Reviews

South Korea wants to place a robot in every home.

Robots could become as common as televisions in the coming decade for South Koreans. Faced with an aging population and the rising cost of skilled labor, the South Korean government is funding research into robots that could perform more menial jobs like guiding customers or doing security patrols. South Korea"s Ministry of Information and Communication (MIC), the same agency that spearheaded the country"s successful broadband initiative, is leading the charge with their IT839 strategy. In the United States, some people have become used to the sight of iRobot"s Roomba robotic vacuum cleaner or its bigger brother, the Scooba robot floor scrubber. While certainly impressive, South Korea wants robots that can do much more. In particular, the MIC is aiming for networked robots that can transmit images and sound through the Internet. In addition, these robots are expected to relay messages from children to their parents or even teach English. Placing robots in every household is part of the MIC"s IT839 strategy, a focused effort by the government to place South Korea as the technological leader of the region. Named after its eight services, three infrastructures and nine products, IT839 has already installed inexpensive broadband for many of the country"s residents. A networked intelligent service robot is one of the nine product categories in IT839. The MIC would like robots to quickly appear in households and if government officials have their way, this could happen in just a few years. In a recent interview with the New York Times, Oh Sang Rok, the manager of the MIC"s intelligent service robot project, said, "My personal goal is to put a robot in every home by 2010."


Add your comment:
Name:
Site address: http://
Your message:
Enter today\\\\'s date, 2 digits
(spam protection):

News of the day
Details of ATI's Xbox 360 GPU unveiled.
With Microsoft"s official announcement of the next-generation Xbox 360 console this week, ATI has decided to disclose some of the architectural details of the graphics processor that it created for the system. I had a brief but enlightening conversation with Bob Feldstein, Vice President of Engineering at ATI, who helped oversee the Xbox 360 GPU project. He spelled out some of the GPU"s details for me, and they"re definitely intriguing.
Popular Articles

Philips develops non-volatile nano-electronic memory.
Scientists at Philips Research have developed a phase-change memory promising to match the speed, density, low-voltage and low-power consumption requirements of future deep sub-micron silicon chips.

Infineon launches 8-bit, 16-bit, and 32-bit MCUs for automotive applications.
Today at the Embedded World 2006 exhibition in Nuremberg (February 14 -16), Infineon Technologies announced the availability of new microcontroller (MCU) products - 8-bit, 6-bit and 32-bit TriCore family of devices - for the automotive market. The Infineon MCUs, well suited for motor control systems, can reduce system-level costs by up to 40% compared to conventional solutions with external components including DSP, PWM ASIC, Analog-to-Digital Converter (ADC), external oscillators, and others.