Archive for the ‘robotics’ category

GoSmart – Best Earbuds Cable Management Solutions: Evaluated and Tested

January 2, 2013

GoSmart

Best Earbuds Cable Management Solutions: Evaluated and Tested

After extensive product research on available earbuds cable management solutions, five top solutions were tested and evaluated by GoSmart, (including GoSmart President, Dr. Jae Son’s – Harvard PhD in Robotics – own ingenious solution that doesn’t require any hardware).  Below is a simple and free technique that will benefit everyone with consumer electronics.

Check out the GoSmart Cable Wrap Technique Video on YouTube:  “How to Organize Earbuds Cables without Buying Anything”:

GoSmart Wrap Product Comparison:  http://youtu.be/RvMVpOqlmsw
GoSmart Wrap Quick Tip:  http://youtu.be/XzwkMnzd10k

Comparison Charthttp://www.thomas-pr.com/gosmart/EarBudCableManagementComparisonTable.doc 

Meet at CES:  Jae Son, Inventor & President of GoSmart www.justgosmart.com, will be at CES 2013 in Las Vegas, if you’d like to meet with him on his inventions – schedule a private meeting:

  • GoSmart Stylus – the smoothest and most precise stylus for iPads, touchscreen tablets, smartphones and other devices.  Made of ergonomically designed solid aluminum and a flexible patent-pending see-through Teflon coated stainless steel tip with Capacitive Coupling Technology.
  • GoSmart Clip – the essential tool for busy travelers for safer GPS phone use in cars.  It also clips iPhones, Androids, and other smartphones to suitcases, golf carts, baby strollers, shopping carts & more.
  • GoSmart Restpad – 100% natural sheepskin wrist rest relieves 2X as much pressure as other wrist rests – great for carpal tunnel relief.

To schedule meetings at CES, contact:

Karen Thomas/Bill Kouwenhoven/Eva Yutani Thomas PR (631) 549-7575 Karen Thomas kthomas@thomaspr.com cell: (516) 527-9111 Bill Kouwenhoven bkouwen@thomas-pr.com  Eva Yutani:  eyutani@thomaspr.com  www.thomas-pr.com

 

Frank Tobe, The Robot Report in NY Times by Christopher Drew

March 5, 2012

Frank Tobe, The Robot Report in NY Times by Christopher Drew!

Frank Tobe, The Robot Report in NY Times by Christopher Drew!

By Christopher Drew, NY Times

http://www.nytimes.com/2012/03/03/technology/for-irobot-the-future-is-getting-closer.html?pagewanted=1&_r=1&nl=todaysheadlines&emc=tha26

Frank Tobe, an independent analyst who publishes the Robot Report online, said that until Ava was equipped to pick up and handle objects, the robot would have limited uses. But he said the partnership with InTouch gave iRobot a much-needed toehold in health care. iRobot plans to invest $6 million in InTouch, and Mr. Tobe said by combining their technologies, the companies could produce devices at a much lower cost and attract more business.

 

THOMAS PR WEB SITE http://www.thomas-pr.com

 

THOMAS PR CLIENT TESTIMONIAL FROM THEROBOTREPORT.COM

February 27, 2012

 

THOMAS PUBLIC RELATIONS, INC. LOGO - THE #1 PUBLIC RELATIONS AGENCY FOR CONSUMER ELECTRONICS, HIGH-TECH, DIGITAL IMAGING, WEB 2.0,  PHOTO, SOCIAL NETWORKING, PEER TO PEER FILE-SHARING, INTERNET & CUTTING-EDGE TECHNOLOGY. The Robot Report - tracking the business of robotics

“Since I began using Karen and her PR firm to help promote my two websites, traffic has grown steadily and significantly. Now we are able to support paid ads. I appreciate the steady and reliable manner that she has provided input and assistance over the months we have worked together. Thanks very much Karen,” – Frank Tobe, therobotreport.com.

 THOMAS PR WEB SITE http://www.thomas-pr.com

Frank Tobe, The Robot Report in Network World by Sandra Gittlen

February 21, 2012

Frank Tobe, The Robot Report in Network World by Sandra Gittlen!  "As robots themselves evolve, so do their controllers. Tobe [Frank Tobe, The Robot Report] predicts that tablets, smartphones and other handhelds will become a common mechanism for training and manipulating robots."

Frank Tobe, The Robot Report in Network World by Sandra Gittlen!

“As robots themselves evolve, so do their controllers. Tobe [Frank Tobe, The Robot Report] predicts that tablets, smartphones and other handhelds will become a common mechanism for training and manipulating robots.”
By Sandra Gittlen, Network WorldFrank Tobe, The Robot Report in Network World by Sandra Gittlen!  "As robots themselves evolve, so do their controllers. Tobe [Frank Tobe, The Robot Report] predicts that tablets, smartphones and other handhelds will become a common mechanism for training and manipulating robots."

http://www.networkworld.com/news/2012/022012-robots-256123.html

The Industrial Robot Revolution

Stand-alone and embedded industrial robots are taking their place alongside humans
By Sandra Gittlen, Network World
February 20, 2012 06:09 AM ET

Frank Tobe, owner and publisher of “The Robot Report” has observed growing interest in robotics around the globe and across vertical markets. “Robots appeal to an array of businesses, including agricultural, packaging and distribution, and medical,” he says.

He believes a dramatic shift in how robots are made and perceived has sparked their broad acceptance. “People used to think of robots as expensive, monstrous, dangerous, clunky machines that had to have a cage around them. Today’s robots are nothing like that – they are cheaper, lighter, agile, and equipped with sensors to make them safer so they can work alongside humans,” he says.

For instance, robots now handle accuracy-dependent tasks such as polishing and sanding on consumer device assembly lines and automatically fill orders at fast-food chains.

“Some are even embedded into other form factors such as automobiles so they are essentially transparent.” He points to the robotics used to power self-park features in newer cars as an example.

As robots themselves evolve, so do their controllers. Tobe predicts that tablets, smartphones and other handhelds will become a common mechanism for training and manipulating robots.

He also believes that although nowadays robotics technology is incredibly proprietary, it will soon open up. “As the marketplace broadens, robotic operating systems will become more open source and more capable,” Tobe says.

THOMAS PR WEB SITE http://www.thomas-pr.com

Forbes on The Robot Report’s Frank Tobe “FoxConn’s Parent Plans to Double Industrial Robot Population in Less than Five Years” by Alex Knapp

November 3, 2011

Forbes on The Robot Report's Frank Tobe "FoxConn's Parent Plans to Double Industrial Robot Population in Less than Five Years" by Alex Knapp!

Forbes on The Robot Report’s Frank Tobe “FoxConn’s Parent Plans to Double Industrial Robot Population in Less than Five Years”

By Alex Knapp, Forbes

http://www.forbes.com/sites/alexknapp/2011/11/03/foxconns-parent-plans-to-double-industrial-robot-population-in-less-than-five-years/

FoxConn’s Parent Plans To Double Industrial Robot Population In Less Than Five Years
 

Taiwanese manufacturer FoxConn made headlines last summer when it announced that it was aiming to use one million robots to replace part of its workforce in its factories in about three to five years. Now that goal is well on its way.

Terry Gou, the President of Hon Hai Precision Industry Co. (FoxConn’s parent) has signed a letter of intent to build a robotic manufacturing hub in the Central Taiwan Science Park. This is apparently where the robots to work in FoxConn’s factories will be built, and ground was broken on a Research and Design facility for robotics last Saturday. According to Gou, this is the first step towards Hon Hai building a “kingdom of robotics.” According to Gou, the project is expected to generate about $4 billion in revenue over the next few years.

Frank Tobe of the Robot Report is excited by the news. “This will double the world’s industrial robot population! An amazing feat and a blow to German and Japanese robot manufacturers who had hoped to get a share of the business.”

I’m a little surprised myself. Like other robotics manufacturers, I had expected the bulk of FoxConn’s robots to be purchased, not built. It’s an interesting move for the company that represents, I think, a real faith that robotics are going to skyrocket in the near future. Clearly, Hon Hai wants to be in on the ground floor of that revolution.

THOMAS PR WEB SITE: http://www.thomas-pr.com

The Robot Report Robotic Gift Suggestions for the 2011 Holiday Season

October 12, 2011

 

 

The Robot Report - tracking the business of robotics 

The Robot Report

Robotic Gift Suggestions for the 2011 Holiday Season:

http://www.everything-robotic.com/2011/10/robotic-gift-suggestions-for-2011.html  

This holiday season, people are looking to get their money’s worth from gift giving.  Gifts need to be either truly phenomenal, practical or inexpensive.  In the phenomenal category, what’s more exciting than getting a robot as a holiday gift?  The Robot Report, a site which tracks the business of robotics, has prepared this list of 2011 Robotic Holiday Gift Suggestions to please almost every family member:

  • For Grandparents and teenagers: Parrot AR.Drone QuadriCopter – $299
  • For Mom: iRobot’s Scooba bathroom floor cleaning robot – $299
  • For Dad: Adaptive cruise control robot option for new cars – $599 – $2,495
  • For science-interested kids 10 and older: LEGO Mindstorms NXT kit – $273
  • For girls younger than 10: Penbo the affectionate waddling penguin – $45 — OR– Fijit the squishy dancing friend – $42
  • For the philanthropic: MyKeepon – $49 (part of the proceeds go to support autism research) — OR — donate a $280,000PR2 to your alma mater’s robotics lab
  • For readers of all ages: Selected books about robots and robotics – $10-$221

See: http://www.everything-robotic.com/2011/10/robotic-gift-suggestions-for-2011.html for product descriptions, prices and where to buy.

About Robot Report

Founded in 2008, The Robot Report is the first internet publication tracking the business of the robotics industry and the future of robotics, with an eye towards investment information on publicly-traded and privately-owned robotics businesses. The Robot Report links to the Everything-Robotic blog for periodic in-depth personal insights from The Robot Report’s Editor and Publisher, Frank Tobe.

For more information, see www.therobotreport.com.

For more info, contact:
Karen Thomas/Eva Yutani

Thomas PR
(631) 549-7575 kthomas@thomaspr.com eyutani@thomaspr.com http://www.thomas-pr.com 

CNET on The Robot Report “Is it Time to Invest in Robot Manufacturers?” by Tim Hornyak

August 6, 2011

CNET on The Robot Report "Is it Time to Invest in Robot Manufacturers?" by Tim Hornyak!

CNET on The Robot Report “Is it Time to Invest in Robot Manufacturers?”
By Tim Hornyak, CNET

http://news.cnet.com/8301-11386_3-20087775-76/is-it-time-to-invest-in-robot-manufacturers-q-a/

Filed Under: Cutting Edge, Business Tech
Is it time to invest in robot manufacturers? (Q&A)

By: Tim Hornyak

August 4, 2011 1:01 PM PDT

They vacuum our floors and help fight our wars, but robots always seem to be just over the horizon. They’re never as commonplace as we expected.

Still, that hasn’t stopped prognosticators from predicting that robots will be the automobile of the 21st century, or that robots makers are now where Microsoft was in the late 1970s. The markets for industrial and service robots are already worth billions of dollars each, according to the International Federation of Robotics (IFR) data.
CNET on The Robot Report "Is it Time to Invest in Robot Manufacturers?" by Tim Hornyak!

Could hundreds of thousands of assembly robots like ABB’s Frida replace humans at Foxconn plants?

(Credit: ABB)

Robotkind certainly got a major boost this week when electronics giant Foxconn, which makes everything from iPads to LCD TVs, announced that it’s replacing some of its human workers, which number more than 900,000, with more than a million robots.

Of course, we all wish we’d bought shares in Microsoft and Google early on. That’s the kind of thinking that led Frank Tobe, author of The Robot Report blog, to look into the sector and try to identify publicly traded robot makers that have growth potential.

In a recent critique of a list of 10 robot makers that appeared on the Nasdaq Web site, the Report’s sub-blog, Everything Robotic, noted that some of the world’s biggest robot companies, such as Japanese industrial robot makers Yaskawa and Fanuc, were not included.

Tobe also pointed out that Nasdaq missed rising stars like Intuitive Surgical, which produces the da Vinci surgery system, and Adept Technology, which makes automation systems.

Intrigued, we asked Tobe, a former political consultant, why he thinks now might be a good time to invest in our robotic future.

Q: Robots are far from mainstream. Why should anyone consider robot makers as an investment?
It’s true that robotics is a niche market at present. Industrial robotics has been a steady $5 billion industry but service robotics has been rapidly increasing and is estimated to hit $20 billion by 2020. Combined with an estimated $10 billion for industrial robots, that takes it from niche to a new status.

Microsoft’s Xbox Kinect device is a good example of an unintended consequence helping the robotics industry by radically cutting costs for vision systems. iPads and tablets are another example helping cut the learning curve by using familiar devices as front-end controllers. Hence the need to pay attention and track the progress of all that is robotics-related. An investor doesn’t want to be left behind when the market takes off.

CNET on The Robot Report "Is it Time to Invest in Robot Manufacturers?" by Tim Hornyak!
Frank Tobe writes The Robot Report.

(Credit: Frank Tobe)

Why did you put together this stock list, and how did you do it?
As an investor and wanna-be futurist, I thought the robotics industry was ready to take off. So I called my broker and asked for a list of stocks to buy. He could only come up with only two. I tried a quick look at Bloomberg and found the same problem.

The IFR does an annual statistical analysis of the industry and includes company names (but not whether they are publicly traded or privately held) nor whether they are a division within a larger company or totally dedicated to robotics. And you have to pay thousands of dollars for their reports.

So, since I couldn’t really find the kind of information I needed, I decided it would be fun to compile the list myself.

I harvested every article I could find on robotics, went to the Web sites of the companies mentioned, and added them to my database. I supplemented that information with member lists from global robotic associations. Then I filed the companies [by category]: industrial, service for government and corporate use, service for individual and personal use, ancillary businesses, and research facilities and educational institutions. It turns out that less 20 percent are publicly traded and 60 percent are foreign companies.

I thought it would be interesting to make a Web site dedicated to tracking the business of robotics and share the knowledge I was gathering and the database I was compiling. Hence, The Robot Report.

What are the most promising sectors within robotics–for instance, military versus medical?
War, security, defense, and first-responder robotics are a big and growing market. But it’s a marketplace dominated by aerospace conglomerates who gobble up start-ups and control the pace of development to what the government is willing to buy. Even though overall defense budgets are being pruned, robotics is steadily increasing. The U.S. does things differently than most of the rest of the world. DARPA, NASA, and the Department of Defense drive research funding in the U.S. and their focus is on space, military, and defense.

Commercial applications trickle down. The best example is Robonaut 2, a NASA-driven effort to provide in-space astronauts with a robotic assistant. General Motors was solicited to be a partner and the resulting two-armed robot is now in the lab aboard the International Space Station. GM has begun to transition their Robonaut 2 knowledge into practical uses in GM factories.

America just recently set up the National Robotics Initiative and the Advanced Manufacturing Partnership to do the same. I agree with the concept that manufacturing is necessary. An untapped and quite large marketplace in manufacturing is that of factory assistant–a trainable, safe robotic helper–to increase productivity and augment capabilities of skilled factory workers.

CNET on The Robot Report "Is it Time to Invest in Robot Manufacturers?" by Tim Hornyak!
Robonaut 2, an example of trickle-down robotics.

(Credit: NASA)

Heartland Robotics’ privately funded endeavor has a greater chance of breaking into this market than the big robot manufacturers because Heartland is starting fresh, has a specific business focus, and has a price goal that makes sense and is affordable to small businesses that manufacture things.

So, to answer your question, small- and medium-size business robotic factory assistants and continued defense/security robotics are the two big marketplaces where I see near-term breakthroughs and meaningful robotic sales. Health care and home personal assistance robots are farther down the road.

If one does decide to invest in robot makers, what’s your recommendation for a weighting as a proportion of the average tech portfolio?
Fidelity Investments suggests that technology stocks represent 30 percent of an aggressive equity portfolio. They were, of course, thinking of Amazon, Google, Apple, and Salesforce when they thought of “technology.” Robotics has yet to have its own place in that formula. The big robotic companies are all foreign-owned and many don’t trade on U.S. exchanges.

Nevertheless, some robotic stocks are good prospects for growth and I think that 20 percent of technology stocks should be robotic.

What are your favorite robot stocks now?
Even though the aerospace/defense industry is likely to be a steady beneficiary of robotic development, and two or three should take a position in a robotics portfolio, I have a bias to not invest in that sector. This limits my personal portfolio to non-defense stocks like American robot manufacturers Adept and iRobot, Fanuc, American health care robotic device makers Intuitive Surgical and Mako Surgical, and ancillary businesses to the robotics industry like haptics provider Immersion.

Down the road, look for Caterpillar and John Deere to emerge as big players in robotics–John Deere with their new line of lawnmowers and both companies with driverless agricultural and construction equipment.

THOMAS PR WEB SITE: http://www.thomaspr.com

THE ROBOT REPORT LAUNCHES JULY ISSUE – FIRST INTERNET PUBLICATION TRACKING ROBOTICS BUSINESS NEWS

July 6, 2011
 The Robot Report - tracking the business of roboticsObama at Carnegie Mellon 

Contact:
Karen Thomas/Eva Yutani
Thomas PR (631) 549-7575
kthomas@thomaspr.com eyutani@thomaspr.com www.thomaspr.com 
www.thomaspublicrelations.com

Photos:
Obama at Carnegie Mellon: http://www.thomas-pr.com/136/photos/therobotreportobama.html  
RoboStox Chart: http://www.thomas-pr.com/136/photos/therobotreportrobo.html  
UC Berkeley PR2 Robot Folding Laundry: http://www.thomas-pr.com/136/photos/therobotreportlaundry.html
Titanium Glove: http://www.thomas-pr.com/136/photos/therobotreportglove.html
Carl’s Jr Robot: http://www.thomas-pr.com/136/photos/therobotreportcarlsjr.html
Bra Created with 3D Printer: http://www.thomas-pr.com/136/photos/therobotreportbra.html
Close-up of Bra Created with 3D Printer: http://www.thomas-pr.com/136/photos/therobotreportbraclose.html
The Robot Report Logo: http://www.thomas-pr.com/136/photos/therobotreportlogo.html
 

THE ROBOT REPORT LAUNCHES JULY ISSUE –
FIRST INTERNET PUBLICATION TRACKING ROBOTICS BUSINESS NEWS 

Latest News on Obama’s $70 Million “Co-Robots,” Robo-Stox™ Stocks Performance, Driverless Cars, Food Processing & Laundry Robots, 3D Printing & More

July 7, 2011, Santa Barbara, CA — The Robot Report www.therobotreport.com, the first internet publication dedicated to tracking the burgeoning business of robotics, announced today that the July issue is now available online at: www.therobotreport.com.  The July issue of The Robot Report features the latest breaking news on Obama’s Robots Initiative, driverless cars, robots in the food processing industry, a new laundry robot App, 3D Printing developments, and the latest on robotics stock performance with Robo-Stox™.  The Robot Report is the leading resource for business news and links about the growing robotics industry. 

News featured in the July issue of The Robot Report 

  • President Obama’s $70 Million Robotics Initiative for “Co-Robots” Announced at Carnegie Mellon:  for “co-robots” to work closely with factory workers, healthcare providers, soldiers, surgeons, astronauts and more to carry out key hard-to-do tasks.

  • The Robot Report’s Monthly Robo-Stox™ Global Robotic Stocks Report and Chart:  compares internationally publicly-traded robotics stock segments to NASDAQ.

  • Driverless Cars debuted in the Europe — and Nevada opens its highways to them!

  • Why were U.S. Robotics used in Japan’s Fukushima Nuclear Disaster?

  • Food Processing Growth Opportunities for Robotics:  “Carls Jr.’s ad says:  ‘If machines can’t eat it, machines shouldn’t make it.’  But robots do process food.”

  • 3D Printing Goes Mainstream:  from titanium gloves to plastic bikinis.

  • UC Berkeley Student Team Solves Laundry Problem with Robots: “The difficulties of loading a hamper of dirty clothes into a washer, transferring it to a dryer, removing and then folding all the different types of clothing and undergarments is a desired app for a home robot – and one being tackled at UC Berkeley using a WillowGarage PR2 robot.”

  • The Robot Report’s Comprehensive Directory of 1,300 Links to Robot Manufacturers, Educational & Research facilities, and Start-up Companies.

  • And much more…

“The Robot Report is the only publication to feature the latest in business information on advancements in the robotics industry.  The site is a key resource for entrepreneurs, companies (from start-up to Fortune 500), and stock holders looking for information on this important industry,” said Frank Tobe, Editor and Publisher, The Robot Report.  For more info, see The Robot Report www.therobotreport.com, the authority on robotics business news. 

About The Robot Report

 

Founded in 2008, The Robot Report is the first internet publication tracking the business of the robotics industry and the future of robotics, with an eye towards investment information on publicly-traded and privately-owned robotics businesses.  The Robot Report researches companies and technology all over the world, gathering industry news to track the business of robotics, and has developed proprietary (Robo-Stox™) methods to report and compare on robot industry stock performance to the NASDAQ Composite Index.  The Robot Report has a comprehensive worldwide database of public and private companies in the robotics industry, split into two segments:  publicly traded stocks and privately-owned companies, and further sliced into five relevant robotic segments.  The Robot Report links to the Everything-Robotic blog for periodic in-depth personal insights from The Robot Report’s Editor and Publisher, Frank Tobe. 

For more information, see www.therobotreport.com.

Thomas PR Signs The Robot Report – Tracking the business of robotics

June 29, 2011

The Robot Report - tracking the business of robotics

 

Thomas PR Signs The Robot Report – Tracking the business of robotics

http://www.therobotreport.com/

THOMAS PR WEB SITE: http://www.thomaspr.com