Marc Raibert: Meet Spot, the robot dog that can run, hop and open doors
Marc Raibert is the founder and CEO of robot maker Boston Dynamics. Full bio
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OK, how about now?
can go almost anywhere on earth,
without any problem.
the manipulator, the clicker,
I can move around in the world
of my arms and my hands
almost anything.
with over 1,000 people in it,
can see every one of you --
is really important for robots
a little status report
toward these ends.
dynamically stabilized robots.
a little over 10 years ago --
that helps stabilize it.
that's running with a galloping gait,
stabilized and propelled.
locomotion using its legs,
that came out onstage.
to your houses with drones?
legged-robot delivery?
to our employees' homes
of stairway twists and turns.
about 70 percent of the way.
about making autonomous robots
just exactly what you say,
of what happens in the real world.
one of the engineers,
still tolerates all that disturbance --
where Eric is tugging on the robot
in those circumstances
that's going to generalize
than they would be otherwise.
that we've been building.
about the hardware design later.
of performance and speed could we get
of the speed that a human operates
it's using its body,
of dynamic stability,
the way it's supposed to.
called "Handle."
because it's sort of half like an animal,
in kind of a funny way,
more than that,
rough-terrain capability,
a little bit of robot religion.
is a machine where there's a computer
through its sensors.
that the computer is on one side,
are the physics of the world.
friction, bouncing into things.
a holistic design,
the hardware and the behavior
and cooperate with each other.
you get a real harmony
interacting with each other.
on the hardware, where we tried to go --
is a conventional design,
that are all bolted together,
is a more integrated thing;
an anatomy drawing.
like the anatomy of an animal.
that has hydraulic pathways --
and behavior are going to be,
recorded from robots
but some other things,
behemoth, bulky, slow, bad robots --
weighing almost 400 pounds --
which was just in the video,
going to show it to you yet,
strength and capabilities.
better very quickly.
a little bit of mobility,
who's my robot wrangler today,
some general direction
of the legs and the sensors
with a number of different gaits;
and things like that.
about a legged robot is,
it can go sideways,
is a little bit of a show-off.
it would be hopping on one foot,
here, stereo cameras,
in order to look at the terrain
these obstacles back here.
all its own terrain planning.
is being developed in real time,
which are where it doesn't want to step,
them like stepping-stones.
an operation like that,
that planning in real time,
a little bit longer
into a different mode,
the blocks like terrain
along with how it's moving.
as a head and a neck,
and the body is following.
in the way I was talking about before --
Spot can do we call, "chicken-head mode,"
in one place in space,
that's called "twerking" --
Could you get me a soda?
Seth is not doing any driving.
we've put on the stage
going off the path --
to take over control again,
about having it do this by itself.
your TED performance?
come back in the middle.
and the package delivery.
that you see for your robots?
I think that robots
I've been talking about
into some of the dirty places
we have robots like this in our homes,
is to take care of the aging
till we're using robots
have our children help take care of us.
we haven't thought of yet,
think of new applications.
a big funder of robotics.
is the dark side myself,
advanced technology,
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Marc Raibert - RoboticistMarc Raibert is the founder and CEO of robot maker Boston Dynamics.
Why you should listen
Working with his team at Boston Dynamics, Marc Raibert builds some of the world's most advanced robots, such as BigDog, Atlas, Spot and Handle. These robots are inspired by the remarkable ability of animals to move with agility, dexterity, perception and intelligence. A key ingredient of these robots is their dynamic behavior, which contributes to their lifelike qualities and their effectiveness in the real world.
Raibert founded Boston Dynamics as a spinoff from MIT, where he ran the Leg Laboratory, which helped establish the scientific basis for highly dynamic robots. He was a professor of EE&CS at MIT and before that associate professor of CS & Robotics at Carnegie Mellon University. Raibert is a member of the National Academy of Engineering.
Marc Raibert | Speaker | TED.com