With Robots by Diego Trujillo Pisanty

With Robots by Diego Trujillo Pisanty

How might our homes change if they had to accommodate robots too?

With Robots by Diego Trujillo Pisanty

London designer Diego Trujillo Pisanty‘s With Robots project explores a near future where existing homes are adapted for domestic robots, rather than built around them.

With Robots by Diego Trujillo Pisanty

His conceptual images show objects with cut-outs or unusual handles so a robot can hold and manipulate them to help with household tasks.

With Robots by Diego Trujillo Pisanty

He predicts our houses will be littered with a series of symbols that could be understood by both humans and robots, marking the fold lines in bed linen for example or identifying the correct position for a cup inside the cupboard.

With Robots by Diego Trujillo Pisanty

Diego Trujillo Pisanty developed the project while studying at the Royal College of Art in London.

With Robots by Diego Trujillo Pisanty

Another recent Dezeen story about domestic robots featured a robotic vacuum cleaner that steals its owner’s duvet in the morning and poos all over the floor.

With Robots by Diego Trujillo Pisanty

You can see more robots on Dezeen here.

Here are some more details from Diego Trujillo Pisanty:


The field of robotics recently regained its momentum. As computers become smaller and more powerful it seems that we are close to having advanced autonomous robots everywhere, even in our homes.

With Robots takes a look at robots and homes and how they might interact. One common argument for humanoid robots is that as our environments are based around the scale and form of humans it is logical that robots operating in this space should be based on the same form. This project approaches the problem from a different perspective, looking at how our homes and objects might change in order to accommodate the needs of robots.

The scenario is not set in a specific time, however the images suggest a near future in which our homes look very much the same as they do now. They have been altered to fit robots rather than built for that purpose. The near future view allows us to suppose that the robots operating at home are one of the first generations and are not able to perform extremely advanced computations.

The project concentrates on the objects robots will need, trying to raise questions on the desirability of these items and the sacrifices we are willing to make in order to have robots in our home. Another important aspect is the atmosphere this new living space has, it is very simple to say “I have a robot and these are its things” but the way we feel surrounded by these objects should also be considered.

Most visual robot languages rely on data matrices which are meaningless to humans. It would be unfair to have meaningless symbols in our house in order for our domestic robots to work. An alphabet that could be understood by both humans and robot software would allow the owners of a domestic robot to understand what the robot is doing and would enable them to re-program it.

Folding

Robot friendly bed sheets were designed in order to aid them with a computationally demanding task. Based on previously research, a robot would take a long time to fold bed sheets, however if the folding points were marked by a tag the robot would be able to do it much faster. For the humans it means having a foreign symbol printed onto their bed sheet. In the background we see a small clock reading 4:19 which suggests the robot has been folding laundry for a very long time, even with the help of the tags.

Handling

Concentrating a bit more on how robots manipulate objects, a cup with a robot friendly handle was made. This object reveals a lot about the relationship between humans and robots, it creates a tension between the robotic and the human handle. The handle could become a design feature or it could be badly received, considered ugly and uncomfortable. The cupboard in which these cups rest have also been altered in order to accommodate the robot. Not only are there tags marking the position of objects but the doors have also been removed as they were not fit for A.I.

Serving

Setting the table is another task robots might be doing, having everything ready for when the owner comes home. The plate does not require a “plate tag” printed on it, the tag has been replaced by a notch on the edge indicating that this object is a plate. The notch also doubles as a holding point, it makes us wonder on the shape of the tool the robot uses to manipulate this object. The edges of the table are marked telling the machine where the limits are. In the scene presented the robot has made a mistake and placed all the cutlery rotated by 90o.

Learning

Every living space is different, not only in the architectural layout but also in the tasks that the tenants require robots to do. For this reason robots ship only partially programmed so that through a learning algorithm they might adapt to the home they operate in. To accelerate the learning process special learning tools have been designed to help the robot integrate to a 3D environment. The picture on this page shows a living room after a robot self-training session. We can see it has now mastered the physics of equilibrium. It is also evident that it has mistaken one of the house’s dinner plates which it has broken with robotic precision to complete it’s piece. This scene intends to make us think of what the tenants would think when encountering such a display. It also tries to show what it would feel like to have objects that are useful only to robots in our house.

Cooking

Cooking robots have been a promise for more then 60 years, ranging from Falks robotic toaster to the Jetsons’ Rosie maid-bot.
How desirable is robot precision in the kitchen? The situation presented shows how meat has been precisely cut into cubes without leaving any cut marks on the chopping board. The board its self has notches to facilitate robot interaction. In the background the meat package can be seen, it too has been labelled to suggest that the robots oparate beyond a single house.


See also:

.

Robot Cleaner
by Jeongmi Lee
Robots of Brixton
by Kibwe Tavares
Funktionide
by Stefan Ulrich

Dezeen’s top ten: robots

Two of our most popular movies on Dezeen Screen this month featured a robot that wakes its owner then poos on the floor and rioting robots on the streets of London, so we’ve compiled Dezeen’s ten most popular stories about robots.

1: this conceptual high-rise with a facade that’s constantly reconfigured by robotic arms is our most popular robot story.

2: second place goes to our story about Stefan Ulrich’s shape-changing robot designed to relieve loneliness.

3: at number three is a robot called R-O-B  that builds walls and was responsible for the award-winning Structural Oscillations installation at the Venice Architecture Biennale in 2008.

4: the Outrace robots, at number four, wrote messages in the sky at last year’s London Design Festival.

5: our fifth most popular robot story is Kacey Wong’s robot-shaped shelter for the homeless.

6: number six is Kibwe Tavares’ Robots of Brixton video, in which a downtrodden robot workforce battles with police against a backdrop of dystopian architecture.

7: the Robox shelving system by Italian designer Fabio Novembre comes in at number six.

8: a tea house for robotic kitchen appliances is our eighth most-read story about robots.

9: number nine goes to these robot figurines made from found objects and re-appropriated components by Rusti D.

10: last but not least is this week’s story about a combined vacuum cleaner, alarm clock and pet by Seoul designer Jeongmi Lee.

See all of Dezeen’s top ten stories here»

We’ll be back with another top ten next month!

Robot Cleaner by Jeongmi Lee

Robot Cleaner by Jeongmi Lee

Seoul designer Jeongmi Lee has designed a conceptual domestic robot that steals your duvet in the morning and poos all over the floor. Watch the movie on Dezeen Screen.

The robotic vacuum cleaner would be tied to the duvet and equipped with a timer to make it run away when the alarm is activated, pulling the covers with it.

Robot Cleaner by Jeongmi Lee

The robot would be able to change its own filters after cleaning the floor, ejecting the used ones in little brown cardboard packages.

Robot Cleaner by Jeongmi Lee

Here are some more details from Jeongmi Lee:


This project was conducted in order to search for new possibilities of home appliances.

Our home appliances are always the same. Washing machines continue to spin and refrigerators steadily cool down things. Sticking to what they are good at is not wrong, but isn’t that a bit boring?

Robot Cleaner by Jeongmi Lee

Therefore, I decided to reconsider the relationship between me and home appliances. ‘A robot cleaner’, to be precise. He, according to my description, is quite cute. Watching him work makes recall a cute puppy. (Sure, there are designs that visualizes cockroaches in the market.) Anyway it’s sad to see such a cute product work on cleaning only…

For him (or a robot cleaner in this case), I ask for a morning call, hoping that our relationship gets elevated to the next level. However, unfortunately, he does not have any ‘voice’ devices. All he can do is ‘run’ and ‘absorb’. Okay then.

Robot Cleaner by Jeongmi Lee

I bring up a memory of my mom waking me up every morning when I was young by taking away my blankets. Perhaps he could do that as well! How? I simply tie him to the blanket with a string. He simply has to run when the alarm rings. Then my blanket will get dragged away by him.

Ah, there’s another cute thing about him. He can poop. As you know, we all have to replace tissue filters of robot cleaners ourselves. However, my robot cleaner can automatically extract them, which is amazingly convenient.


See also:

.

Eco-pods by Howeler + Yoon
and Squared Design Lab
Doomsday by
Kacey Wong
Outrace by Clemens
Weisshaar & Reed Kram

Robox by Fabio Novembre

Robox by Fabio Novembre

Italian designer Fabio Novembre will present this robot-shaped shelving unit for design brand Casamania in Milan next month.

Robox by Fabio Novembre

Called Robox, the shelves have a picture frame at the top and a red box representing the robot’s heart.

Robox by Fabio Novembre

More about Fabio Novembre on Dezeen »

The text below is from Fabio Novembre:


Robox

Maybe a day someone would say that Robox represents my cubist period or that the edge solution has been the trick to find out the “right way” after the hyperboles and parabola of my work. From Mazinga to the Transformers the boys of my generation had always have a robot on their side and I was searching for a new function able to justify still its presence next to my desk.

The simple change of a consonant reveals the inclusive attitude of this new domestic hero: a device with a heart, an hard-disk pre-digital where store our memories.

Freestanding bookshelf in polished metal
Dimensions: Height 78 cm x depth 31 cm x width 184 cm
Available in different colours all with red heart


See also:

.

Nemo by Fabio Novembre
for Driade
Abarth Chair by Fabio Novembre for CasamaniaHim and Her by
Fabio Novembre

Talking Piano

[Ed. Note: I found this in the drafts folder… started this draft on February 8th, 2010 and now it’s February 3rd, 2011.]

I’m totally floored.



(via today and tomorrow)

Ninnophono

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ninno2

Previously on Fubiz

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Lights Out

Une courte animation 3D mettant en scène ce personnage robot très attachant. Un excellent travail du graphiste Cormac Kelly actuellement basé à Dublin, à la fois sur les logiciels Softimage, After Effects et Premiere. A découvrir en vidéo dans la suite de l’article.



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Découverte du portfolio de Benedict Campbell rempli de productions visuelles et de nombreuses images pour des marques. Près de 20 années d’expérience, mêlant à la fois des photographies et des illustrations suréalistes du monde robotique. Exemples dans la suite.



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David Löhr

Un impressionnant rendu 3D pour les robots futuristes de l’artiste David Löhr. Une série complète intitulée “Let Science Speak” et commissionnée par l’agence allemande Neteye pour la marque Nivea Men. Plus d’images de son travail dans la suite.

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poses

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giant








Portfolio de David Löhr : Science Under Fire