Circa 2004, we undergrad tagalongs on CMU's robot soccer team were in charge of two things: the Sony Aibo dog's post-goal victory dance, and getting it to ride on a little Sony-provided skateboard. Clearly "dogs on skateboards" never gets old. :)<p>But from the title I was hoping to see a "skateboard <i>with</i> legs" instead. Imagine a little eight-legged horse for your feet, you know?
Pretty cool! At first I wasn’t that impressed because it’s mostly just pushing to get some speed then “passively” riding down some ramps and steps. Then I realized that riding down steps is not a passive activity — most humans will fail their first time and need to learn to maintain balance while the board bounces over rough terrain.<p>I think most inanimate objects would fall off a skateboard when pushed down steps, so it’s an impressive display of balance and tool-use in my opinion!
I really want to have something insightful to say, or perhaps something predictably pessimistic about robotics and AI.<p>But I just can't get over how cute the little fucker is. Little robodog skateboarding around living his best life.
This is the unitree go1 robot dog which sells for $2700. Wasnt sure whether these were shipping/in the wild but obviously they have been for at least a few months!
I'm not an expert, but if I understand the abstract correctly, the big deal isn't the skateboarding at all. This is a modal behavior where both the individual behaviors and the mode transition decisions were trained at the same time. Is this correct?
I know very little in this field, but does this mean they the LED color is serving as debug/log messages for the training process? It sure seems so to my naive reading, and seems so clever.<p><pre><code> We use different LED lights to indicate transitions between dynamic modes
in the automata. Similar to segmentation techniques in computer vision,
the learned hybrid modes can help us analyze motion patterns more
systematically, improve interpretability in decision-making, and refine
control strategies for enhanced adaptability.</code></pre>
I watched the teaser video and was disappointed to see that — despite half a century of precedent — these so called experts failed to include, and focus on, some really gnarly stacks, nosedives and face plants.