, you want the robot to do something useful for you," he says.

That will require the addition of features like vision systems and robotic hands, which adds many levels of complexity.

Mr Li's work builds on research by DeepMind Technologies, an artificial intelligence unit of Alphabet (the owners of Google) and based in London.

They have been leaders in a technique called deep reinforcement learning, by which neural networks learn from experience.

Using that technique, DeepMind has developed AI that has beaten human masters at chess and Go as well as becoming a top player at the computer game Starcraft.

Raia Hadsell is the director of the Robotics Laboratory at DeepMind. She says that combining AI and movement has been a different challenge.

"Your actions change the world," she points out. So unlike an AI that, for example, plays chess, a robot doing tasks around the home would have to cope with a shifting environment - imagine a robot doing the washing up and using the last of the washing up liquid.

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But if this approach can be successfully developed the rewards could be enormous.

"I think that you will start to see robots being used more with humans in a safe way, because you'll be able to interact with these robots a little bit more. So they start to be more capable with doing tasks in the home," she says.

"But probably more significantly, used in parts of industry, agriculture, construction. Imagine being able to enable a farmer with a robot that has general purpose, and could imitate different types of behaviours."

However, don't think you can give up ironing just yet.

"I don't think this is in the next couple of years, but maybe, you know, the next 10 years," Ms Hadsell says.

Mr Li's robotic dog senses the world using feedback from its joints and motors - a relatively simple set of inputs. The outputs are just as simple - the dog walks or trots towards a target.

Nathan Lepora is professor of robotics and AI at the Bristol Robotics Laboratory. He has also been training an AI to move, but not a robotic dog, instead a robotic hand that has a sense of touch.

His AI can recognise objects using an artificial sense of touch. While still in its early days he thinks that training AI to sense its environment and move around is potentially very powerful.

"The AI opens up much more general ways of learning how to control rather than, if you like, handcrafting simple controllers. That's the difference. And that's what the deep reinforcement learning opens up.

"And deep reinforcement learning also gives the capability to use much more complex sensory inputs as well, for that control."

However, it's not going to be easy to train an AI that can control a humanoid robot, equipped with all sorts of different sensors.

"The level of mechanical engineering [involved in] building these robots has kind of gone past our capability to control them, because they're so complicated. And that's the problem that's getting cracked at the moment," says Prof Lepora.

Follow Technology of Business editor Ben Morris on Twitter

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A robotic dog that can learn points to the future - Yahoo Finance

Security Mobile Robots Market- increasing demand with Industry Professionals: SMP Robotics, Cobalt Robotics, Knightscope, RRC Robotics, OTSAW, etc …

Security-Mobile-Robots-MarketLatest research on Global Security Mobile Robots Market report covers forecast and analysis on a worldwide, regional and country level. The study provides historical information of 2016-2021 together with a forecast from 2021 to 2026 supported by both volume and revenue (USD million). The entire study covers the key drivers and restraints for the Security Mobile Robots market. this report included a special section on the Impact of COVID19. Also, Security Mobile Robots Market (By major Key Players, By Types, By Applications, and Leading Regions) Segments outlook, Business assessment, Competition scenario and Trends .The report also gives 360-degree overview of the competitive landscape of the industries.Moreover, it offers highly accurate estimations on the CAGR, market share, and market size of key regions and countries. Players can use this study to explore untapped Security Mobile Robots markets to extend their reach and create sales opportunities.

Some of the key manufacturers operating in this market include: SMP Robotics, Cobalt Robotics, Knightscope, RRC Robotics, OTSAW, China Security & Surveillance Technology, Dalu Robotech, Zhejiang Guozi Robot, ALSOK, SEQSENSE, Showsec, SECOM, Cloudminds and More

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Regions Covered in the Global Security Mobile Robots Market:1. South America Security Mobile Robots Market Covers Colombia, Brazil, and Argentina.2. North America Security Mobile Robots Market Covers Canada, United States, and Mexico.3. Europe Security Mobile Robots Market Covers UK, France, Italy, Germany, and Russia.4. The Middle East and Africa Security Mobile Robots Market Covers UAE, Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Nigeria, and South Africa.5. Asia Pacific Security Mobile Robots Market Covers Korea, Japan, China, Southeast Asia, and India.Years Considered to Estimate the Market Size:History Year: 2015-2021Base Year: 2021Estimated Year: 2021Forecast Year: 2021-2026

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Security Mobile Robots Market- increasing demand with Industry Professionals: SMP Robotics, Cobalt Robotics, Knightscope, RRC Robotics, OTSAW, etc ...

Advanced Automation: Enter the World of Simulations and VR in Robotics – MarketScale

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The place: Webster, New York, home of Calvary Robotics and Christopher Grieve, Manager Simulations/VR, Lead Technical Artist, Sales & Marketing, at Calvary.

While Grieve grew up in Webster, hes felt fortunate to call Calvary Robotics his home for the past six years, where he runs the virtual reality and simulation department. Grieve gave host Joe Gemma, Global VP, Sales & Marketing at Calvary Robotics, a rundown of what his department does.

Grieve always loved mechanical drawing and pursued drafting/CAD and technical illustration in college. But, throughout his time in the industry, Grieve learned to apply and blend his expertise with the artistic, technological innovations happening in robotics. The path eventually led to Calvary with VR and simulations.

Simulations is where we create our animated videos, Grieve said. We take the 3D models from engineering, and then well build the geometry in the computer. From there, we can leverage all the work weve done animating and bring it into a video game engine to create VR applications.

From a customer perspective, what are the value adds of simulation and VR capabilities? Grieve said the videos his team generates allows a client, especially one unfamiliar with technical drawings, to gain a hyper-real perspective of how a machine runs at the rate that its supposed to and doing every process that it needs to.

They can see what it is they are going to buy before its engineered and designed. While a customer would need to be onsite at Calvary to experience the VR capabilities, Grieve believes VR is an excellent tool in the arsenal.

It provides clients with a real feel for every aspect of the machine they are purchasing and allows them to make tweaks before a finished product rather than making revisions after the fact.

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Advanced Automation: Enter the World of Simulations and VR in Robotics - MarketScale

Elmore County teachers engage in robotics training | News | thewetumpkaherald.com – Wetumpka Herald

Twenty teachers from throughout Elmore County Public Schools gathered at the systems central office on Monday for a day of robotics training.

From 8 a.m. to 3 p.m., teachers who serve as robotics coaches at their respective schools engaged in training through an Auburn University program called S.C.O.R.E. -- Southeastern Center of Robotics Education.

The goal of the day was to help the teachers feel comfortable leading their robotics teams. The teachers learned about the resources available to them, VEX IQ competition basics, how to choose their competition teams, what to do at practices and goal setting. At the end of the day, they participated in a mini-tournament for the VEX IQ game called Rise Above.

Tracy Wright, the districts STEM director, said the robotics professional development training aligns with the districts initiative to have at least two robotics teams at each of its middle and elementary schools.

Right now, we have robotics teams at all of the high schools and some of the middle schools, Wright said. Now were becoming more uniformed and offering robotics teams at all elementary and middle schools. Each school will have at least two teams consisting of at least four students per team.

Wright said the teams can exist in the form of an after school club or an in-school enrichment opportunity. It is up to each school to decide what works best for them.

The district was able to expand its robotics team offerings thanks to two grants, the Alabama Robotics Competition Grant and the Google Buddy grant. It was through the Google Buddy grant that the district gained access to the training offered by S.C.O.R.E.

Each grant offers STEM-related professional development opportunities, as well as robots, robot parts, a curriculum and chances to compete. The teachers present at Mondays training will participate in the VEX IQ Challenge through the Google Buddy grant.

Through Google Buddy, teachers also have access to Google employees and can arrange to talk to them for advice and guidance. Eclectic Middles library media specialist Amy Harrell is set to speak with a Google employee on Wednesday.

I have a Zoom meeting with Conrad from Switzerland on Wednesday, she said. Hes going to coach me on how to be a better coach. This is program is literally connecting us to people around the world.

Holtville Middle School eighth grade science teacher Stacy Chancellor said one of her favorite things about the program is that all of the needed materials are provided.

You are supplied with what you need, so every team comes into the competition on the same playing field, Chancellor said. Its not about how much money a school has.

Matthew Buckley, S.C.O.R.E. program administrator, and Jennifer Spencer, S.C.O.R.E. assistant director explained that although the robots are provided, they are very customizable. There are certain preset robot designs that teams can use or they can come up with their own design.

Throughout the competition season, Spencer said its common for teams to tweak their robots to make them work better. Sometimes, teams end up with a robot thats a lot different from the one they started with, but thats precisely the point.

Our overall vision for the robotics teams is that we want our students to be able to define and solve their own problems versus simply solving ones in textbooks, Wright said. Students who can do this come up with innovative and creative ideas. Were trying to help them develop 21st-century skills and were preparing them for jobs that havent even been invented yet.

Aside from improving problem-solving and critical thinking skills, robotics teams also help cultivate soft skills like teamwork, collaboration and respect for each others ideas, which can be a constant battle with middle school students, according to Chancellor.

After playing Rise Above, where the objective of the game is to use the robot to move cylindrical structures into designated squares, Eclectic Elementary teacher Emily Wells she has a new appreciation for the tasks that students take on.

This was my first time participating in any sort of robotics competition and it was a lot harder than I thought it would be, but the kids are going to be so much better than us, she said.

Harrell added that playing the game helped her get a better understanding of the game and its rules.

Playing the game gave me a better understanding of how to help the kids, she said. Seeing all of this will also help me make my goals more clear for my students. My robotics teams are set and were preparing to start competing this spring.

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Elmore County teachers engage in robotics training | News | thewetumpkaherald.com - Wetumpka Herald