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posted by janrinok on Friday July 01 2022, @06:06AM   Printer-friendly
from the this-movie-ends-badly dept.

New chip for robots conveys 'sense of touch' to human operators:

A Japanese startup is taking a major step toward commercializing real haptics technology that can replicate the exact feel and texture of objects, opening up new remote opportunities in health care, construction, manufacturing and other fields.

Motion Lib, launched out of Japan's Keio University, will enter a partnership with Tata Consultancy Services as early as this month to develop an advanced haptics feedback system that can be used in a variety of industries.

They aim to launch the system globally as early as 2024. TCS will also work on cloud infrastructure to store data of different tasks and movements that the system can carry out.

TCS has a market capitalization of around 12 trillion rupees ($153 billion), more than IBM, operating in 46 countries and working with over 2,000 startups. It partners with over 500 researchers worldwide, including at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and has the connections to introduce new technology to major corporations.

Conventional haptics systems cannot replicate small differences in resistance, making handling delicate items a challenge. Real haptics technology, first put into practical use by Keio University project professor Kohei Onishi, can simulate minute tactile sensations, allowing users to pick up balloons and potato chips via a robotic arm without damaging them, or figure out how hard they can squeeze a cake before crushing it, for example.

[...] The technology could also be used to store specialized skills as tactile data, so they can be recreated remotely and passed on to future generations.

[...] The global market for industrial robots is expected to double from 2021 to 2028 to over $165 billion, according to Statista. Real haptics could also augment users' strength, opening up new job opportunities for people with disabilities as well.

But they could potentially be used for military applications as well. Motion Lib's system is designed so remote feedback and controls can only be activated on robots and machines with its proprietary chip. [...] "We'll be able to protect the technology by keeping control over the chips," Onishi said.


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  • (Score: 2) by janrinok on Saturday July 02 2022, @09:54AM

    by janrinok (52) Subscriber Badge on Saturday July 02 2022, @09:54AM (#1257508) Journal

    So nobody was enthralled by the thought of a robot picking up chips.....

  • (Score: 2) by Mr Big in the Pants on Saturday July 02 2022, @09:03PM

    by Mr Big in the Pants (4956) on Saturday July 02 2022, @09:03PM (#1257625)

    Japanese remote haptics...we all know where this is going.

    You can pretend your list of sanitised, tepid uses is all you have thought of to the morons out there. But we know better.
    All those suggestions sound like meh to me.

    Removing the ickiness of in person sex is the problem you are trying to solve.

    OnlyFans needs to get on this as quickly as possible (pun intended)

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