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How Michael Crichton, Sean Connery and Wesley Snipes influenced the establishment of an outstanding robotics company Did you?

The story begins with the 1993 action thriller "Rising Sun" movie set, starring Connelly and Snipes, based on the Crickton novel of the same name. 

During a week of filming in the hot California sun, Mark Reay, then MIT professor, realized he had more to do.

"We were providing robots in the background of the movie scene," Raibert said. "And we were there for a week, and it was a week in hell." In the

set, Raibert, among other things, heat is a variable that doesn't exist in the controlled MIT Lab. For a while, he said, "Nothing worked properly." It was around this time that Raybert decided to create Boston Dynamics.

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Anderson Cooper and the founder of Boston Dynamics, Mark Reaybert, are headquartered in Massachusetts. Eric Kerchner / 60 minutes

This exclusive company occasionally knows aboutViralvideos, especially videos of robots dancing mashed potatoes. It has been. Last year on the song "Do You Love Me?", They brought 60 Minutes correspondent Anderson Cooper to New England headquarters and made almost 30 years of effortto advance robotic capabilities{38. } I agreed to look unusual. 

“I think there are three really important elements in robotics,” said Kevin Blanche Spore, one of the lead engineers at Boston Dynamics. "There is vision, mobility, and maneuverability."

Unlike many Hollywood movies where robots are portrayed with advanced human-like artificial intelligence, Boston Dynamics is balanced and It focuses on what is called "athletic intelligence," which is the ability of machines to control posture and the like. , And how to move them.

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Eric Kerchner / 60 minutes

Company "build," The "break and fix" approach means that sometimes the machine is literally pushed to collect data and improve functionality. 

"Robots of this generation will be different," said Robert Plater, CEO of Boston Dynamics. "They will work among us. They will work next to us in the way we help them, but they will also take some of the burden from us."

Boston Dynamics wants humans to work with robots in more ways soon. In the 60th minute of March 2021, the company debuted one of its latest works, a robot called "Stretch". According to the company, it can move 800 boxes per hour in the warehouse and can operate continuously for up to 16 hours without replacing the battery.

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Boston Dynamics debuted "Stretch" in 60 minutes last yearEric Carrchiner / 60 minutes

Some have expressed concern about whether advances in robotics could lead to human automation and unemployment. Robert Plater, CEO of Boston Dynamics, believes these concerns are exaggerated. 

"At the same time, you are creating a new industry," Playter told 60 Minutes. "We envision a job that we would call a" robot wrangler. " He will launch and manage 5-10 robots at a time and keep them all working.

"Stretch" will be available earlier this year, joining Boston Dynamics' four-legged dog-like robot , starting at around $ 75,000 per unit. 

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"Spot" uses 5 3D cameras to map the surroundings and avoid obstacles in all directions. It's a robot.  Eric Kerchner / 60 minutes

It turns out that "spots" work in a variety of situations, from construction sites to police investigations. increase. Its potential for future use remains as spectacular as the imagination of those who are willing to buy it.

As for the future of Boston Dynamics, Mark Reay's initiative has come a long way from these struggles at the Rising Sunset. His company is currently building robots that look like they are at home with high-budget science fiction. FI film.

Chernobyl "spot" footage from the University of Bristol, UK

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