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Monthly Archives: September 2022
Report highlights return of EU wildlife over past 50 years – Agriland
Posted: September 27, 2022 at 9:01 am
European wildlife will return if there is enough space for recovery and if measures provide for a harmonious life alongside species, according to a new report by Rewilding Europe published today (Tuesday, September 27).
The updated Wildlife Comeback Report, which looks at 50 European species, shows that the populations of some species have grown both in size and geographical range over the last 40 to 50 years.
Out of all mammal species included in the report, the strongest comeback has been recorded for the Eurasian beaver, the grey seal, and the European bison.
The Wildlife Comeback Report explores species recovery, provides an outlook for future recovery of European wildlife, and shows the importance of reducing pressures such as habitat loss and hunting.
With wildlife species across the world disappearing at an alarming rate, the new report shows that wildlife will return if we give it space to recover and strive to live alongside it harmoniously.
It [the report] shows that measures such as better legal protection; enlarging and connecting protected areas; dedicated species recovery work (including reintroductions); and improving habitats, are effective, according to Rewilding Europe.
The barnacle goose, the griffon vulture, the great white egret, and the Dalmatian pelican are recovering well, due to legal protection through the EU Birds and Habitats Directives, changes in policy and land use, and conservation efforts, according to the report.
Grey wolves readily recolonise areas where humans allow their presence. To support their recovery, the EU offers funding for prevention measures and full compensation to farmers for livestock lost to wolf predation.
After decades of decline, European vulture populations are also recovering, largely due to changes in EU legislation and intensive management and conservation, the report states.
However, in-depth analysis shows that wildlife comeback in Europe is still highly patchy, while some species such as the Eurasian otter and cinereous vulture show recent range contractions.
Many landscapes across Europe remain devoid of wildlife, and when it does start to come back it often brings challenges, particularly when it comes to large carnivores such as bears and wolves, according to Rewilding Europe.
Yet the positives of wildlife recovery far outweigh the negatives, the Wildlife Comeback Report states.
Accelerating and widening wildlife comeback in Europe can improve the health and functionality of entire ecosystems, while delivering a huge array of benefits to nature and people.
Rewilding Europe executive director, Frans Schepers, however, said the report shows that hard work is needed on many fronts in order to continue wildlife recovery.
Much of the vital work monitoring global biodiversity trends and evaluating species extinction risks often highlights the negative impacts of pressures, such as habitat loss and climate change on species.
However, this report gives cause for optimism and shows that given a chance, and with well-placed conservation efforts, wildlife can recover, lead author of the report, Sophie Ledger of the Zoological Society of London said.
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The North Wales criminals locked up for crimes of aggression and violence – North Wales Live
Posted: at 9:01 am
An angry motorist, a man who smashed a railway ticket machine and a taxi passenger who grabbed the driver by the neck were among offenders locked up for crimes of aggression and violence in recent months.
Judges felt their crimes were so serious that they deserved to be sent to prison. In some cases the defendants had already been given a chance to change by the court but had failed to do so leaving the courts no choice but to impose a custodial sentence.
Here is a summary of some of those cases at Caernarfon and Mold Crown Courts and Wrexham Magistrates Court.
Read more:Landlord ripped out tenant's bathroom in 'moment of madness' over unpaid rent
A man smashed up a ticket machine with a piece of railway ballast because a "voice in his head told him to". Aldo Tamburrini had been trying to get the computer out of the vending machine at Prestatyn Station.
But while on bail for that offence, the 57-year-old defendant then burgled a priest's home and bought alcohol using his stolen bank cards. A judge at Mold Crown Court noted Tamburrini was vulnerable but said it was his public duty to deal with him and sent him to prison for 876 days. He will serve half and the remainder under supervision.
Prosecutor Nicholas Williams said the defendant, of Caradoc Road, Prestatyn, was seen entering Prestatyn Station in the early hours of April 22 this year. CCTV footage showed him going onto the tracks and picking up a piece of ballast which he used to "smash the ticket vending machine" on the platform. He caused a total of 14,702.78 damage.
A cyclist was left needing a hip replacement after an angry motorist crashed into him and then left the scene. Robert Hughes, of Ffordd Hiraethog in Mostyn, admitted causing serious injury by dangerous driving at Mold Crown Court.
Prosecuting, Sarah Badrawy, told the court how Hughes, 52, was driving his silver Mercedes along the A494 between Denbighshire and Flintshire a week before Christmas - on December 19 last year. He encountered Keith and Jackie Godfrey - a husband and wife who set off from their home in Ruthin for a bike ride.
She said that there had been a "very quick verbal exchange" between the two men after Hughes passed the couple with "less than a foot" between them. Thinking nothing more, the cyclists carried on their journey.
A man who rammed a police car during a dangerous high-speed chase told a judge he "didn't really care" about being jailed. Adam Ashley Challoner, of East Green in Sealand, "used his vehicle as a weapon" during the chase, Mold Crown Court heard.
Prosecuting, Karl Scholz, told the court how Challoner was spotted by police driving a silver VW Golf in the Chester area at around 1am on July 9 this year. It was said that the occupants were wanted for failing to stop after a crash.
The car was followed back to Flintshire, into Sealand and Garden City, by a police car which had requested back-up to help in detaining the people inside the vehicle. As the car approached Foxes Lane, they "must have" become aware of the police following them, said Mr Scholz, as the car sped up and drove away heading back in the direction of Chester.
A man who was being investigated over a multi-million-pound drugs conspiracy "used his teeth as a weapon" against two people after a night of drinking. Liam Davies, of Nant Y Coed in Holywell, appeared at Mold Crown Court having admitted to assaulting three people - including police officers.
According to prosecutor Alexandra Carrier, Davies had been out drinking at The Stag Inn in Bagillt on March 25 this year. It was said that he had been caught up in an "altercation" with an unidentified woman during the early hours which was witnessed by Jack Jones, another pub-goer.
Ms Carrier said that Davies was "on top of" the "hunched over" a woman and that Mr Jones rushed to help. When attempting to push Davies away, Mr Jones fell and landed on the concrete floor, and the defendant turned to him.
A mum was left bleeding and her baby boy "pale and screaming" with head and eye injuries when a "very drunk" dad struck them both with a mobile phone charger. Daniel Luke McHugh, 29, threw the charger with such force that his son spent a "week in hospital". McHugh was so intoxicated he told police he "could not remember" assaulting Kayleh Drelincourt or their child at her home in Saltney on June 14.
McHugh, of Glyn Garth in Chester, appearing via a video link from HMP Berwyn at Mold Crown Court admitted to two charges of assault occasioning actual bodily harm earlier this month. Prosecutor Alexandra Carrier said a "very drunk" McHugh, who also had a cocaine problem, arrived at his former partner's home "anxious and paranoid" that she had been cheating on him.
A back seat passenger grabbed a taxi driver by the neck then stole his night's takings. But Lyndsey Royce was later identified and caught.
The 29-year-old, of Connor Crescent, Wrexham, admitted robbery and a judge at Caernarfon Crown Court jailed her for three years.
Prosecutor David Mainstone told how taxi driver Djamel Rouibah had been working a night shift for Speedie Cars in Wrexham on Saturday, November 28, 2020. At 11.45pm that night he was instructed to pick up a woman called "Amy" from an address in Marchwiel and take her to Wrexham.
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CIDCA to send medial, disaster assessment teams to flood-hit areas of Pakistan – Daily Times
Posted: at 9:01 am
BEIJING: China International Development Cooperation Agency (CIDCA) will dispatch two separate teams to Pakistan to carry out medical rescue and guidance as well as disaster assessment in the flood-hit areas.
CIDA connected Guangxi to send a medical team to carry out medical rescue and guidance, as well as a disaster assessment team organized by the Ministry of Emergency Management, Director, CIDCA, Yang Meng said in an interview here on Monday.
In addition, China appealed to the international community to provide more help and works with relevant organizations to use the Global Development and South to South Cooperation Fund to provide more support to flood-hit areas.
He said that on September 16, President Xi Jinping met with Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif, and said that China and Pakistan share linked destiny, and China would do its best to help Pakistan to overcome difficulties.
Terming China and Pakistan as iron brothers, all-weather friends, he said that after the floods, President Xi Jinping, Premier Li Keqiang and State Councilor Wang Yi sent their messages of condolence. The Chinese government immediately announced 100 million yuan of emergency humanitarian assistance, including 25,000 tents and other materials urgently needed. And 3,000 tents delivered by China Air Force are one of the first aid materials Pakistan received.
Yang Meng said that considering the huge losses, the Chinese government provided an additional 300 million yuan. In conclusion, the total amount is 400 million yuan, ranking first in the world.
He said that since Sept 7, CIDCA has arranged flights to deliver supplies every day. As of yesterday, 13,000 tents, 10,000 blankets and 1,000 boxes of compressed cakes have been delivered by air. The follow-up materials have been shipped by sea in three batches, which will arrive in early October.
Sharing specific relief work undertaken by CIDA, he said that it immediately activated the emergency humanitarian assistance mechanism, and coordinated relevant Chinese departments, such as the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Ministry of Commerce, Ministry of Emergency Management, Chinese Air Force, China Meteorological Administration.
All the relief materials were fully prepared within one month. And CIDCA worked with the civil aviation department to increase three flights due to Pakistans urgent need, he added
He said that from the arrival of the first batch to the delivery of all materials, the assistance lasted for one month. For airlift, a flight has been arranged per day from Sept 7, and an additional flight is added from Sept 22 to 24, altogether 22 sorties are arranged; for shipping, a total of 90 containers have been arranged on Sept 14, 17 and 24 respectively; for land transportation, 200 tons of onions are delivered via the Karakoram Highway within a week.
He said on Sept 3, Chairman Luo Zhaohui of CIDCA met with Pakistans Ambassador to China Moin Ul Haque, and proposed that a joint working group could be set up to maintain round-the-clock communication, the liaison mechanism is running smoothly, and CIDCA has fully coordinated with the relative ministry, local provincial governments, social organizations, enterprises, and Chinese embassies abroad to provide assistance.
CIDCA has formulated a multi-modal transportation plan by sea, land and air due to different materials, he added.
He said that no matter how the international situation changes, the Chinese government and people are always standing firmly with the Pakistan government and people.
I believe, with the help of China and the international community, Pakistan will surely overcome this disaster and rebuild the homeland as early as possible, he added.
In his remarks, the Head of Chancery (HOC), Pakistan Embassy, Beijing, Naeem Iqbal Cheema extended the sincerest gratitude to the Chinese government and people for the donation of relief and rehabilitation items for flood-affected people of Pakistan.
He said that the support received from the Chinese brothers and sisters for flood-hit areas is overwhelming and thanked the CIDCA and other relevant government institutions for coordinating the delivery of essential relief supplies from China.
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AI Company Nala Robotics Introduces The Wingman – Yahoo Finance
Posted: at 8:59 am
Self-cleaning Autonomous Robot Cooks Chicken Wings, Fries and Other Food Items
ARLINGTON HEIGHTS, Ill., Sept. 27, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Nala Robotics, an AItechnology company fueling restaurant cooking automation, today introduced The Wingman, an autonomous fry station that can easily be added or configured to any restaurant or commercial food service operation.
The Wingman by Nala Roboticscan pick up and load the frying baskets with chicken wings, French fries and other food items, dip them in oil and shake off any excess. The multi-fryer configuration allows different cooked foods to simultaneously be sent to individual seasoning bins where spices or sauces are added and properly mixed to ensure every wing or food item is evenly coated. Each dish is then subsequently plated, ready to be served.
"The Wingman is our latest robot to help restaurants and other food providers boost efficiency in the kitchen and scale production, while minimizing the potential for contamination," said Ajay Sunkara, CEO of Nala Robotics. "It's no secret that chicken wings are a very popular food choice in America and across the globe, prepared in a variety of styles and cuisines. This is where our technology is essential, where we can cook an endless array of dishes, while at the same time meet high consumer demand as labor shortages continue to challenge the industry worldwide."
With its built-in clean in place functionality, The Wingman uses artificial intelligence and high-performance camera and vision systems to significantly improve efficiency for high-volume deep frying, while maintaining high-quality consistency.
Monthly rental options for The Wingman start at $2,999 per month. Email info@nalarobotics.com for more information on pricing and customized solutions.
Download a short video of The Wingman here or by visiting https://vimeo.com/749619393.
About Nala Robotics
Nala Robotics is an AI technology company disrupting the culinary industry. Its innovations include the world's first fully automated multi-cuisine chef, a customizable robot that uses machine learning to cook infinite recipes replicated with exact precision anytime, anywhere. The company's line of autonomous robotic solutions are ideal of multiple cuisines including American, Chinese, Indian and Thai. Based in Arlington Heights, Ill., Nala Robotics has offices in California, India and Ukraine. For more information, visit https://nalarobotics.comor follow the company on LinkedIn and Twitter @nalarobotics.
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Amazon warehouse robots are getting closer to replacing human hands – Vox.com
Posted: at 8:59 am
In 2019, Amazon founder Jeff Bezos predicted that within a decade, robotic systems will be advanced enough to grasp items with the dexterity of a human hand. Three years later, Amazon looks to be making progress toward that goal.
A recent video published on the companys science blog features a new pinch-grasping robot system that could one day do a lot of the work that humans in Amazon warehouses do today. Or, potentially, help workers do their jobs more easily.
The topic of warehouse automation is more relevant than ever in the retail and e-commerce industries, especially for Amazon, which is the largest online retailer and the second-largest private sector employer in the US. Recode reported in June that research conducted inside Amazon predicted that the company could run out of workers to hire in the US by 2024 if it did not execute a series of sweeping changes, including increasing automation in its warehouses.
At the same time, the company is facing the prospect of US workers starting to unionize after the victory by the Amazon Labor Union in the historic Staten Island vote, and another upcoming union election in October in Upstate New York. Labor activists have long speculated that Amazon might ramp up automation efforts in response to unionization activity.
In a statement provided by an Amazon spokesman, the companys director of Robotics AI, Siddhartha Srinivasa, said: [W]e have an incredible opportunity to help advance the science of robotic manipulation in ways that meaningfully benefit our employees and our customers. Our investments in robotics and technology are helping make jobs in our facilities better, easier, and safer, as well as creating new career opportunities for our people.
The robotic arm in question does not look as futuristic as you might imagine. The proof-of-concept machine uses an off-the-shelf metal pincher rather than some novel grasping device. But it can pick up a new item and deposit it on a metal chute every three seconds. At the rate its going in the video, Amazon says the robot could handle more than 1,000 items an hour, meaning it could pick and stow items at rates several times faster than a human worker could. From a box of crayons to a container of what looks like garlic powder to a whisk broom, each item is grasped and moved with no human direction. The robot utilizes multiple cameras to help it see the assortment of items in front of it, as well as machine learning to help it decide the best way to pick up a given item, and motion-planning algorithms to help the robot navigate the crowded scene without bumping or damaging any of the goods. Preliminary tests also found that the robot damages certain products at a much lower rate than other manipulation robots Amazon has tested.
The video and the robotic system in it were created late last year in a controlled lab test by Amazon technologists. This robot prototype can only move items weighing less than two pounds. In testing, the robot was asked to handle hundreds of different items in this weight group and successfully grasped and moved around 95 percent of them, according to Amazon spokesman Xavier Van Chau. On a larger scale, the two-pound weight restriction would still allow the robot to grasp a selection of items making up about half of Amazons total product assortment. But the company is working on grasping solutions that would be able to handle any and every type of item that could fit inside an Amazon box, perhaps by combining a pincher attachment with a popular suction method, and having the system trained to know which hand should be used for which item.
How long it will take for Amazon to create a single robot that can handle the vast majority of products is up for debate, but its a question of when, not if. And when the when becomes now, well have an answer to one of the great unknowns of this era of automation: Will a new generation of warehouse robots that can grasp goods almost as well as human hands make work better or easier for the people doing these jobs? Or will the technological evolution eliminate the need for these workers and their jobs?
An Amazon spokesperson said the company is betting on the latter, based on the way it has utilized other types of robots in its warehouses up to now. In June, Amazon announced a prototype of a robotic system called Cardinal that lifts and sorts already-packaged orders and, the company claims, reduces the risk of employee injuries by handling tasks that require lifting and turning of large or heavy packages or complicated packing in a confined space. The company says it expects to introduce the system into an unspecified number of fulfillment centers in 2023. And last year, the company unveiled another robot arm that it calls Robin, which handles a similar task with lighter packages. Van Chau, the company spokesperson, declined to provide details on the deployment of either the Cardinal or Robin robots.
Amazons history in robotics dates back to when it bought a company called Kiva for $775 million. In the decade since, it has rolled out more than 500,000 roaming warehouse robots. During the same period, the company says it has hired more than a million workers and points to this fact to try to dispel the notion that warehouse advancements are leading to worker elimination.
From the early days of the Kiva acquisition, our vision was never tied to a binary decision of people or technology, the company said in a recent blog post. Instead, it was about people and technology working safely and harmoniously together to deliver for our customers. That vision remains today.
The Kiva robots did make some Amazon warehouse jobs easier. For those workers in picker or stower roles, robots now transport shelves to them at a stationary workstation, where they stand for 10 hours a day with padding beneath their feet. In Amazons pre-Kiva days, these workers would walk 10 to 20 miles a day, plucking merchandise from, or adding goods to, aisle after aisle of inventory shelves.
Kiva robots also brought downsides. Before the robots arrived, a picker might have had a goal to handle 100 items an hour; Amazon tripled those expectations when the robots, not the workers, did the traveling. And with the addition of robots, injury rates increased as workers were forced to move faster to keep up with higher quotas.
The tasks being completed by Amazon test robots like the pinch-grasping one in the new video potentially have more direct overlap with existing worker tasks. The robot, like an Amazon picker or stower, is retrieving a piece of merchandise from one location and moving it to another, as quickly as possible without damaging it. That said, while the robot prototype is picking items at a rate of more than 1,000 an hour around triple the typical rate of human pickers in Amazon warehouses its not an apples-to-apples comparison. Amazon pickers in warehouses with robots have to pull each item out of a cluttered shelving unit, and sometimes have to use a step stool to reach merchandise at the top. Similarly, Amazon stowers have to fit each piece of merchandise into an open space on the mobile shelving unit, versus the robot that is simply moving it from one open space to another. Van Chau, the Amazon spokesperson, said the prototype in the video was neither tested nor designed to pick items from shelves as workers do in the companys current robotic warehouses.
Still, robotics experts are paying attention. Martin Ford, the author of multiple books about robotics including Rule of the Robots, said while its unclear how Amazons most recent robot prototype would perform in a high-volume warehouse, it still seems to show remarkable progress. With advancements like Amazons, as well as those of many well-funded startups building robotic systems to try to solve for challenge of grasping with the dexterity of humans, its inevitable that the problem will be solved perhaps sooner than many of us expect, Ford told Recode.
And once that happens, Ford added, theres little doubt that Amazon warehouses, as well as many other environments, are going to become a lot less labor intensive.
Amazon maintains that robots and people will continue to work together inside its warehouses. But robotics experts say that one day, the company may have a real option to depend on robots to do a lot of the work it currently depends on human employees to do.
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Pittsburgh Technical College offering new degree in automation and robotics repair – WTAE Pittsburgh
Posted: at 8:59 am
Aurora Autonomous Vehicle Company in Pittsburghs Strip District needs to hire more employees who can build and fix the tech-heavy cars and trucks the company designs.So they called Pittsburgh Technical College to help create a brand-new degree.Pittsburgh Technical College offers robotics classes, but there wasn't a comprehensive program graduating the kind of employee Aurora needs until now.Watch the video player above to learn more about this dynamic new degree.These service engineers are "really at the heart of what we do," said Matt Blackburn, senior manager of government relations at Aurora.He described the hardware that goes into what the company makes for vehicles: "Somebody has to build that, somebody has to repair that, somebody has to replace that. So that's what these technicians will be doing.""It's an opportunity to really integrate key components from major programs, like computer-aided design, engineering, electronics, to really create the technician of the future," Alicia Harvey-Smith, president and CEO of Pittsburgh Technical College, said.Students like Calle Barrett have a mind for robotics. She said that students would begin with a box with pieces for a robot. From there, "you build the robot from basically the wheels up, and you wired it and everything."A year ago, Aurora reached out to PTC to develop an associate degree in robotics and autonomous engineering. It will take 18 months to graduate and start working. Harvey-Smith estimated the starting salary range to be in the mid-to-high-$50,000's, "which is not bad for a student with an associate certification degree. But I think that will continue to grow as the demand increases and as this particular industry increases."David Becker, academic chair of Electronics, Trades and Technology for PTC, said that "Robotics is in its infancy." He added that "there's not enough students trained" in this "exploding" field.Not only are scholarships available, but the final part of the course can include a paid internship at Aurora.Aurora executives say this new associate degree, called robotics and autonomous engineering technology, or RAET, will also help fill positions across other Pittsburgh companies.Blackburn reminded potential students that "you don't have to work at Aurora" after completing this program. In fact, "you could work at any of the robotics/tech companies here in Pittsburgh.""The best part of this job is watching students get jobs, period," said Becker.The first session begins in October, but students can apply anytime through the link here.
Aurora Autonomous Vehicle Company in Pittsburghs Strip District needs to hire more employees who can build and fix the tech-heavy cars and trucks the company designs.
So they called Pittsburgh Technical College to help create a brand-new degree.
Pittsburgh Technical College offers robotics classes, but there wasn't a comprehensive program graduating the kind of employee Aurora needs until now.
Watch the video player above to learn more about this dynamic new degree.
These service engineers are "really at the heart of what we do," said Matt Blackburn, senior manager of government relations at Aurora.
He described the hardware that goes into what the company makes for vehicles: "Somebody has to build that, somebody has to repair that, somebody has to replace that. So that's what these technicians will be doing."
"It's an opportunity to really integrate key components from major programs, like computer-aided design, engineering, electronics, to really create the technician of the future," Alicia Harvey-Smith, president and CEO of Pittsburgh Technical College, said.
Students like Calle Barrett have a mind for robotics. She said that students would begin with a box with pieces for a robot. From there, "you build the robot from basically the wheels up, and you wired it and everything."
A year ago, Aurora reached out to PTC to develop an associate degree in robotics and autonomous engineering. It will take 18 months to graduate and start working.
Harvey-Smith estimated the starting salary range to be in the mid-to-high-$50,000's, "which is not bad for a student with an associate certification degree. But I think that will continue to grow as the demand increases and as this particular industry increases."
David Becker, academic chair of Electronics, Trades and Technology for PTC, said that "Robotics is in its infancy." He added that "there's not enough students trained" in this "exploding" field.
Not only are scholarships available, but the final part of the course can include a paid internship at Aurora.
Aurora executives say this new associate degree, called robotics and autonomous engineering technology, or RAET, will also help fill positions across other Pittsburgh companies.
Blackburn reminded potential students that "you don't have to work at Aurora" after completing this program. In fact, "you could work at any of the robotics/tech companies here in Pittsburgh."
"The best part of this job is watching students get jobs, period," said Becker.
The first session begins in October, but students can apply anytime through the link here.
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More kids should be in FIRST robotics – UConn Daily Campus
Posted: at 8:59 am
The world is constantly changing, and as new challenges arise for society to face, we risk failing to make the changes necessary to meet them. Education is how we prepare children to face the challenges of the future, and extracurricular supplements help students become well rounded individuals. Extracurricular activities for kids often focus on sports, yet there are so many new opportunities that have the capacity to prepare the next generation to thrive as constructive members of the 21st century. However, these opportunities are sadly often overlooked. Some people reading this will have never heard of For Inspiration and Recognition of Science and Technology (FIRST), while others have found their experience with FIRST Robotics programs to be life changing. FIRST Robotics is an international organization that runs robotics programs for students in pre-K all the way through high school, but what this simple definition doesnt reveal are the true benefits that students receive hidden in the nuances of these programs.
According to firstinspires.org 81% of FIRST alumni declare a STEM major, compared to only 58% of people in a comparison group. But what students learn in FIRST goes beyond the science and technology knowledge they gain. Anyone who has been on a FIRST team at any age level can see how opportunities for students to develop real-world skills and associate what they are learning with methods of improving their world are integrated into the program. In the FIRST Lego League Challenge, the elementary and middle school program, one of the major components of the program involves students looking at an actual problem and developing a solution. Last season challenged students to find a problem in the area of transporting goods, and students were able to explore problems with packaging, delivery time and a variety of other topics, and then develop an innovative solution in that area. In the high school program, FIRST Robotics Competition, also known as FRC, the highest award a team can win doesnt involve the robot they develop, but instead focuses on the quality of the team itself. This usually involves looking at how the team has used their STEM knowledge to improve their communities and help others. This has led many FRC teams to become extremely involved in their community. The benefits of FIRST are unlimited, whether its STEM knowledge, practical skills such as critical thinking, leadership, and teamwork or students learning how they can make a positive change in their community and world.
Despite programs such as FIRST truly working to better prepare students to become positive influences in the world, many kids end up in other activities, namely sports. The Little League has over two million children participating worldwide, while FIRST hasnt even reached 700,000. The benefits of the FIRST programs are clearly larger than the science and technology skills learned and students tendency to pursue these fields; but simply looking at the two programs from a career perspective, the difference is astronomical. Less than 1% of Little League Participants end up playing Major League Baseball. Yet, as mentioned before, 81% of FIRST alumni declared a STEM major. One extracurricular activity provides students with the basic skills and inspiration needed to start a sustainable career something many students end up pursuing while the other activity gives students a crapshoot in that field. Even for the students who dont major in a STEM field, FIRST undeniably has a benefit for any student who goes through its programs; yet it is still hard to believe that in a society plagued with as many problems as ours, there isnt more of a premium on a program that has such a focus on good citizenship this is a shift that needs to happen. Simply taking a look at the students participating in FIRST compared to other youth organizations and then examining the benefits that these programs provide, its fair to say that FIRST is underrated. It would be worth any parents time to look into these programs.
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Robotic Platform Is Open Sourced And User Friendly – Hackaday
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Having a 3D printer or a CNC machine available for projects is almost like magic. Designing parts in software and having them appear on the workbench is definitely a luxury. But for a lot of us, these tools arent easily available and projects that use them can be out-of-reach. Thats why one of the major design goals of this robotics platform was to use as many off-the-shelf components as possible.
The robot is called the OpenScout and, as its name implies, intends to be a fully open-source robotics platform for a wide range of use cases. It uses readily-available aluminum extrusion as a frame, which bolts together without any other specialized tools like welders. The body of the robot is articulating, helping it navigate uneven terrain outdoors. The specifications also call for using an Arduino to drive the robot, although there is plenty of space in the robot body to house any robotics platform you happen to have on hand.
For anyone looking to get right into the useful work of what robots can do, rather than spending time building up a platform from scratch, this is an excellent project. Its straightforward and easy to build without many specialized tools. The unique articulating body design should make it effective in plenty of environments. If you do have a 3D printer, though, that opens up a lot of options for robotics platforms.
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Cybernetics will drive the future of robotics – Times of India
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The desire for gadgets or machines that can keep up with the challenges of todays world and increasingly function in simpler and smarter ways is evident. Automation and autonomy have enabled this by producing and delivering products and services that require the least amount of human intervention, making certain jobs easier than ever before even when information is incomplete and uncertain. The emergence of new service robots and their ongoing evolution into new applications has further facilitated the world of automation. Due to the dynamic nature of robotics, numerous application sectors are now using robotics to carry out predetermined tasks and enhance human efforts in both physical and cognitive ways. Robotics has fuelled task efficiency, dependability, and quality, all of which were earlier, products of a laborious procedure. Being a crucial component of automation, robotics is currently used in an ever-growing variety of fields, including manufacturing, transportation, healthcare & medical care, utilities, defence, facilities, operations, and more recently, information technology. According to reports, the Indian industrial robotics market is expected to grow at a CAGR of 13.3% between 2019-2024. With its growing industry applications and productivity benefits, the study of cybernetics is likely to be a vital element in the advancement of robotics.
What is Cybernetics and what makes it different from Artificial Intelligence (AI)?
Cybernetics is a branch of science that focuses on creating technologies that behave or think like humans by researching how electrical devices or machines and the human brain function to add value to the task to be performed. Cybernetics, one of the best workaround physical embodiment of Artificial Intelligence (AI), Machine Learning (ML), and predictive analysis and control, investigate underlying systems/structures, possibilities, and limitations of complex mechanisms, including robotics, and develops autonomous innovations that require minimal to no human interaction. AI and cybernetics are two different perspectives on intelligent systems or systems that may act to achieve a purpose. Making computers simulate intelligent behaviour using pre-stored world representations is the main goal of AI. In general, cybernetics is the study of how systems control themselves and can take actions autonomously based on environmental signals even when the information is minimal and subject to significant uncertainty or noise. These systems go beyond simple computation; they can also control biological (body temperature regulation), mechanical (engine speed regulation), social (managing a huge workforce), and economic (controlling a national economy) systems.
How does Cybernetics work?
Every cybernetic systems objective is to be set up so that its operations are linked in a variety of input-output system configurations which are normally driven with reference control signasl. This is achieved by employing feedback-based automatic closed-loop control systems can decide which behaviours should be changed, which actions should be tracked, how to compare the actions to the reference, and how to adapt the relevant behaviours in the most effective way. In natural cybernetic systems, this regulatory mechanism develops or organises by itself via self-learning. On the other hand, artificial cybernetic systems react or are influenced by human-implemented automatic control systems. Essential elements of cybernetic systems are sensors, the controller, actuators and the system to be controlled.
Cybernetic systems, both natural and artificial, are subject to the controller, which must possess all of the capabilities necessary for its functions to analyse and model the static and dynamic characteristics so it can understood and properly classified so that a appropriate controller can be developed. The system starts to act in a goal-oriented way once the model and controller are coupled. The process can adapt to changing situations where the model and controller changes to stay tuned to the changing system. A good example to consider is an auto-pilot for an aeroplane whose weight is changing due to the on-board feul being consumed causing the plans behaviour to change. In addition, the objective is to maintain all essential system properties in agreement with the reference input regardless ofsystem disturbances which could be severe gusts of wind or storms. The controller must be able to operate the system appropriately and change the relevant variables in order to maintain good and safe performances.
When the regulatory structure of the system notices an abnormality in its behaviour, it makes an effort to correct it by analysing the differences between its desired goal and the actual behaviour to alter controlling inputs to gthe system to make up for the discrepancies. This process of error discovery and correction is repeated as the now purposeful system starts to make advances toward achieving its goal.
Cybernetics in robotics
Cybernetics in robotics aims to use AI and machine learning in the sense-plan-act paradigm normally used to design robots so they can operate effectively in real-world scenarios. Getting a robot to understand and differentiate complex situations in everyday is extremely demanding and getting the situation awareness correctly identified is critical to ensuring the desired reference control signal can be identified for implementation. This can range from making sure an industrial robot identifies and picks up the correct item for the next stage of the manufacturing process from a selection of parts to ensuring the requests of the human to be served a variety of beverages will get the correct drink. Sensors and sensor systems which are correctly calibrated are essential for ensuring the situation awareness is achieved correctly and in real-time using AI-based models which can be learnt and applied in various situations such as driverless cars, medical robots, automated manufacturing and home care robots.
As per MarketStudy Oct. 2021 report, the industrial robotics market is expected to grow to $87.79 billion at a CAGR of 10.35%. Similarly the service and medical robotics sectors are expected to grow at fast rates.
Views expressed above are the author's own.
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Local educator creating robotics team | News, Sports, Jobs – The Inter-Mountain
Posted: at 8:59 am
ELKINS A local educator is creating a robotics team program for young students.
I am starting a Lego Robotics Team Program in Elkins and I want to get the word out because I have the materials and the experience, and I am looking for students to comprise the teams, said Eric Eisenbrey, the director and lead guide for the Eyes and Brains STEM Center, the Elkins areas first microschool and STEM-based school.
Starting in the first week of October and running until March, I am offering an after-school program for Kindergarten to first-, second- to fifth-, and sixth- to eighth-graders, he said.
The fifth- to eighth-grade will be registered to compete in the First Lego Robotics League state competition to be held in March at Fairmont University.
Kindergarten to first-graders will meet from 3:45-4:45 p.m. on Wednesdays. There will be a registration fee.
The second- to fifth-graders will meet on Tuesdays and Thursdays from 3:45-5:15 p.m. There will also be a registration fee.
The sixth- to eighth-graders will meet on Mondays and Fridays from 3-4:30 p.m. There will be a registration fee.
The kindergarten to first-graders program is focused on giving children a build on their natural curiosity and developing problem-solving skills when they build solutions to scenarios using Lego Duplo bricks. The second- to fourth-grade program introduces programming with motors and sensors. This program also adds a research element that drives the design challenge for this group.
The fifth- to eighth-grade program focuses on the fundamentals of engineering as they will explore real-world problems, learn to design, and code, and create unique solutions made with Lego bricks. This group will finish out the season with a competitive challenge that has them building and programming a Lego robot that navigates the missions of a robot game.
Those interested can register at linktr.ee/eyesandbrains. For more information, call 304-801-3272.
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