[access-uk] Re: Dymos? was Wal-mart has new robot to help visually impaired customers.

  • From: "Mark Threadgold" <m.j.threadgold@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: <access-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Thu, 19 May 2005 10:09:53 +0100

MessageDymo is the make of labeller that produces braille tape labels.  Used
by Asda to label your shopping at checkout on request.

hth


Mark Threadgold


-----Original Message-----
From: access-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:access-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx]On Behalf Of
Amro Bilal
Sent: 19 May 2005 10:05
To: access-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [access-uk] Dymos? was Wal-mart has new robot to help visually
impaired customers.


"last time I check at Asda about the dymos..."

Excuse my ignorance, guys, but what is dymos? Any place to read more about
it?

Cheers,

Amro
  ----- Original Message -----
  From: Jillian Grant
  To: access-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
  Sent: Thursday, May 19, 2005 5:02 AM
  Subject: [access-uk] Re: Wal-mart has new robot to help visually impaired
customers.


  Well, last time I check at Asda about the dymos which was a couple years
ago, they didn't even have the service, and weren't sure if or when they'd
get it.  I'll be checking next time I go back.


    ----- Original Message -----
    From: Ian Macrae
    To: access-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
    Sent: Wednesday, May 18, 2005 10:20 AM
    Subject: [access-uk] Re: Wal-mart has new robot to help visually
impaired customers.


    On the principle that ASDA's Braille Dimo guns are often empty,
presumably they'll forget to charge the robots up!  And will they, like
trolleys, have minds of their own?
      -----Original Message-----
      From: access-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:access-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On
Behalf Of George Bell
      Sent: 18 May 2005 10:00
      To: access-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
      Subject: [access-uk] Wal-mart has new robot to help visually impaired
customers.


      I thought some supermarket shoppers might be amused by the following?

      George.


      Wal-Mart Tests Robots for Blind Shoppers
      By Evan Schuman
      LOGAN, Utah, May 16 -- Wal-Mart started quietly testing a
university-created robot designed to help visually impaired consumers
navigate store aisles and
      find their desired products.

      The robot?named RG, for Robotic Guide?is the creation of Vladimir
Kulyukin, an assistant professor of computer science at Utah State
University and the
      director of the university's Computer Science Assistive Technology
Laboratory.

      The initial version of RG?which weighs about 22 pounds and is roughly
the height of an upright vacuum cleaner?is limited to three basic functions.

      First, it guides the consumer through the aisles and around people,
displays and merchandise using RFID readers and 16 ultrasonic sonars.

      Its second function is to communicate with the consumer. It takes
instructions via a small Braille directory of products that is attached to
the robot's
      handle, and it replies to the shopper's questions with spoken answers.

      The third function is to use its RFID reader to locate the desired
products. The store's RFID tags help the robot navigate the lanes as well as
locate products.

      "There are RFID sensors placed on the shelves in the store. The robot
has the RFID antennae and detects the presence of those tags," Kulyukin
said. "That's
      how it knows it's reached the Colgate section of the toothpaste shelf
and it then announces, 'You have reached the Colgate toothpaste section, on
your
      right.'"

      The robot has its limitations, though. Until item-level tagging
becomes the norm, the system can indicate only the part of the shelf where
the product is
      supposed to be. If it's been moved?either by an employee moving stock
who forgot to move or update the RFID tag or by another consumer who put a
tube of
      Aim toothpaste amidst the Colgate?the visually impaired consumer might
grab the wrong product.

      The robot's development is still at a very early stage and has thus
far mostly been paid for with a $500,000 grant from the National Science
Foundation,
      Kulyukin said. He is negotiating with a large national retail chain to
buy the units and invest in its further development.


      Adapted with permission from eWeek.com.  Copyright (c) 2005 Ziff Davis
Media Inc.   All Rights Reserved.



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