In today's show, we hear about two demonstrations that caught our attention at the IEEE/RSJ International Conference on Intelligent Robots and Systems (IROS). Péter Fankhauser from the ETHZ in Zurich tells us about the Rezero ballbot, a balancing robot that speeds around on a sphere. [url]Mike Rubenstein[/url] from the Self-organizing Systems Research Group at Harvard then tells us about their efforts to make swarms of 1024 robots a reality with the kilobot project.
Péter Fankhauser
[caption id="attachment_2038" align="alignleft" width="200" caption="© Karl Hug Ringier AG"]

The interdisciplinary team developed the ballbot, a robot that balances and drives around on a ball. Using a single ball instead of wheels allows the robot to move spontaneously in any direction, fit into tight spaces, and achieve high speeds. The robot was often seen zipping through the hallways at IROS earlier this month.
Fankhauser tells us about his learning experience, challenges in working in large crossdisciplinary teams, the secret behind the ballbot capabilities and the future steps in making the ballbot a commercial reailty.
Mike Rubenstein

After bording a plane with 100+ robots, Rubenstein was able to demonstrate the system at IROS.
In the future, Rubenstein hopes to implement his thesis work on "Self-assembly and self-healing for robotic collectives" on the kilobots. An example of such a system is show in the video below.
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