This blog is dedicated to sharing the concept that our hands are essential to learning- that we engage the world and its wonders, sensing and creating primarily through the agency of our hands. We abandon our children to education in boredom and intellectual escapism by failing to engage their hands in learning and making.
Tuesday, May 07, 2013
teaching computers by hand....
Programming computers is usually a keyboard operation requiring an understanding of a programming language. A Hands-on learning group member posted a link to an article showing how computers involved in controlling robots, can be programmed by hand positioning of the robot's tool. The article, How to Coordinate Multiple Axis Movements for a Robotic Welder, includes the short video above, showing the hands-on programming in action and illustrates the work of Robotiq, a company that makes various kinds of hand-like grippers for the robotics industry.
This leaves me with a question for my readers. Guiding the robotic tool and arm by hand to sense various positions so the computer can guide replication of the process seems a far cry from actually having hand-skills and conveying those to a robot, or using those skills yourself to make something. And if you have hand skills, and take pleasure in making beautiful and useful objects with those skills, would you want to train a robot to take your place?
What the hands actually do (and that took us years to learn) is so much more complex than what we are able to teach even the most complex robotic hands to do. And the ability to spew products easily and at low cost takes a toll on the environment while producing goods of ever decreasing value and meaning. Whereas objects that require skilled hands in their making are becoming rare.
Make, fix and create...
Training a computer to replace me makes very little sense. What fun would that be?
ReplyDeleteMario
Mario, do you think computers and robots will enjoy their retirement as much as you do yours?
ReplyDeleteMost likely not. They will end up being recycled (hopefully) for whatever components have some scrap value. Somehow I don't see that happening to me, at least while I'm alive, even if my driver's license says I'm an organ donor.
ReplyDeleteMario