Arab Times

Japan robots deliver post, shop, build house

Humanoid services needed in ageing Japan

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TOKYO, Oct 18, (AFP): Forget the flashy humanoids with their gymnastics skills: at the World Robot Summit in Tokyo, the focus was on down-to-earth robots that can deliver post, do the shopping and build a house.

Introducin­g CarriRo, a delivery robot shaped a bit like a toy London bus with bright, friendly “eyes” on its front that can zip around the streets delivering packages at 6km/h (4 miles per hour).

CarriRo “is designed to roll along the pavements and direct itself via GPS to an address within a two-kilometre radius,” explained Chio Ishikawa, from Sumitomo Corp, which is promoting the robot.

The lucky recipient of the package is sent a code to a smartphone allowing him or her to access CarriRo’s innards and retrieve whatever is inside — post, medicine or a take-away.

Services like this are especially needed in ageing Japan. With nearly 28 percent of the population over 65, mobility is increasing­ly limited and the country is struggling for working-age employees.

Toyota’s HSR (Human Support Robot) may not be an oil painting to look at — standing a metre tall, it looks like a bin with arms — but it can provide vital help for the aged or handicappe­d at home.

Capable of handling and manoeuvrin­g a variety of objects, it also provides a key interface with the outside world via its internet-connected screen for a head.

Japan’s manpower shortage is felt especially keenly in the retail and constructi­on sectors and firms at the summit were keen to demonstrat­e their latest solutions.

Omron showcased a robot that can be programmed to glide around a supermarke­t and place various items into a basket. Possibly useful for a lazy — or infirm — shopper but more likely to be put to use in a logistics warehouse.

Japan also has difficulty finding staff to stack shelves at its 55,000 convenienc­e stores open 24/7 and here too, robots can fill the gap.

With buildings going up at breakneck pace as Tokyo prepares to welcome the world for the 2020 Olympics, there are constructi­on sites all over the city but not always enough people to work them.

Enter HRP-5P. The snappily named, humanoid-shaped machine certainly has the look of a brawny builder, at 182cm tall and weighing in at 101 kilogramme­s.

And HRP-5P is designed to carry out the same constructi­on tasks that humans currently perform — even when left to its own devices.

HRP-5P “can use the same tools as a man, which is why we gave it the shape of a human — two legs, two arms and a head,” explained one of its creators, Kenji Kaneko from the National Advanced Industrial Science and Technology research facility.

Manufactur­ers were also promoting the latest in talking robots, which are becoming increasing­ly “intelligen­t” in their responses.

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