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PLEN maker Akazawa goes bust
Systec Akazawa Co., a key player in the Osaka robot scene and maker of the PLEN desktop hobby robot, has gone bust.
The aircraft parts manufacturer is set to declare bankruptcy with liabilities of about 700 million yen ($7.4 million), according to Nikkei Net, which cited a sharp decline in orders.
The company has apparently ceased operations, and its website is offline. The family-run firm was headed by President Ryohei Akazawa, known for his involvement with RoboCup champions Team Osaka. The team won the RoboCup championship in its division five times.
In 2006, the company introduced PLEN, a $2,600 Bluetooth-controlled hobby bot that could rollerskate and skateboard. There was no word about how the bankruptcy will affect users on the PLEN website.
PLEN won't be the first robot to be hit by hard economic times (q.v. Sony's Qrio), but Akazawa's collapse will hit the Osaka scene hard. I expect other robot ventures to succumb to the recession as well. Via Nikkei Net
TV show gets robot mascot
Tokyo
The MBS TV show is called Chikyu Kando Haitatsunin Hashire! Posutoman Run! Postman Run! and it's about celebrities who are charged with delivering mail overseas.
Posuto-kun comes with over 30 original motions and may hit stores between February and March, with a price tag of $3,500.
Via Robot Watch
Japan unveils gov't funded fashion bot
The Japanese government has spent a whopping $2 million developing a female "fashion" robot that was shown of by the state-run AIST research lab near
The
4C looks like a combination of AIST's HRP series and the popular Actroid android made by entertainment company Kokoro. Powered by 30 motors, 4C is designed to walk and look like a typical Japanese woman - ignore the silver body armor - and can perform a variety of facial expressions such as surprise.
Reports say AIST will sell 4C body frames for $200,000 apiece.
Robot fish to sniff out pollution
The first school of autonomous robotic fish designed to detect pollution around the world will soon be released into the ocean, according to BMT Group. The robot carp developed in the
The fish will be released off northern
"While using shoals of robotic fish for pollution detection in harbours might appear like something straight out of science fiction, there are very practical reasons for choosing this form," said Rory Doyle, senior research scientist at BMT Group.
"In using robotic fish we are building on a design created by hundreds of millions of years' worth of evolution which is incredibly energy efficient. This efficiency is something we need to ensure that our pollution detection sensors can navigate in the underwater environment for hours on end."
Life-size Gundam coming to Tokyo
Besides Godzilla, there's one more big "g" known throughout Japan and I'm not talking about gomi. This year marks the 30th anniversary of the Gundam anime franchise, and a life-size, 60-foot model of the RX-78-2 star robot will touch down in a Tokyo park to mark the occasion.
The giant bot will tower over groveling fans of the space opera in Shiokaze Park in Odaiba, an artificial island on Tokyo Bay, in July and August. Light and mist will emanate from the fiberglass statue, which will have a moving head. Far more impressive than the replica of the Statue of Libertythat stands nearby. Perhaps a duel is in order.
