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Arm wrestling robots...

...beaten by wimp

         

Syzygy

3:36 pm on Mar 8, 2005 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Flesh and bone triumphed in the first ever man-versus-machine battle of brawn - an arm wrestling contest between robots and humans in California on Monday.

Interesting story on the development of polymer based artificial muscles and robotics, courtesy of New Scientist [newscientist.com].

The aim is to further develop the technologies so that 'it' can beat any human...

Syzygy

Automan Empire

4:21 am on Mar 9, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



"Girl beats robot at arm wrestling" or "Arm-wrestling robot rips girl's arm off" are the only 2 variants likely to have made the newswires. "Geeks arm wrestle with their machines" would not have even made the local paper.

On the surface, this seems kind of trivial. However, I direct your attention to the press-release-writing lessons to be learned here! Not to mention Viral marketing.

Just as DeForest invented the triode tube but Marconi is known as the "father of radio" it simply isn't enough to break technological ground... you have to pique the fickle interests of the lay public, too.

Syzygy

11:49 am on Mar 9, 2005 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Sorry, Automan Empire, I'm obviously missing your point. The news article is from New Scientist, not a sensationalist tabloid rag.

It is obvious that the 'arm wrestling' part of the story is a lightweight publicity stunt aimed at creating greater awareness among a wider audience of the research being done here.

At the same time the 'stunt' element serves as a marker by which progress can be measured in the future.

The aim... is to improve on existing actuators - or muscles - currently used in prosthetics and robots.

Syzygy

Automan Empire

4:59 am on Mar 10, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Well, I didn't read the new scientist piece, and the link isn't downloading anything at the moment. I was going off the story as printed in 2 local papers. The thrust of the articles was heavy on the "girl beats robot at arm wrestling" and very, very light on polymers or robotics.

My point was the odd-twist human element was picked up all over the country by mainstream press, which never would have happened if it was just a technical piece. I felt this was a great example, given the how-do-I-write-an-attractive-press-release posts that have appeared on WebmasterWorld recently.

I think you got my point just fine on a technical level, but not on the more-subtle "emotional" level which often means so little to us techie types but is EVERYTHING to the average Joe/Jane.