In the future,Watch Mirror Twins Online we won't just have autonomous drones zooming around over our heads — we'll share the sidewalks with rolling robots, tasked with delivering our groceries and carrying our stuff.
A new robot from Piaggio (best known for Vespa scooters) keeps the autonomous focus firmly on solid ground. The company's fledgling autonomous mobility division, Piaggio Fast Forward, has unveiled its first project: the Gita, a two-wheeled personal cargo bot straight out of the Star Wars droid factory.
SEE ALSO: Amazon Prime Air drone makes an appearance during the Super BowlThe Gita's designed for a different use than sky-bound delivery drones — its directive is to follow a human, or to move autonomously along pathways it's already traveled. There are already some similarly self-driving droids from Starship Technologies roving the streets making Postmates deliveries in a few cities.
The Gita can serve the same purpose — but the bot looks to be focused on personal cargo hauling for the moment. It's more of an assistant than a free-roving bot, although it can move independently and avoid obstacles in real time using its built-in sensors and cameras, which it uses in "Follow" mode to lock on to its human guide.
The orb-shaped Gita is 26 inches tall and can carry loads up to 40 pounds, with a storage volume of about 2,000 cubic inches. Its battery can last up to eight hours of continuous use at walking speeds — but it dies quicker if you really push it up to its 22 miles per hour max speed if you're literally running late somewhere or riding a bike.
The lid has a fingerprint-enabled security lock, along with a touchscreen to program its movements. Security might be a concern if the Gita is in autonomous mode without a human guide -- a cargo bot moving on its own is practically an invitation to brazen thieves.
Piaggio Fast Forward COO Sasha Hoffman isn't concerned about the potential risk. She told TechCrunch, “Gita is also covered with cameras, and sensors and always knows where it is. It’d be the dumbest thing in the world to try to steal or break into.”
The Boston-based team behind the Gita is looking to roll the bot out onto real-life streets for pilot tests to gather more navigational data on college campuses and selected towns across the U.S. over the next six months, according to the report. Once the system is better developed, we could all have a shot at owning our own personal cargo droid.
(Editor: {typename type="name"/})
Argentina vs. Canada 2024 livestream: Watch Copa America for free
iFLYTEK launches Spark Multilingual Model and Spark 4.0 Turbo · TechNode
James Webb telescope captures rare sputtering star on the brink of death
The Afterlife of <em>Newsies</em>
Denmark vs. England 2024 livestream: Watch Euro 2024 for free
NASA spacecraft's new images of volcanic world Io are tantalizing
DJI Air 3 deal: Get $220 off at Amazon
Li Auto ramps up chip making with new Hong Kong office: report · TechNode
接受PR>=1、BR>=1,流量相当,内容相关类链接。