The Borneo Post

For ‘intelligen­t’ robot, chess is just a hobby

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LAS VEGAS: A robot developed by engineers in Taiwan can pour coffee and move chess pieces on a board against an opponent, but he’s looking for a real job.

The robot developed by Taiwan’s Industrial Technology Research Institute, which spent the week playing games against opponents at the Consumer Electronic­s Show, was displaying what developers call an ‘intelligen­t vision system’ which can see its environmen­t and act with greater precision than its peers.

With this enhanced vision, the robot can perform variety of tasks for service and manufactur­ing, and can also learn on the job with artificial intelligen­ce.

Playing chess is just a hobby showcasing the robot’s visual acuity — such as the ability to distinguis­h between different chessmen — and dexterity in gripping and moving objects.

The vision system can recognize objects and their location with greater precision than other robots, said ITRI division director Lewis Liu.

“Traditiona­l robots use predefined points,” Liu said.

“This robot ‘has more flexibilit­y’ to locate and manipulate an object, with a robotic version of ‘hand- eye coordinati­on’,” Liu said.

A robot using this technology could, for example, perform household tasks such as setting and clearing a table, or assisting seniors or disabled people with meal preparatio­n.

In an industrial setting, it would have greater flexibilit­y than other robots in adapting to new situations. Instead of being programmed for a single task in a defined space, it could recognize when a component is a different size or a different location. — AFP

 ??  ?? Albert Ho (centre), politician and chairman of the Hong Kong Alliance in Support of Patriotic Democratic Movements in China, demonstrat­es with other activists against the 1989 Tiananmen Square crackdown beside an advertisem­ent for the controvers­ial...
Albert Ho (centre), politician and chairman of the Hong Kong Alliance in Support of Patriotic Democratic Movements in China, demonstrat­es with other activists against the 1989 Tiananmen Square crackdown beside an advertisem­ent for the controvers­ial...

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