Showing posts with label tokyo. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tokyo. Show all posts

Sunday, June 11, 2017

Aeon will open unmanned credit card counters at Aeon Mall, deploying Pepper humanoids robots.


Pepper will help with the paperwork.

Aeon will open unmanned credit card counters at Aeon Mall-operated shopping centers and Aeon Bank branches, tapping the power of robots and artificial intelligence.

By deploying the Pepper humanoid robot to help people with the paperwork and IBM's Watson-based artificial intelligence system to answer questions, the Japanese retail giant is looking to keep the counters open longer hours. The company aims to reassign freed-up staff for related tasks like promoting credit cards to people visiting the malls and bank branches.

Group subsidiary Aeon Financial Service is to quickly roll out 30 or more Pepper robots. Linked to tablet computers for entering personal information, the Pepper robot will be able to interact with three customers at a time, explaining the procedures for entering information, catching mistakes and helping to complete the process without any staff assistance. This will be the first use of Pepper in this context in Japan.

The Watson AI system will provide answers to some 700-800 simple questions related to credit cards, helping to keep the counters running smoothly and free of congestion. Aeon Financial plans to install 100 terminals linked with the AI system over the next three years.

As a first step, an automated credit card application counter will be opened at an Aeon Mall facility in the city of Chiba in mid-June.

Wednesday, December 2, 2015

International Robot Exhibition 2015 started today in Tokyo.



Robot HRP-2 Kai (left) demonstrates walking on a narrow path, while Jaxon shows that it can duck while moving. The humanoids were on display at the International Robot Exhibition 2015 in Tokyo's Koto Ward. Both are designed for work following disasters and were demonstrated at a booth operated by New Energy and Industrial Technology Development Organization. | KAZUAKI NAGATA JapanTimes.

The biannual International Robot Exhibition kicked off Wednesday in Tokyo, showcasing the latest advances in robotics — including technology for use in disaster scenarios and in the nursing-care field.

With a record 446 firms attending the event at Tokyo Big Sight in Koto Ward, numerous robots are on display through Saturday, when the event wraps up. These include the New Energy and Industrial Technology Development Organization’s (NEDO) disaster prevention robots, which were drawing huge crowds at their demonstrations.

During the demonstrations by NEDO, one of the country’s largest public research organizations, visitors were awed as the HRP-2 Kai life-size humanoid robot walked along on a narrow path and opened a door to check for a fire while another life-size robot, Jaxon, walked and turned a sprinkler valve to extinguish the blaze.

Using robots to probe disaster sites is a challenge the global robot industry is currently working to tackle, said Ryosuke Aya, project coordinator with the robot and machinery system technology department at NEDO, a Kawasaki-based semi-public body in charge of developing new technologies and energy.

Robots would have been indispensable in the aftermath of disasters like the devastating 3/11 earthquake and tsunami — especially in quake-prone Japan — as well as in more recent accidents like tunnel collapses.

When such disasters occur, “there are places where humans can’t physically go,” said Aya. “That’s where robots come in to reduce the risks of disasters.”

The event also highlighted robot tech for nursing care, including remote monitoring systems and exoskeleton suits that aid those with limited mobility.

But while the nursing care tech sector is likely to grow as Japan grays, Hiroshi Kobayashi, director of Innophys Co., a Tokyo-based venture affiliated with Tokyo University of Science, believes the industry remains quite conservative.

Because of this attitude, employing these new technologies will take time at many nursing-care facilities, said Kobayashi, whose firm sells a robotics product called the Muscle Suit that enables wearers to more easily lift heavy objects.

Meanwhile, robots like SoftBank’s emotion-reading Pepper and Sharp’s robot-designed phone RoBoHon, have also been a hit at the venue, with some attendees pointing out that these robots are likely to be a boon for makers. 

“The market for smart robots will be getting bigger and bigger,” said Taki Sakai, president of Unirbot, the Tokyo-based firm behind Unibo, a small white robot with a liquid-crystal display screen on its head.

The robot can recognize individuals’ faces, chat with them and act as a personal assistant.

The firm is set to go on sale next July for ¥98,000 with a monthly ¥4,500 fee for cloud-based services.


Wednesday, June 11, 2014

Japan: Apple to open new store in Omotesando,Tokyo. Video.

Francisco De Jesùs.

Apple is announcing a new store opening in Japan, this time in Omotesando, Tokyo, this June 13, 2014. Take a brief look on this video.



Thursday, August 30, 2012

Japan: Tokyo court ruled Samsung did not infringe Apple`s patents.


WorldWide Tech & Science. Francisco De Jesùs.


Japan: Tokyo court ruled Samsung did not infringe Apple`s patents.


A court in Tokyo has ruled that Samsung Electronics did not infringe on patents held by Apple, a victory for the South Korean company.
The patent was related to transferring media content between devices.
This is one of many cases brought to courts around the world by the two smartphone market leaders.
"We welcome the court's decision, which confirmed our long-held position that our products do not infringe Apple's intellectual property," said Samsung in a statement to the BBC.
Tokyo District Judge Tamotsu Shoji dismissed the case filed by Apple in August, finding that Samsung was not in violation of Apple patents related to synchronising music and video data between devices and servers.
Source: BBC


Monday, November 15, 2010

LG OLED evo M5, the Only True Wireless OLED TV With G5’s Excellence in Picture Quality.

  With Uncompromised, Low-Lag Performance at 4K 144Hz, LG’s Advanced Wireless Technology Sets a New Standard for Clutter-Free Gaming and Hom...

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