AI & Humanoids

Watch: World's first front-flippin' humanoid robot

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The PM01 looks like it's ready to fight off mythical creatures in an effort to save the human race
EngineAI
The PM01 certainly looks like it has the confidence to tackle any situation
EngineAI
The PM01 looks like it's ready to fight off mythical creatures in an effort to save the human race
EngineAI

Chinese robotics company Zhongqing Robotics (aka EngineAI) just front-flipped into the humanoid robotics scene. The firm has posted a video of what is claimed to be the world's first humanoid robot front flip.

Robot backflips are so passé ... Ever since Boston Dynamics' Atlas stuck that backflip back in 2017 and wowed (frightened?) the entirety of humanity, it seems like any ol' robot can throw a backflip now. But to do a front flip is significantly more difficult than a backflip – just ask any gymnast.

Perception alone makes it more difficult, as the moment you begin to rotate forward, your eyes lose sight of the ground and you can't spot your landing until the very last second. The human brain feels safer falling away from the ground than throwing oneself blindly forward and upside down, hoping to nail a clean landing.

And then there are the sheer body mechanics involved. Backflips use stronger muscle groups like your glutes, hamstrings, and back muscles. Front flips use more of your abs and hip flexors. The tuck position is far easier in a backward rotation than what's required for a front flip.

The PM01 certainly looks like it has the confidence to tackle any situation
EngineAI

Hesitation is the main human hurdle for rotating your body through the air, be it forward or backward. Without a clean, confident spring and solid rotation, you're going to land on your head at some point. And that's a scary thought.

But none of that matters, because this is a robot and it has no fear, no hesitation, and no sense of self-preservation. Its designers can put any range of powerful electric motors and joints into its anatomy. And it's been coded and instructed to flip, so it flips.

Not to say this isn't an impressive feat, because it is. The field of robotics – particularly humanoid, general-purpose robots – is advancing at an incredible rate. Ten years ago, this kind of stuff simply did not exist. And now you can buy your very own open-source PM01 robot for US$13,700, according to EngineAI's website. Its specs aren't bad: 5-DoF (degrees of freedom) in each arm and six per leg. That's 23-DoF in body movement in total. The bot also boasts 221 lb-ft of torque (300 Nm), which seems like quite a punch when the little guy is only 4.5 ft (138 cm) tall and weighs 88 lb (40kg).

Take a peek as EngineAI's general-purpose humanoid robot nails a front flip and walks off like a champ – and with one of the most human-like gaits we've seen to date, which is also quite impressive.

We'd love to see the blooper reel.

Source: EngineAI

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10 comments
Metal Organic Kraftwerk
Seemed like they were able to use the free rotation of the arms to add extra momentum. Pretty cool!
christopher
Nothing to loose your head over.
Rocky Stefano
$13k for a programmable robot? Why would you need factory workers anymore?
JS
@Metal Organic Kraftwerk - I specifically watched that several times over, initially thinking "they're cheating!" But after watching it back, the result of the movement isn't terribly different than the force a person could generate with a similar flail of the arms. Awkward though, for sure ... kinda like the spelling of the word "awkward," when you think about it.
@christopher - HAHA!
windykites
These flipping robots are getting everywhere! I wouldn't like to meet one walking down the street.
veryken
That video right there is good physiological, weight-distributional, and gymnastics-coachable display of how the head affects flipping.
michael_dowling
What is the practical value of this ability? I am waiting for an affordable helper robot for general unstructured tasks around the home,ideally like the one in the wonderful movie,Bicentennial Man.
Nelson
Tech lords like Musk are upset we are not breeding enough while spending fortunes on AI and robotics to make humans obsolete?!
Gregg Eshelman
It's using a straight knee walk like humans instead of the bent knees like most other bipedal robots.
rgbatduke
Sigh. The only thing that differentiates the "front" from the "back" of any vaguely humanoid robot is (at most) a stenciled word on the torso. If one put the head back on the robot (it's actually cheating that it flips without it as it alters both the center of mass and moment of inertia for the free flip) backwards, would it not suddenly become a backflip? Without a head, is it not a unspecified-side flip? The SHAPE of the chest is just a shell. The joints on its limbs are definitely sculpted to look like they only bend one way, but in fact their range of motion is likely limited not by their shape but by the internal motors and how they are coupled. You could likely take this same robot, reverse all of its shell sculpture, make some small adjustments in its limb articulation range, and this would appear to be a backflip.
Also, I have to ask -- what is the net cash value of the ability to backflip OR front flip? I remember owning a wind-up toy that would do this -- step step step and flip, step step step and flip -- usually perfectly. Made of plastic, cost at the time a few dollars. If they want to impress me, show me the robot setting a table, placing food in serving dishes on the table, clearing the table after a meal storing the leftovers in storage containers placed in the fridge or not as needed, washing the dishes by hand, drying them by hand and then putting them away. Throw in the ability to go to the fridge, take out a beer identified by brand, open it, and bring it to me where I sit and MAYBE you've got a sale...