Tuesday, September 20, 2005
Linux-powered humanoid robot on sale Friday


Wakamaru augments speech synthesis with physical gestures

Mitsubishi says it has tried to create a robot that can sustain meaningful relationships with human beings, initiating conversations with family members and offering services such as alarm, news, weather, and email dictation. The device can look after the house, provide video streams over cellular networks, and cull useful information over the Internet, while maintaining its own autonomous "rhythm of life," the company says.

Wakamaru uses face recognition to identify up to ten people, including two that considers "owners." It uses speech recognition technology to identify 10,000 Japanese words. Speech synthesis capabilities include voice modulation and using gestures when speaking. It recognizes names given it by users, Mitsubishi says.

Wakamaru stands just shy of 4 feet tall (100cm), and weighs 66 pounds (30 kg). It can travel at 1km per hour, avoiding objects and identifying moving people, Mitsubishi says.
Wakamaru's claimed battery life is two hours, after which the robot returns to its charging station before power fails completely. It maintains Internet access and communications capabilities while charging, Mitsubishi says.
Additional interesting details and photos are available on Wakamaru's homepage, here.