Grrr. People being sloppy. "a spider-like robot that climbs and 
maintains wind turbines". Really?

No. From a single reporter's story, archived at gizmodo but only 
it seems on .com.au and .co.uk, we have an article from nine 
months ago about a "spiderman-like" wall climbing robot. There
is nothing spider, or indeed spiderman -like about this robot 
except the reporter, who, it turns out, seems to have a thing 
about spiderman, and like Jane Siberry's dog, everything reminds 
her of spiderman, as becomes evident if you google "leslie horn" 
and "spiderman". 

So some hack reads this, without digging further, and truncates 
spiderman to spider for the current article. In fact, the robot 
is described and pictured in the original press release from GE, 
which Ms Horn's Gizmodo article links to, here:

http://www.gereports.com/go-go-gadget/

and the word "spider" is conspicuous by its absense. The robot has
soft flexible caterpillar treads, which surround it forming a 
soft seal, and a vacuum motor pulls a vacuum in the space thus 
formed under the robot's "belly". It relies on a relatively smooth 
surface and an umbilical to power the pump. Oh, yes, and this 
robot does not "maintain" anything. It uses a video camera to do 
inspections. A modded version may use radar to ping the blades 
for defects, but it has no capacity to do any sort of repair.

Another example of the wretched quality of modern reporting, where 
a sensational lie seems to always be preferred to the truth when 
it can garner more eyes, and thus more pennies, for the website.

 -Pete



> From: Portside labor [[email protected]]
> Sent: Friday, March 08, 2013 8:20 PM
> To: [email protected]
> Subject: New robots in the workplace: Job creators or job terminators?
> 
> 
>  <http://portside.org>  <http://portside.org/>  <http://portside.org> 
> Portside Labor
>  
> <http://portside.org/2013-03-08/new-robots-workplace-job-creators-or-job-ter
> minators> New robots in the workplace: Job creators or job terminators? 
> 
> Cecilia Kang
> March 8, 2013
> Washington Post
> <http://www.washingtonpost.com/business/technology/new-robots-in-the-workpla
> ce-job-creators-or-job-terminators/2013/03/06/a80b8f34-746c-11e2-8f84-3e4b51
> 3b1a13_story.html> 
> 
>  
> 
> Today's robots can do far more than their primitive, single-task ancestors.
> And there is a broad debate among economists, labor experts and companies
> over whether the trend will add good-paying jobs to the economy by helping
> firms run more efficiently or simply leave human workers out in the cold.
> 
>  
> 
> 
>  
> 
> BOSTON - At MIT, a management robot is learning to run a factory and give
> orders to artificial co-workers, and a BakeBot robot is reading recipes,
> whipping together butter, sugar and flour and putting the cookie mix in the
> oven. At the University of California at Berkeley, a robot can do laundry
> and then neatly fold -T-shirts and towels.
> 
> A wave of new robots, affordable and capable of accomplishing advanced human
> tasks, is being aimed at jobs that are high in the workforce hierarchy.
> 
> The consequences of this leap in technology loom large for the American
> worker - and perhaps their managers, too. Back in the 1980s, when automated
> spray-painting and welding machines took hold in factories, some on the
> assembly line quickly discovered they had become obsolete.
> 
> Today's robots can do far more than their primitive, single-task ancestors.
> And there is a broad debate among economists, labor experts and companies
> over whether the trend will add good-paying jobs to the economy by helping
> firms run more efficiently or simply leave human workers out in the cold.
and maintain> 
>  "We've reached a tipping point in robotics," said Daniela Rus, director of
> MIT's Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory. The
> possibility is to run a factory, she added, "all while you are sleeping."
> 
> U.S. firms have already begun deploying some of these newer robots. General
> Electric has developed spiderlike robots to climb and maintain tall wind
> turbines. Kiva Systems, a company bought by Amazon.com, has orange
> ottoman-shaped robots that sweep across warehouse floors, pull products off
> shelves and deliver them for packaging. Some hospitals have begun employing
> robots that can move room to room to dispense medicines to patients or
> deliver the advice of a doctor who is not on site.
> 
> Many companies see such automation as the key to cutting costs and staying
> competitive. Sales of industrial robots rose 38 percent between 2010 and
> 2012 and are poised to bring in record revenue this year, according to
> industry analyst Dan Kara.
> 
> CLICK HERE TO VIEW COMPLETE ARTICLE
> <http://www.washingtonpost.com/business/technology/new-robots-in-the-workpla
> ce-job-creators-or-job-terminators/2013/03/06/a80b8f34-746c-11e2-8f84-3e4b51
> 3b1a13_print.html> 
> 
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