Disaster Honda to end ASIMO development - Good night, sweet prince

https://www.straitstimes.com/asia/east-asia/end-of-the-line-for-asimo-japans-famed-robot

TOKYO (AFP) - It has played football with former US president Barack Obama and danced for German leader Angela Merkel, but Honda's Asimo robot may have reached the end of the line.

Launched in 2000, the humanoid machine resembling a shrunken spaceman has become arguably Japan's most famous robot, wheeled out to impress visiting politicians over the years.

But Honda said Thursday it may scrap future generations of Asimo, now on its seventh iteration.

"We will still continue research into humanoid robots, but our future robots may not be named Asimo," Honda spokesman Hajime Kaneko told AFP.

The comment came after Japan's public broadcaster NHK reported that the Japanese carmaker had terminated Asimo and dissolved the team making one of the world's most famous humanoid robots.

NHK suggested increasingly intense competition in the field as a reason, pointing to the example of US-based Boston Dynamics' Atlas robot which can jump on to a high step and even do a backflip.

Honda denied that it had dissolved the team working on Asimo, but the brains behind the bot look likely to shift their expertise to developing robots with specific applications.

"We have obtained lots of technologies while developing Asimo, and how to utilise them is one issue," Kaneko said.

The company is expected to focus on humanoid robots that can help care for elderly and disabled people, NHK said, citing unnamed company sources.

Though never sold commercially, Asimo attracted international attention, playing football with Obama in 2014, dancing for Merkel in 2015, and taking a selfie with Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull the same year.

There have been no upgrades to the model since its seventh generation, which debuted in 2011 and can listen to and understand three people talking simultaneously.
 
I wish they still made the old air-cooled XRs. Those were awesome as trailbikes and could handle the abuse young rednecks like me could throw at it.
 
From the sound of it, Honda are still going to be investing research into humanoid robots, they're just retiring the ASIMO model.

Personally, I think that this is probably a good thing. Technology is one thing that we mustn't become nostalgic about. Technological advancement depends upon the idea that we must hope, not lament, that the old will be replaced with the new.
 
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I'm honestly kind of bummed that ASIMO is being retired just because it's such a great example for younger kids interested in robotics. Boston Dynamics is kind of the adult interest, and ASIMO is the stepping stone to getting there.
 
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