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December 11, 2007

Toyota Calls Robotics a Key Business

Yuri Kageyama in the Atlanta Journal-Constitution:

Image_6258210Compared to a virtuoso, its rendition was a trifle stilted and, well, robotic. But Toyota's new robot plays a pretty solid "Pomp and Circumstance" on the violin.

The five-foot-tall all-white robot, shown Thursday, used its mechanical fingers to press the strings correctly and bowed with its other arm, coordinating the movements well.

Toyota Motor Corp. has already shown robots that roll around to work as guides and have fingers dexterous enough to play the trumpet.

Toyota President Katsuaki Watanabe said robotics will be a core business for the company in coming years. Toyota will test out its robots at hospitals, Toyota-related facilities and other places starting next year, he said. And the company hopes to put what it calls "partner robots" to real use by 2010, he said.

"We want to create robots that are useful for people in everyday life," he told reporters at a Toyota showroom in Tokyo.

Watanabe and other company officials said robotics was a natural extension of the automaker's use of robots in manufacturing, as well the development of technology for autos related to artificial intelligence, such as sensors and pre-crash safety systems.

More here.

Posted by Abbas Raza at 05:36 AM | Permalink

Comments

Thank you for your interest in my story. It is fascinating that Japan is investing so much into developing robotics as a pillar of its growth. the main players are the automakers _ not just Toyota but also Honda. My story on a recent government-backed robot contest:
http://dwb.sacbee.com/content/business/24hour_tech_business/story/3770777p-13278498c.html

Posted by: Yuri Kageyama | Dec 21, 2007 10:09:26 PM

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