Tuesday, June 11, 2013

Hotel In Santa Clarita - iRobot To Unveil Virtual Business Partner

Source - http://bostonherald.com/
By - Marie Szaniszlo
Category - Hotel In Santa Clarita
Posted By - Hampton Inn Santa Clarita
 
Hotel In Santa Clarita


The people who brought you the Roomba vacuum cleaner have teamed up with Cisco to develop an entirely different robot, one that may just help make the pesky business trip a thing of the past.
Bedford-based iRobot will unveil the Ava 500 video collaboration robot at the InfoComm conference in Orlando, Fla., this week, its first creation designed to work in the office.
“Our goal is to give executives a compelling alternative to going to meetings in person,” said CEO Colin Angle. “They’re not giving up the opportunity to sit down at a table, see people’s expressions or follow them out to the hallway to have follow-up conversations.”
Using an iPad, you tap on the Ava 500 app and select where you want to “go” — an office, a factory or any other facility equipped with the robot — and whom you want to see.
At that location, Ava — which stands about 5 feet, 5 inches tall and weighs about 100 pounds — maps its surroundings so that it can find its way around offices, manufacturing floors and laboratories without bumping into people or objects.
You can choose to let it go either in “private” mode, where the 21.5-inch Cisco HD screen on the robot’s “head” appears blank, or in “public” mode, where your face is displayed on the screen. If you choose the latter, you can see and be seen, and you can remotely stop to have an ad-hoc hallway conversation with a colleague along the way.
“The real value of the robot is that spontaneity,” said Angie Mistretta, director of telepresence solutions marketing at Cisco.
After your meeting, Ava allows you to “go” anywhere else in the building before it heads back to its docking station to recharge.
The robot’s mobility, security and the quality of its video all make it “radically” better than Skype, Angle said.
When it goes on the market early next year, Cisco expects the estimated, one-time cost will be under $70,000. But Angle said the robot also will be able to be leased for between $2,000 and $2,500 per month.
Although initially Ava is expected to be used for business, Mistretta said the robot also could be used in education, allowing students to ask questions of a professor individually after a lecture, and in manufacturing, allowing a company to bring in a remote expert to diagnose and fix a problem.
- See more at: http://bostonherald.com/business/technology/technology_news/2013/06/irobot_to_unveil_virtual_business_partner#sthash.a7zVCCcd.dpuf
The people who brought you the Roomba vacuum cleaner have teamed up with Cisco to develop an entirely different robot, one that may just help make the pesky business trip a thing of the past.
Bedford-based iRobot will unveil the Ava 500 video collaboration robot at the InfoComm conference in Orlando, Fla., this week, its first creation designed to work in the office.
“Our goal is to give executives a compelling alternative to going to meetings in person,” said CEO Colin Angle. “They’re not giving up the opportunity to sit down at a table, see people’s expressions or follow them out to the hallway to have follow-up conversations.”
Using an iPad, you tap on the Ava 500 app and select where you want to “go” — an office, a factory or any other facility equipped with the robot — and whom you want to see.
At that location, Ava — which stands about 5 feet, 5 inches tall and weighs about 100 pounds — maps its surroundings so that it can find its way around offices, manufacturing floors and laboratories without bumping into people or objects.
You can choose to let it go either in “private” mode, where the 21.5-inch Cisco HD screen on the robot’s “head” appears blank, or in “public” mode, where your face is displayed on the screen. If you choose the latter, you can see and be seen, and you can remotely stop to have an ad-hoc hallway conversation with a colleague along the way.
“The real value of the robot is that spontaneity,” said Angie Mistretta, director of telepresence solutions marketing at Cisco.
After your meeting, Ava allows you to “go” anywhere else in the building before it heads back to its docking station to recharge.
The robot’s mobility, security and the quality of its video all make it “radically” better than Skype, Angle said.
When it goes on the market early next year, Cisco expects the estimated, one-time cost will be under $70,000. But Angle said the robot also will be able to be leased for between $2,000 and $2,500 per month.
Although initially Ava is expected to be used for business, Mistretta said the robot also could be used in education, allowing students to ask questions of a professor individually after a lecture, and in manufacturing, allowing a company to bring in a remote expert to diagnose and fix a problem.
- See more at: http://bostonherald.com/business/technology/technology_news/2013/06/irobot_to_unveil_virtual_business_partner#sthash.a7zVCCcd.dpuf
The people who brought you the Roomba vacuum cleaner have teamed up with Cisco to develop an entirely different robot, one that may just help make the pesky business trip a thing of the past.

Bedford-based iRobot will unveil the Ava 500 video collaboration robot at the InfoComm conference in Orlando, Fla., this week, its first creation designed to work in the office.

“Our goal is to give executives a compelling alternative to going to meetings in person,” said CEO Colin Angle. “They’re not giving up the opportunity to sit down at a table, see people’s expressions or follow them out to the hallway to have follow-up conversations.”

Using an iPad, you tap on the Ava 500 app and select where you want to “go” — an office, a factory or any other facility equipped with the robot — and whom you want to see.

At that location, Ava — which stands about 5 feet, 5 inches tall and weighs about 100 pounds — maps its surroundings so that it can find its way around offices, manufacturing floors and laboratories without bumping into people or objects.

You can choose to let it go either in “private” mode, where the 21.5-inch Cisco HD screen on the robot’s “head” appears blank, or in “public” mode, where your face is displayed on the screen. If you choose the latter, you can see and be seen, and you can remotely stop to have an ad-hoc hallway conversation with a colleague along the way.

“The real value of the robot is that spontaneity,” said Angie Mistretta, director of telepresence solutions marketing at Cisco.

After your meeting, Ava allows you to “go” anywhere else in the building before it heads back to its docking station to recharge.

The robot’s mobility, security and the quality of its video all make it “radically” better than Skype, Angle said.

When it goes on the market early next year, Cisco expects the estimated, one-time cost will be under $70,000. But Angle said the robot also will be able to be leased for between $2,000 and $2,500 per month.

Although initially Ava is expected to be used for business, Mistretta said the robot also could be used in education, allowing students to ask questions of a professor individually after a lecture, and in manufacturing, allowing a company to bring in a remote expert to diagnose and fix a problem.



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