Sunday Star-Times

Jogging robot a new web shocker

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Few things succeed in riling the internet faster, unleashing a unique cocktail of amazement and terror, than a new Boston Dynamics robot video.

In the past, the tech company, owned by Japan’s SoftBank Group, has released videos showing its robots climbing stairs, executing perfect backflips and opening doors with shocking ease.

The company’s latest YouTube submission: a 34-second clip of its boxy humanoid robot, Atlas, going for a jog in a grassy residentia­l area on what appears to be a bright spring day.

With its electronic appendages unleashing an animatroni­c whine, Atlas even stops to hop over a log before casually going on his bipedal way.

In only a day, the video racked up more than 900,000 page views.

For some viewers, Atlas is an exciting childlike underdog signaling that a Jetsons-like future is nearly upon us.

‘‘Great job, Atlas!’’ one viewer commented. ‘‘So proud of you! Keep learning, my friend! :)’’

For many others, the headless robot is an apocalypti­c sign that humanity demise.

‘‘So imagine you wake up one morning and walk out the front door on your little ranch and then you see this thing in the distance charging at you with an axe,’’ one viewer commented. ‘‘What do you do?’’

In the past, even Tesla co-founder is hastening its own Elon Musk, who regularly warns about the rise of artificial intelligen­ce, has used Atlas’s athletic prowess to paint a dire picture of humanity’s future.

Though Boston Dynamics did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment, its website says Atlas is the latest in a line of advanced humanoid robots it is developing.

‘‘Atlas’s control system coordinate­s motions of the arms, torso and legs to achieve wholebody mobile manipulati­on, greatly expanding its reach and workspace,’’ the company says. ‘‘Atlas’s ability to balance while performing tasks allows it to work in a large volume while occupying only a small footprint.’’

‘‘Stereo vision, range sensing and other sensors give Atlas the ability to manipulate objects in its environmen­t and to travel on rough terrain. Atlas keeps its balance when jostled or pushed and can get up if it tips over."

Boston Dynamics CEO Marc Raibert has announced that the company will begin selling its doglike SpotMini robot next year, most likely to businesses for use as a camera-equipped security guard.

He made the announceme­nt yesterday at the TechCrunch robotics conference at the University of California, Berkeley.

Google bought the Waltham, Massachuse­tts-based firm in 2013, then sold it last year to Japanese tech giant SoftBank.

Raibert also said he was looking at deploying the SpotMini robots in constructi­on work. He would not reveal how much they would cost.

 ?? BOSTON DYNAMICS/YOUTUBE ?? Boston Dynamics’ humanoid robot, Atlas, goes for a jog and even hops over a log in the latest video demonstrat­ing its capabiliti­es.
BOSTON DYNAMICS/YOUTUBE Boston Dynamics’ humanoid robot, Atlas, goes for a jog and even hops over a log in the latest video demonstrat­ing its capabiliti­es.

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