Sure, Spot the Boston Dynamics robot dog regularly makes headlines — it can even impersonate Mick Jagger. But robot dogs are so last week now that Kawasaki has created a robotic, rideable goat.
The goat has been dubbed Bex, because it’s really supposed to be an ibex, which refers to certain species of wild goat. It has horns that light up, and delicate legs that can be lowered and then sprout wheels. And it’s strong enough that a full-sized human can mount it like a horse and ride it around.
Kawasaki has been working on a “Robust Humanoid Platform” (RHP) called Kaleido since 2015.
“Halfway between humanoid robots and wheeled robots, [we] wondered if there was an opportunity,” Masayuki Soube of Kawasaki said in an interview translated by IEEE Spectrum. “That’s why we started developing Bex, a quadruped walking robot. We believe that the walking technology cultivated in the development of humanoid robots can definitely be applied to quadruped walking robots.”
Soube went on to say Bex can carry light cargo or crops, and it contains cameras that can help with industrial plant inspections. Its upper body can be adapted for different needs, depending on how it’s going to be used. It can carry up to 100 kilograms (220 pounds).
One thing’s for sure: Bex won’t be running in the Kentucky Derby. A video shot last week at Japan’s iREX robot trade show reveals Bex carrying a rider around a display booth at a very, shall we say, casual pace.
Snarked one YouTube commenter, “That’s the slowest mountain goat ever.”
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