How 1996 Showed Me The Future of Robotics
Robotics is having its day. It brings a smile to my face to see. Why?
Really the first stop in my career, back in 1996, was at an Intelligent Robotics Lab (IRL) in 1996 as a Master's Student in Electrical Engineering.
One of my Lab Directors went onto Amazon later in his career. Others went to IBM's Watson and others went into AI research.
The IRL was a super-cool place led by an even more amazing founder, Kazuhiko Kawamura. Dr. K had the vision that one day humans and robots would work cooperatively together.
Doesn't sound that interesting? Well. His thinking goes back to the early 1980s. Just think about that for the moment. In 1980 the Sony Walkman was invented.
DHL ordered 2,000 picking robots designed to make their warehouse more efficient. These were made by a company called Locus Robotics, founded by Bruce Welty after he noticed in 2014 that once Amazon acquired Kiva Robotics, another generation of robotics was clearly not on the horizon. So he needed to do it himself. Again, it's nice to see robotics on the rise.
Dr. K (who just turned 80 right before the pandemic!) should be proud of his legacy!