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Engineering the Future of Robotics

Save on conference passes to the 2022 Robotics Summit

2 min read
Banner ad for Robotics Summit & Expo

The 2022 Robotics Summit & Expo will take May 10-11, 2022, in Boston. This year's program will cover trending topics in the industry such as interoperability, cloud technology, autonomous mobile robots, human scale automation, collaborative robots, and more.

Robotics Summit & Expo

This sponsored article is brought to you by Robotics Summit & Expo.

The Robotics Summit & Expo is returning to Boston on May 10-11 at the Boston Convention and Exhibition Center!

This international event will bring attendees content that will help them to design, development, manufacture, and deliver commercial-class robots.

This year's program has an exceptional lineup of speakers covering trending topics in the industry such as interoperability, cloud technology, autonomous mobile robots, human scale automation, collaborative robots, motion control and so much more within the five dedicated tracks of the program.

Attendees will hear keynote presentations from industry thought leaders including:

  • Brian Gerkey, Co-founder/CEO, Open Robotics: "Robotics Needs a Babelfish: The Skinny on Robot Interoperability"
  • Rick Faulk, CEO, Locus Robotics Robotics: "Automation in the Warehouse: Optimizing Productivity with Business Intelligence"
  • Jon Hirschtick, General Manager of Onshape and Atlas, PTC: "The Future of Product Design in a Connected World"
  • Melonee Wise, VP of Robotics Automation, Zebra Technologies: "Why the Cloud is a Force Multiplier for Robotics"
  • Greg Smith, President, Industrial Automation Group, Teradyne: "Collaborative Robotics: Resolving the Manufacturing Labor Crisis, Creating New Opportunities"
  • Kevin Blankespoor, VP & General Manager of Warehouse Robotics, Boston Dynamics: "The Next Generation of Mobile Robot Applications"

Not only does our event provide our attendees with educational sessions and access to some of the leading robotics companies around the nation but we also have complimentary events and unlimited networking opportunities for our attendees, including a reception on the expo floor, a career fair after the event, and a chance to walk Boston Dynamic's Spot quadruped.

Attendees will have access to two additional co-located events: The Healthcare Robotics Engineering Forum and DeviceTalks Boston.

For an additional bonus, you can save 25% on your full conference pass right now by using code RSE25 at checkout!

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The Bionic-Hand Arms Race

The prosthetics industry is too focused on high-tech limbs that are complicated, costly, and often impractical

12 min read
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A photograph of a young woman with brown eyes and neck length hair dyed rose gold sits at a white table. In one hand she holds a carbon fiber robotic arm and hand. Her other arm ends near her elbow. Her short sleeve shirt has a pattern on it of illustrated hands.

The author, Britt Young, holding her Ottobock bebionic bionic arm.

Gabriela Hasbun. Makeup: Maria Nguyen for MAC cosmetics; Hair: Joan Laqui for Living Proof
DarkGray

In Jules Verne’s 1865 novel From the Earth to the Moon, members of the fictitious Baltimore Gun Club, all disabled Civil War veterans, restlessly search for a new enemy to conquer. They had spent the war innovating new, deadlier weaponry. By the war’s end, with “not quite one arm between four persons, and exactly two legs between six,” these self-taught amputee-weaponsmiths decide to repurpose their skills toward a new projectile: a rocket ship.

The story of the Baltimore Gun Club propelling themselves to the moon is about the extraordinary masculine power of the veteran, who doesn’t simply “overcome” his disability; he derives power and ambition from it. Their “crutches, wooden legs, artificial arms, steel hooks, caoutchouc [rubber] jaws, silver craniums [and] platinum noses” don’t play leading roles in their personalities—they are merely tools on their bodies. These piecemeal men are unlikely crusaders of invention with an even more unlikely mission. And yet who better to design the next great leap in technology than men remade by technology themselves?

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