San Diego already has major industry and defense players and employers with many robotics technologies and applications. There are also significant manufacturing sectors in San Diego and nearby Tijuana.
Frank Tobe | The Robot Report
At a one-day forum on the UCSD campus, Chancellor Pradeep Khosla did two unusual things: he spent most of the day at the Contextual Robotics Technologies Intl Forum, and he announced that UCSD would create five new faculty slots in robotics and plans to develop a world-class robotics cluster in the San Diego area.
“This will be big not only for us, but for industry in San Diego,” Khosla said.
Chancellor Khosla described how the University of California San Diego (UCSD) plans to invest in making itself a hub for cognitive, embedded technologies and communication sciences involved in robotics by working together with venture capitalists, local tech businesses (particularly Qualcomm, whose microchips are widely used in smartphones and other wireless devices), local military research labs, startup companies and the research labs and programs already existant at UCSD and in the area.
San Diego already has major industry and defense players and employers with many robotics technologies and applications. There are also significant manufacturing sectors in San Diego and nearby Tijuana. And UCSD is a major plus as well. It already has a Flow Control & Coordinated Robotics Lab, a Computer Vision and Robotics Research Lab, an Intelligent Systems, Robotics and Control Lab, and the Artificial Intelligence Group, to name just a few... plus it is located in beautiful La Jolla north of San Diego. UCSD is also nearby the Scripps and Salk Institutes.
A step toward building that robotics center was this one-day forum which had a phenomenal list of robotics thought leaders that came to speak and network.
- Matt Grob, CTO and EVP, Qualcomm Technologies
- Vijay Kumar, UPS Foundation Professor, U Penn
- Chris Anderson, Co-founder and CEO, 3D Robotics
- Daniela Rus, Director, CSAIL, MIT
- Rodney Brooks, Founder and CTO, Rethink Robotics
- Brad Nelson, Professor of Robotics and Intelligent Systems, ETH Zurich
- Gil Pratt, Robotics Challenge Program Manager, DARPA
- Dean Kamen, Founder DEKA R&D and FIRST
Speakers alluded to the “peace dividend of the smartphone wars” as being the various sensors that now cost pennies and weigh less and how they are being put to use in robotics. Just a few years ago they weighed too much and cost more. Still, battery technology hasn’t kept pace with sensors and displays.
Two speakers, Vijay Kumar from the University of Pennsylvania and Chris Anderson, of 3D Robotics, talked about aerial robots and agriculture. Both were concerned with creating drones that were more accurate, used the least power, and were safe, and both showed the benefits of this type of drone and big data software processing for agriculture. Their systems can provide aerial data, sensor data (infrared, spectral, etc.), and data over time comparisons – all valuable in the precision agricultural process.
Dean Kamen gave a poignent talk about the benefits that are derived from working with medical device providers all over the world. Even though he's been labled "the Segway guy," DEKA R&D employs over 500 engineers working on prosthetic, bionic and other medical devices - including a new stair-climbing wheel chair call the iBot which recently received FDA approval and will soon be marketed by Johnson & Johnson - for DARPA and many of the major medical device companies. He also told of a serious problem in getting FDA approvals for many of those devices. "This country is going to continue to slide compared to the rest of the world," he said. For the last couple of years his company has not been involved in clinical trials going on in the U.S. but is actively involved in trials in the EU, Japan, China and around the world. Kamen attributed his observation to the FDA being too risk-adverse, thereby forcing ideas, money and talent to move away from the U.S.
The networking was continuing as I left to drive home. This event was a good launch pad for UCSD's goal to develop itself into a world class robotics center. And their announcement of the five new faculty positions is a long-term committment to back their goal with resources. I wish them well.
UPDATE October 16, 2014: As a follow-up to the UCSD formum sponsored by Qualcomm and UCSD, Qualcomm and Techstars announced the establishment of a new San Diego robotics accelerator. The new Qualcomm Robotics Accelerator, powered by Techstars, is intended to accelerate the development of next-generation robots and intelligent machines.
Qualcomm says it has committed over $1 million in aggregate funding to startups admitted to the program.
Techstars has emerged as one of the nation’s most successful programs for mentoring and investing in seed-stage tech startups.
The content & opinions in this article are the author’s and do not necessarily represent the views of RoboticsTomorrow
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