
| RoboEarth teaches robots to learn from peers RoboEarth European scientists and engineers have developed RoboEarth, the “World Wide Web for robots,” to allow robots to learn from the experience of their peers, thus enabling them to take on tasks that they weren’t necessarily programmed to perform. Using a database with intranet and Internet functionality, the system collects and stores information about object recognition, navigation, and tasks and transmits the data to robots linked to the network. The following Robot is slow and dumb, yet anything that it learns can be taught to other robots via the internet. The following video starts out with words as follows: At its coure, RoboEarth is a World Wide Web for robots: a giant network and database repository where robots can share information and learn from each other about their behavior and their environment. Next |