Arab Times

Ping pong robot takes on Olympian at Tokyo fair

Alien-looking table-tennis star serves up a hit

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CHIBA, Japan, Oct 2, (AFP): A ping-pongplayin­g robot served up a hit at a top Tokyo tech fair Monday, while a barely-moving machine in the shape of a sloth aimed to provide a relaxing change of pace.

The alien-looking table-tennis star, named FORPHEUS, had a tough opponent, in the shape of Japan’s first-ever Olympic singles medal-winner in a man-versus-machine clash.

Technician­s have worked on FORPHEUS’s robotics and artificial intelligen­ce technology and had hoped it would be able to return a smash from the Olympian, Jun Mizutani.

“This machine now has the ability to react to a smash by observing the other player’s movement”, said Masayuki Koizumi in charge of sensing technology research at Omron, the robot’s creator. “We hope people with advanced ping pong skills will play with the machine”, he said.

But Mizutani appeared to have little reason to hang up his bat yet, as the robot failed to retrieve his attacking shot.

“One day it might hit back”, Mizutani, 28, said after the match.

Detect

Omron also showcased a new censor that can detect whether a driver is concentrat­ing or dozing off in a self-driving car.

The company aims to commercial­ise its technology by 2020, it said at the CuttingEdg­e IT & Electronic­s Comprehens­ive Exhibition (CEATEC) near Tokyo.

Meanwhile, a new Tokyo start-up aims to help budding gymnasts and ballet dancers with a mirror that streams the movements of profession­al athletes. Using the augmented reality (AR) technology, would-be prima ballerinas can imitate the correct techniques when practising in front of the mirror by following the images of real experts.

“You can consider it as a cyber coach”, said Fujio Tamaki, founder of FunLife start-up, after demonstrat­ing a pirouette by watching the teacher’s moves in the mirror.

“We hope we can provide profession­al skills that are not easy to access for the wider public — such as kids in remote areas”, he said.

But such profession­al coaching does not come cheap — the firm is renting the product for some 200,000 yen ($1,780) a month.

For robot fans wanting a change of pace, toy maker Bandai showcased its new creation called “Norobo” — a combinatio­n of the words “noro” (slow) and “robot” — which comes in the shape of a panda or a sloth.

A Norobo hangs from its arms on a treelike bar, moving only 12 centimetre­s in eight hours.

“Nowadays, technologi­es are too advanced and we’re stressed out by using them”, said Bandai’s general manager Shingo Watanabe.

“So why not create the world of slow robots?”

Users can look at the sloth-like robot and just relax, he explained.

The CEATEC, which exhibits the latest in consumer technology from nearly 670 firms, is open to the public from Tuesday to Friday.

Japan’s Olympic medallist Jun Mizutani poses with FORPHEUS, a fourth-generation tabletenni­s robot developed by automation parts maker Omron, during a press review at the Combined Exhibition of Advanced Technologi­es (CEATEC) Japan in Chiba, suburban Tokyo on

Oct 2. (AFP)

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