Goto

Collaborating Authors

 robot podcast


#300: Past and Present Podcast Team Members, with Sabine Hauert, Peter Dürr and Andra Keay

Robohub

Welcome to the 300th episode of the Robohub podcast! You might not know that the podcast has been going in one form or another for 14 years. Originally called "Talking Robots," the podcast was started in 2006 by Dario Floreano, now Director of the Laboratory of Intelligent Systems at EPFL in Switzerland, who started out interviewing his robotics Ph.D. students. Some of those students, alongside others, eventually took over the running of the podcast, then called "Robots Podcast", interviewing a number of researchers, entrepreneurs, and engineers involved in robotics. The official first episode of the Robots Podcast was published back in 2008 and is still available to listen to at robohub.org/podcast.


Robots Podcast #242: Disney Robotics, with Katsu Yamane

Robohub

Katsu received his PhD in mechanical engineering from University of Tokyo in 2002. Following postdoctoral work at Carnegie Mellon University from 2002 to 2003, he was a faculty member at University of Tokyo until he joined Disney Research, Pittsburgh, in October 2008. His main research area is humanoid robot control and motion synthesis, in particular methods involving human motion data and dynamic balancing. He is also interested in developing algorithms for creating character animation. He has always been fascinated by the way humans control their bodies, which led him to the research on biomechanical human modeling and simulation to understand human sensation and motor control.


Robots Podcast #242: CUJO – Smart Firewall for Cybersecurity, with Leon Kuperman

Robohub

In this episode, MeiXing Dong talks with Leon Kuperman, CTO of CUJO, about cybersecurity threats and how to guard against them. They discuss how CUJO, a smart hardware firewall, helps protect the home against online threats.


Robots Podcast #241: Tensegrity Control, with Kostas Bekris

Robohub

In this episode, Jack Rasiel speaks with Kostas Bekris, who introduces us to tensegrity robotics: a striking robotic design which straddles the boundary between hard and soft robotics. A structure uses tensegrity if it is made of a number of isolated rigid elements which are held in compression by a network of elements that are in tension. Bekris, an Associate Professor of Computer Science, draws from a diverse set of problems to find innovative new ways to control tensegrity robots. Kostas Bekris is an Associate Professor of Computer Science at Rutgers, the State University of New Jersey. He is working in the area of algorithmic robotics, especially on problems related to robot motion planning and coordination.


Robots Podcast #240: Biowatch: Biometric Identification Using Veins, with Matthias Vanoni

Robohub

Vanoni speaks about Biowatch, a wrist-veins biometric reader that functions as a security solution for mobile payments and smart devices. They discuss the technical challenges of building a miniaturized wrist-vein reader and how this device changes the usual user authentication process.


Robots Podcast #239: Robot Academy, with Peter Corke

Robohub

Robot Academy is an online platform that provides free-to-use undergraduate-level learning resources for robotics and robotic vision. The content was developed for two 6-week Massively Open Online Courses (MOOCs) that Corke taught in 2015 and 2016. This content is now available as individual lessons (over 200 videos, each less than 10 minutes long) or in masterclasses (collections of videos, around 1 hour in duration, previously a MOOC lecture). Unlike a MOOC, all lessons are available all the time. While the content is typically designed for undergraduate-level students, around 20% of the lessons require no more than general knowledge.


Robots Podcast #238: Midwest Speech and Language Days 2017 Posters, with Michael White, Dmitriy Dligach and Denis Newman-Griffiths

Robohub

In this episode, MeiXing Dong conducts interviews at the 2017 Midwest Speech and Language Days workshop in Chicago. She talks with Michael White of Ohio State University about question interpretation in a dialogue system; Dmitriy Dligach of Loyola University Chicago about extracting patient timelines from doctor's notes; and Denis Newman-Griffiths of Ohio State University about connecting words and phrases to relevant medical topics.


Robots Podcast #237: Deep Learning in Robotics, with Sergey Levine

Robohub

Levine explains what deep learning is and he discusses the challenges of using deep learning in robotics. Lastly, Levine speaks about his collaboration with Google and some of the surprising behavior that emerged from his deep learning approach (how the system grasps soft objects). In addition to the main interview, Audrow interviewed Levine about his professional path. They spoke about what questions motivate him, why his PhD experience was different to what he had expected, the value of self-directed learning, work-life balance, and what he wishes he'd known in graduate school. Sergey Levine is an assistant professor at UC Berkeley.


Robots Podcast #236: IASP 2016 (Part 3 of 3), with Vadim Kotenev and Vagan Martirosyan

Robohub

They speak with Vadim Kotenev of Rehabot and Motorica about prosthetic hands and rehabilatative devices; and Vagan Martirosyan, CEO of TryFit, a company that uses robotic sensors to help people find shoes that fit them well. The robotic platform that scans your feet from TryFit.


Robots Podcast #235: Locus Robotics, with Rick Faulk

Robohub

In this episode, Abate De Mey speaks with Rick Faulk, CEO of Locus Robotics, about warehouse automation with collaborative robots. At Locus Robotics, they increase the productivity of workers in e-commerce warehouses by using robot helpers to transport items that are passed to them by the workers. The lightweight autonomous robots move at a similar pace to their co-workers, use LIDAR and computer vision to detect people and avoid collisions. This allows people to share the warehouse floor with the robots. The collaborative robotic system is lightweight and can be adapted to existing warehouses with minimal alterations.