• Robots being trialled in California to patrol hi-tech firms
  • Uses laser scanners, cameras, microphones and even odour sensors
  • Robots do not carry weapons - but can alert police and controllers
  • Inventors claim it will be able to monitor areas for potential crimes

Five foot tall robots equipped with microphones, speakers and a hos of sensors have gone on patrol in silicon Valley.

A robotics firm in Mountain View says it is already using the robots - and say dozens could be on patrol by the end of the year.

Called the Knightscope, the robots are designed to spot suspicious behaviour and alert controllers.

Its inventors hope it could eventually patrol malls, office and even local neighbourhoods - and say they believe it will cut crime by 50%.

'Imagine a friend that can see, hear, feel and smell that would tirelessly watch over your corporate campus or neighborhood, keep your loved ones safe and put a smile on everyone passing by.

'Imagine if we could utilize technology to make our communities stronger and safer…..together,' the firm says.

The five foot tall robots have a combination of laser scanning, wheel encoders, inertial measurements, and GPS that allows fully autonomous operation and charging.

It also has odour detectors, and can even monitor air pollution as it travels around.

Using cameras they can also read upto 300 car numberplates a minute, allowing them to monitor traffic.

The Knightscope K5 robot security guards are 5ft tall robots that come with GPS, lasers, and heat-detecting technology.

They are designed to function without any human manipulation and are built with surveillance cameras and sensors, odor detectors, thermal imaging system, and scanners which can read an impressive number of 300 car registration plates every single minute. When on a patrolling duty, it uses lasers to calculate the distance and also relies on its GPS system.

The robots are autonomous and designed to avoid confrontations.

When someone steps right in front of one, the robot will stop, and move around them - while sending video inside to a control center where a human is monitoring.

If a would-be burglar persists, co-founder Stacy Stephens said: 'Then, the robot is looking at the video, listening for glass breakage, any loud sound that breaking in would cause. We'll get the license plate, picture of the vehicle, geotag location, and time.'

The robots patrol using a similar technology as the self-driving Google car.

'It has a LIDAR (light image detection and ranging) that's doing a 3D map,' Stephens told CBS.

'It will geofence itself and give itself a perimeter within which it will operate. And it moves around within that perimeter freely and it chooses its own path.'

The robots will be deployed in outdoor settings, such as corporate campuses, college campuses and open air malls.

So far, the company has built seven robots and plans to deploy four of them towards the end of the year.

The K5 robot is also built with a button on top of its head.

This button can be pressed down by anyone who needs some help, and the firm has even addressed fears it will put human security guards out of work.

'I believe robots are the perfect tools to handle the monotonous and sometimes dangerous work in order to free up humans to more judiciously address activities requiring higher-level thinking, hands-on encounters or tactical planning,' said Knightscope in a blog post.



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20.11.2014 | 475 Aufrufe

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