September 10, 2012

Not so awfully long ago, you come upon a director on the set of a Hollywood movie and their neck would be festooned with lenses, rangefinders, color calibrators, filters, light meters and more. Making a movie is a lot more than point and shoot, and while the subtleties of shot composition and solidity of lighting may be lost on audiences, directors and cinematographers agonize about them. Until pretty recently that meant a lot of very expensive little telescope-looking things, one for each purpose, hung around your neck.
Nowadays plenty of directors and DOPs simply use their iPads – the $30 Artemis Viewfinder and $3 CinePro apps do most of the jobs all those other lenses used to. Stop to consider that the iPad itself is all of two years old, and one can’t help but sense we’re on the cusp of something… something significant in the way we use technology.
It’s one theme of Robot & Frank, a new independent film starring Frank Langella as an aging ex-jewel thief in the near future who receives a robot butler from his son. Contrasting the human character’s deteriorating mental faculties with his increasing dependence on the robot as both servant and friend, Robot & Frank is both touching and oddly prescient. While cinematic science fiction has predicted the future countless times and with varying degrees of success, something about Robot & Frank’s more gentle approach sets it apart. More than a movie about robot buddies and holo-phones, it’s about how we interact with our tools, and how we come to see them as much more than mere appliances.
This issue, particularly in robotics, is something we’ve discussed before in Digital Manufacturing Report, and will probably discuss again. After all, digital manufacturing itself is a reinvention of the way we work with the tools used to create our products. Robot & Frank almost effortlessly presents a world that’s not too far away: a world of robot companions and ever-more integrated technology as part of our daily lives. But unlike so many dystopian cautionary tales, Robot & Frank embraces the idea, reminding us that we’ve always integrated new technologies, ever since the very beginning. It’s just that now we’re finding that the technologies we’re integrating may soon be the recipients of our love as well as our use.
Robot & Frank arrives on the scene almost exactly 20 years after Ridley Scott’s Blade Runner, which of course tells a very different tale of the interactions and relationships between humans and robots. One can imagine, almost, Blade Runner’s Rick Deckard – retired after a long life of blades and the running thereof, sick at last of hunting down and destroying rogue androids – settling back for his golden years with a friendlier robot buddy as his own companion.
Full story at IMDb
So far, the story surrounding the industrial Internet has been centered around GE, and their plans to infuse their factories with thousands of sensors that will bring big data to manufacturing. But after record-breaking floods from Hurricane Sandy took their toll on New York and New Jersey, environmental and civil engineers have found a new application for the Internet-connected sensor system.
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As the cloud becomes an increasingly attractive option for manufacturers with big needs in IT, scalable options such as outsourced data centers have become a must-have for many companies. But General Motors has taken a step in the opposite direction when its $130 million datacenter went online Monday in the suburb of Warren, Michigan.
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When we talk to manufacturers of any size, one concern across the board has been finding engineers with sufficient education and training to do their job. Taking one step toward alleviating this issue is Siemens, who have launched a U.S. job training initiative for veterans, hoping to round out the training of engineers throughout the country.
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May 17, 2013 |
This week, Airbus towed its newest airliner, the A350 XWB, out of its hangar and is poised to roll it into the spotlight of the upcoming Paris Air Show. The A350 XWB has been designed with the goal of surpassing the 787 in fuel efficiency and comfort, and has forgone metal for composite materials to make it happen.
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May 16, 2013 |
Sander Veenhof and Joris van Tubergen, of the Netherlands, joined their skills in media art and design to merge 3D printing with augmented reality. They call the result "UltimARker" and like the 3D printer it works with it's been designed for the open source community to give consumers more detailed information about their 3D printer.
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May 16, 2013 |
A recent survey by Cisco Systems found that 57 percent of consumers worldwide are in favor of using driverless cars, with 60 percent approval in the United States, suggesting that the world might be more ready for autonomous vehicles to hit the road than previously thought.
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May 10, 2013 |
We've known since Obama's State of the Union address this year that 3D printing is a key pillar in the president's plan for America's future in manufacturing, but on Thursday this was made even more clear with the announcement of a competition to create three manufacturing innovation institutes, to be modeled after a government-funded 3D printing center.
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May 09, 2013 |
Finally, we have someone to look to when we have to assemble our IKEA furniture--or at least something. This week, this solution was showcased at the IEEE International Conference on Robotics and Automation, proving that robots might soon be surpassing humans at yet another task. At least we can gladly hand this one over.
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03/20/2013 | SAS | This white paper examines how an enterprise-wide quality platform can turn existing data into substantial and sustainable revenue growth and cost savings for global manufacturers. The paper is based on the findings of the IW/SAS Enterprise Quality Survey completed by more than 400 manufacturing executives. The objectives of the survey were to determine concerns about quality among manufacturers; investigate the tools used to measure quality; and examine how using enterprise-wide analysis on quality data improves performance.
07/19/2011 | Univa | TATA Steel Automotive Engineering’s concern grew when open source Grid Engine support and development was discontinued by Oracle. Grid Engine is a business critical application in their environment. They recognized the likelihood that product enhancements and innovations would cease. Read how TATA Steel Automotive Engineering moved from a self-support solution to Univa Grid Engine. You can get more out of your environment and your budget with Univa Grid Engine.
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