Thursday, November 1, 2012

Robotics in Everyday


Robots start

We do not have to look far to describe an application early robotics. Some of you may remember the jukebox. This is an excellent example of robotics gross when you programmed a mechanical arm to choose from a range of 45 rounds files in the selected folder, get to play its contents, then return it to the place where the arm picked it up. At home, your disc changer is another example recently and CD changers also perform the same task automatically.

What we have today.

Most robotic applications we are today in the manufacture and assembly of automobiles. They take the place of factory workers in assembly line performing specialized tasks, such as rivets attaching to heavy parts, body painting, etc. In the manufacture of computers, robotics also include a large number of motherboards welding and other assembly operations difficult. CD and DVD pressing plants do too. Robots have been widely deployed in many production processes considered tedious and repetitive or menial for humans to work in.

We can say robotics has its first application and most useful in space and military applications. Spacecraft unmanned, who explored the Martian landscape and went beyond Jupiter are excellent examples of robotics. The same is true with unmanned military aircraft that provide surveillance on enemy territory.

Even in the streets of the city, surveillance robots have made their presence felt useful to check buildings and places where criminal elements hostile to hide the exact location before an attack or arrest. Hostile environments such as volcanoes were explored using remotely controlled robots to collect samples of the soil environment of lava and magma materials. Robots are now widely used to discover the places and situations considered at risk for human intervention.

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