Thursday, December 8, 2011

robot books


   Robot Building for Beginners
robot
Robot Building for Beginners is a wonderful book that provides basic, practical knowledge on getting started in amateur robotics. Short chapters are perfectly suited for bedtime reading. It contains step-by-step instructions and small, hands-on experiments, including a line-following robot that you can make from a sandwich container.
Learning robotics by yourself isn't easy. It helps when the encouragement comes from someone who's been there. Not only doesRobot Building for Beginners help you understand a particular part of the puzzle, but it also prepares you with techniques to learn new parts on your own.

Author David Cook begins with the anatomy of a homemade robot and advice on how to proceed successfully. General sources for tools and parts are provided in a consolidated listing with specific part references throughout each chapter. Basic safety and numbering systems are also covered.
An in-depth analysis of digital multimeters gives the reader all the information they need to select and obtain this valuable tool for themselves. Other tools and parts include: wire strippers, snips, hack saws, needle nose pliers, tap and die, nine-volt batteries, wire, alligator clips, LEDs, capacitors, resistors, solderless breadboards, soldering irons, solder, flux, heat-shrink tubing, photosensors, transistors, chips, motors, gears, wheels, screwdrivers, wrenches, nutdrivers, screws, bolts, hot glue, and solar panels.
This huge book helps you unlock the mysteries of robot anatomy and fundamentals with complete step-by-step instructions for building a robot from scratch. If you've been looking for complete instructions on building a simple, yet capable robot, this is your book!
Build a Remote-Controlled Robot 
robot
Build a Remote-Controlled RobotHere are all the step-by-step, heavily illustrated plans you need to build a full-sized, remote controlled robot without any advanced electronic or programming skills. It's the perfect way to jump into the fascinating world of robotics!

Written specifically with first-time builders in mind, Build a Remote-Controlled Robot includes:
* Complete plans for building the inexpensive "Questor" Robot
* 100 step-by-step detailed photographs of every stage of the assembly process
* Simple-to-read wiring diagrams
* A complete parts list including tips on where to find components easily and inexpensively
Written by a teacher with experience enough to know what questions you would ask, this guide bypasses heavy-duty design theory and gets right to the heart of building the Questor robot with an emphasis on having a great time while doing it.
Chapter 1: The motorized platform
Chapter 2: Body framework
Chapter 3: Power supply and control box
Chapter 4: Remote control system
Chapter 5: Arms and subsystems
Chapter 6: Skin and finishing touches
Build a Remote-Controlled Robot is the perfect "first book" for amateur robotics!
   Absolute Beginner's Guide to Building Robots
robot
Absolute Beginner's Guide to Building RobotsFinally, a robotics book for people who don't know the first thing about robotics! Absolute Beginner's Guide to Building Robots is well-written, inviting, and action-packed, with engaging ideas and fascinating facts about robots and robot-related arts and sciences. You are led gently into the intimidating world of robotics, but nearly 400 pages later, you emerge with a respectable knowledge of robot history, the major fields and "schools" of robotics today, and the basic skills and resources needed to create your own hobby robots.
By the end of the book, you will be the proud owner of three bots, the first two of which demonstrate key robotic principles. The third is a programmable/expandable robot, which serves as a platform for future experimentation. And best of all, these robots are built with simple to get and inexpensive parts - many of which you already have around the house!
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robot
   Robots, Androids, and Animatrons : 12 Incredible Projects You Can Build
robot
Robots, Androids, and AnimatronsBuild your own computer-controlled servant. Construct your own robot or android to do your bidding! In Robots, Androids and Animatrons: 12 Incredible Projects You Can Build, electronics expert John Iovine serves up easy-to-follow plans and step-by-step instructions for constructing your very own state-of-the-art working robot that will obey your orders, act as your surrogate and even do scores of tough chores. You'll find everything you need to harness the latest robotics technologies--locomotion, sensing and control--to develop a high-tech robot, animatron or android in your own home workshop. This groundbreaking guide makes it easier than you ever imagined to: Design a lifelike robotic hand or arm that performs repetitive tasks; Build a computerized robot that uses both an expert system and a neural network--for some very unexpected behavior; Devise a robotic insect with a "brain"; Create a telepresence robot you can "get inside of" with actual arcade and virtual reality applications; Take advantage of sensing systems--tilt, bump, road and wall, light, speech, recognition, sound--even odors and gases; And much more.
With the complete directions supplied by popular electronics author John Iovine in this revisedRobots, Androids, and Animatrons, you can:

* Build your first walking, talking, sensing, thinking robot
* Create 12 working robotic projects, using the fully illustrated instructions provided
* Get the best available introduction to robotics, motion control, sensors, and neural intelligence
* Put together basic modules to build sophisticated 'bots of your own design
* Construct a robotic arm that responds to your spoken commands
* Build a realistic, functional robotic hand
* Apply sensors to detect bumps, walls, inclines, and roads
* Give your robot expertise and neural intelligence
* Do all of this without programming or assembly language skills
Perfect for first-time robot builders-And for more advanced hobbyists who want to add to their skills! If you have basic electronics abilities, Robots, Androids, and Animatrons gives you everything you need to create 12 exciting robotic projects using off-the-shelf products and workshop-built devices-including a complete parts list. Also ideal for anyone interested in electronic and motion control, this book - already a cult classic - gives you the building blocks you need to go practically anywhere in robotics.

Robots : MUSIC & VIDEOS










watch online :ROBOTIC MOVIES







       WATCH I,ROBOT ONLINE








                       I, Robot 2004 Hollywood Movie Watch Online

             WATCH ENTHIRAN ONLINE


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Endhiran is a 2010 tamil movie directed by Shankar (indian, boys, mudhalvan fame) starring rajani kanth and aishwarya rai in lead roles. Music is composed by oscar winner A.R Rahman. Editing done by Anthony. Enthiran movie is a sure hit in box office with super star and ex miss world as cast not to mention rehman’s music.

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1. Autonomous Solutions Inc., Unmanned Ground Vehicle, $100,000 Read more: Top 5 Robots You Can Buy Right Now - Popular Mechanics

A Utah-based company called Autonomous Solutions will happily convert your family car into an unmanned ground vehicle complete with computer-controlled steering, acceleration, braking and gear-shifting. Ask for the "Proving Grounds Automation Package," drop your car off and pick up your new robo-vehicle a few weeks later. With the barebones package, your car can now be remote-controlled or programmed to run certain routes. Keep in mind, the price will rise steeply for smart behaviors like obstacle avoidance and route planning, which require additional sensors and computing power, but may one day let you hit "snooze" all the way to the office.

Cyberdyne Systems, HAL-5 Exoskeleton, $60,000



The HAL-5 (Hybrid Assisted Limb) from the Cyberdyne Corporation uses coin-sized electromyogram (EMG) sensors on the shoulders, hips, knees and elbows to eavesdrop on the signal sent from the brain to muscles. During its three-hour battery life, the thought-guided machine can help a paralyzed human walk, climb stairs or lift up to 175 pounds. The powered suit resembles a Star Wars-vintage storm trooper outfit and has been used to piggyback a paralyzed man to within 500 yards of the summit of Breithorn Mountain in Switzerland. Act fast: Only a few hundred

3. Kondo, KHR-1HV Humanoid Robot, $1200 


While little kids in North America build model airplanes, little kids in Japan build radio-controlled humanoid robots. Arguably, the best on the market is the Kondo KHR-1HV—a two-foot -tall, muscle-bound cage-fighter with sturdy servo motors that allow 19 degrees of freedom for smooth moves including stair climbing, somersaults and back flips. Throw away the airplane glue and buy a soldering iron: Today’s humanoid robotic van Dammes come complete with karate moves, acrobatic flips and those cute, pasted-on googly eyes—some reassembly may be required.
4. LEGO Mindstorms NXT kit, $250








Most of us are not robotics engineers; we're simply people who don't want to get up off the couch to run to the fridge. Thanks to modern science, you no longer need a pesky Ph.D. to build your dream gopher-robot—you just need some LEGOs. The LEGO Mindstorms kit uses a "smart brick," a 32-bit microprocessor "brain" that can be programmed from a personal computer to control robotic LEGO creations. The rest of the robot is built from conventional (albeit extra sturdy) LEGO bricks that are moved via three servo motors. Your little LEGO robot can sense the world around it (and your drink of choice) via touch, light, sound and ultrasonic sensors—all the more reason for PM to have given LEGO a 2006 Breakthrough Award for the NXT kit.


5. Fisher-Price, Tickle Me Elmo Extreme (TMX), $40 Read more: Top 5 Robots You Can Buy Right Now - Popular Mechanics



This fuzzy, red, next-generation Elmo doll is like Teddy Ruxpin on steroids. When you touch one of its three "tickle spots," the stuffed robot falls over, rolls on the floor laughing, pounds its fists on the ground and begs the tickler to "please stop it!" Afterward, the Sesame Street-inspired robot hops back onto its feet and asks for another tickle. Robo-Elmo is scarier than Chucky from the movie Child's Play—and more fun, too.





"ROBOTICS" THE WAY OT SUCCESS






Roboticists develop man-made mechanical devices that can move by themselves, whose motion must be modelled, planned, sensed, actuated and controlled, and whose motion behaviour can be influenced by “programming”. Robots are called “intelligent” if they succeed in moving in safe interaction with an unstructured environment, while autonomously achieving their specified tasks.
This definition implies that a device can only be called a “robot” if it contains a movable mechanism, influenced by sensing, planning, actuation and control components. It does not imply that a minimum number of these components must be implemented in software, or be changeable by the “consumer” who uses the device; for example, the motion behaviour can have been hard-wired into the device by the manufacturer.
So, the presented definition, as well as the rest of the material in this part of the WEBook, covers not just “pure” robotics or only “intelligent” robots, but rather the somewhat broader domain of robotics and automation. This includes “dumb” robots such as: metal and woodworking machines, “intelligent” washing machines, dish washers and pool cleaning robots, etc. These examples all have sensing, planning and control, but often not in individually separated components. For example, the sensing and planning behaviour of the pool cleaning robot have been integrated into the mechanical design of the device, by the intelligence of the human developer.
Robotics is, to a very large extent, all about system integration, achieving a task by an actuated mechanical device, via an “intelligent” integration of components, many of which it shares with other domains, such as systems and control, computer science, character animation, machine design, computer vision, artificial intelligence, cognitive science, biomechanics, etc. In addition, the boundaries of robotics cannot be clearly defined, since also its “core” ideas, concepts and algorithms are being applied in an ever increasing number of “external” applications, and, vice versa, core technology from other domains (vision, biology, cognitive science or biomechanics, for example) are becoming crucial components in more and more modern robotic systems.                              >>More

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INTRODUCTION


A robot is a mechanical or virtual intelligent agent that can perform tasks automatically or with guidance, typically by remote control,in future the robots are going to rule the world they will be common and a time will come when the humans become rare..............
the war,new inventions,tournaments,family and love all will safe in metal hands ...............   

In practice a robot is usually an electro-mechanical machinethat is guided by computer and electronic programming. Robots can be autonomous, semi-autonomous or remotely controlled. Robots range from humanoids such as ASIMO and TOPIO toNano robotsSwarm robotsIndustrial robotsmobile and servicing robots. By mimicking a lifelike appearance or automating movements, a robot may convey a sense that it has intent or agency of its own. The branch of technology that deals with robots is robotics.
When societies first began developing, nearly all production and effort was the result of human labour, as well as with the aid of semi- and fully domesticated animals. As mechanical means of performing functions were discovered, and mechanics and complex mechanisms were developed, the need for human labour was reduced. Machinery was initially used for repetitive functions, such as lifting water and grinding grain. With technological advances more complex machines were slowly developed, such as those invented by Hero of Alexandria (in Egypt) in the 1st century AD, and the first half of the second millennium AD, such as the Automata of Al-Jazari in the 12th century AD (in medieval Iraq). They were not widely adopted as human labour, particularly slave labour, was still inexpensive compared to the capital-intensive machines. Men such as Leonardo Da Vinci in 1495 through toJacques de Vaucanson in 1739, as well as rediscovering the Greek engineering methods, have made plans for and built automata and robots leading to books of designs such as the Japanese Karakuri zui (Illustrated Machinery) in 1796. As mechanical techniques developed through the Industrial age we find more practical applications such as Nikola Tesla in 1898, who designed a radio-controlled boat, and John Hammond Jr. and Benjamin Miessner who in 1912 created the Electric Dog as a precursor to their self directing torpedo of 1915.[1]. We also find a more android development as designers tried to mimic more human-like features including designs such as those of biologist Makoto Nishimura in 1929 and his creation Gakutensoku, which cried and changed its facial expressions, and the more crude Elektro from Westinghouse Electric Corporation in 1938.
Electronics then became the driving force of development instead of mechanics, with the advent of the first electronic autonomous robots created by William Grey Walter in BristolEngland, in 1948. The first digital and programmable robot was invented by George Devol in 1954 and was ultimately called the Unimate. Devol sold the first Unimate to General Motors in 1960 where it was used to lift pieces of hot metal from die casting machines in a plant in Trenton, New Jersey. Since then we have seen robots finally reach a more true assimilation of all technologies to produce robots such as ASIMO which can walk and move like a human. Robots have replaced slaves[citation needed] in the assistance of performing those repetitive and dangerous tasks which humans prefer not to do, or are unable to do due to size limitations, or even those such as in outer space or at the bottom of the sea where humans could not survive the extreme environments.
Man has developed an awareness of the problems associated with autonomous robots and how they may act in society. Fear of robot behaviour, such as Shelley's Frankenstein and the EATR, drive current practice in establishing what autonomy a robot should and should not be capable of. Thinking has developed through discussion of robot control and artificial intelligence (AI) and how its application should benefit society, such as those based around Asimov's three laws. Practicality still drives development forwards and robots are used in an increasingly wide variety of tasks such as vacuuming floors, mowing lawns, cleaning drains, investigating other planets, building cars, in entertainment and in warfare.


Wednesday, December 7, 2011


 
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