Pleo is a cute little robot dinosaur that acts like a living pet. It explores, learns, makes dinosaur noises, munches on (plastic) leaves, and demands that you give it your total, exclusive, unfettered attention.

Baby dinosaur robot Pleo was invented by Caleb Chung, who had co-invented Furby in 1998. Chung's company Ugobe, based in in Emeryville, Calif. (later renamed Pleoworld), shipped Pleo in late 2007, priced at US $349. The robot featured two 32-bit and four 8-bit microprocessors, 14 motors, a camera, two microphones, eight sensors under its rubberized skin, a tilt sensor, an infrared mouth sensor, fourteen force-feedback sensors, and four switches in its feet. In 2011, a new version of Pleo, called Pleo Reborn, was introduced by Innvo Labs, featuring upgraded software and user interactivity. The company's website currently lists the robot as "temporarily out of stock."


Dinosaur Robot


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Life Size Robot Dinosaurs give exhibition visitors the chance to explore life-size animatronic roaring prehistoric creatures closely. Here are the amazing mechanical dinosaur products from MYDINOSAURS.com.

Assemble and code your own robotic model of the ferocious Tyrannosaurus rex and its handheld controller. After assembling the 100 pieces and decorating your new dinosaur you will use the controller to give commands such as walking, gliding, lighting up its eyes and unleashing a mighty roar. Code REX to move in real-time or save a sequence of commands for it to perform at the push of a button (no apps or devices needed).

It might be about the weirdest check-in experience possible, but that's exactly the point at the Henn na (whose name means 'weird') chain, which bills itself as offering the world's first hotels staffed by robots.

The effect is bizarre, with the large dinosaurs gesticulating with their long arms and issuing tinny set phrases. Yukio Nagai, manager at the Henn na Hotel Maihama Tokyo Bay, admits some customers find it slightly unnerving.

But for other guests the novelty is the charm: each room is staffed with mini-robots that look a bit like spherical Star Wars droid BB-8, and help guests with everything from changing channels to playing music.

Have some fierce fun with this do-it-yourself, multifunctional armoured Triceratops. Build your very own armoured dinosaur robot ready for battle. Watch the Triceratops ' neck shield swing whilst walking along - then it stops and changes to attack mode and unleashes the bayonet.


The Robot Dinosaur, also known as xmas13_robotdino, is a Ultra Rare item on Habbo. It was a one-time release item, being awarded for competition entry during the Christmas 2013 campaign. The Dinosaur, when doubled clicked, will grapple with its hand and open/close its mouth. It also rotates two ways, left-facing and right-facing.

If Peter Dilworth gets his wish, children may one day be able to view walking -- and perhaps running -- 3-D recreations of small dinosaurs. His principal motivation: the lifelike behavior of the creatures, actually robots, would inspire the kids themselves to become scientists or engineers.

Mr. Dilworth, a member of the technical staff at the MIT Artificial Intelligence (AI) Lab, has already met a significant milestone to that end. After about five years of work, his robotic version of a Troodon dinosaur from the Late Cretaceous period -- dubbed Troody -- walked across his desk late last fall.

The new version will also be about 50-percent bigger (Troody, at about 18 inches high and four feet long, is a "juvenile"), and will look and behave more like the real thing, complete with feathers. "It will kind of look like a big chicken," said Mr. Dilworth, who has been collaborating all along with Gregory S. Paul, an independent paleontologist and artist, to make the robot as lifelike as possible.

Troody's successor should also be able to turn better, walk faster, and perhaps even jog or run. "If it runs, it will be the first 3-D bipedal, or two-legged, walking and running robot in the world," Mr. Dilworth said.

Troody is one of several robots created or in development at MIT's Leg Lab (a part of the AI Lab). The facility, dedicated to simulating and building robots that walk like their biological counterparts, as well as building devices to help people with handicaps walk, was organized in 1980. It is currently directed by Gill A. Pratt of the Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science and Hugh M. Herr of the Harvard-MIT Division of Health Sciences and Technology.

"Very little of the world is accessible by wheels," the researchers say. As a result, legged robots could be "useful for everything from exploring inaccessible or hazardous locations to providing service or entertainment in the places we live and work." Other motivations: the research is fun and the results compelling to watch.

Troody is one of two bipedal robots at the lab. The other, M2, approximates the legs of a person. It can stand and walk in place, but cannot yet walk forwards. "There are a handful of other biped robots in the world, mostly in Japan," Mr. Dilworth said, but they use different control systems. As a result, he said, the Japanese robots tend to be very stiff, and more machine-like. "We use series elastic actuators, or springs connected to motors, and low-stiffness control, so the joints are looser, and more biological."

The MIT actuators, invented by Professor Pratt and Matthew M. Williamson (MIT SM 1995, PhD 1999), also make the robots better able to traverse unexpected terrain. For example, Mr. Dilworth said, "I put a notebook on the ground in front of Troody, and it was able to stumble over it without falling. It could theoretically walk over a variety of terrain."

Troody, which weighs about ten pounds, has 16 joints and 36 sensors. "Every joint has a position and force sensor," Mr. Dilworth said. The robot also has a vestibular system -- the equivalent of an inner ear -- that it uses for balancing, and an onboard computer that automatically runs a walking control algorithm.

The robot, which "at first looked more like a Star Wars walker than a dinosaur," went through many versions of hardware. "A lot of work went into it before I got something that worked," Mr. Dilworth remembers.

After four years of tinkering, walking came dramatically. "In one and a half weeks the robot went from standing and lifting one leg in the air for a half second to walking around my desk. I was on an adrenaline high," Mr. Dilworth said. "Now I know how to do it, I think. Finally!"

My kids and I have been playing with the MiPosaur for a couple of weeks and still are finding out new tricks that it can do. We made a review video so you can see this fun robot dinosaur in action! Please watch the video and below it, I will share more details about our experience with MiPosaur.

The Robot Dinosaur is a gigantic, remote-controlled robot with a head resembling that of a Teensie, along with two raptor-like legs. It tends to hop like a large bird and makes noises almost like a chicken. It can be seen pecking the ground at times.

The combat in the original was already going to be hard to top, but taking down giant robot dinosaurs and angry cultists and rebels managed to be even more face meltingly-awesome in Forbidden West thanks to a heavier emphasis on elemental weaknesses, improved melee attacks including combos and the very cool resonator blast, and even more fun robots to take down. The battles seem to fit any style from those seeking a slower stealthier approach to those going in fully kinetic guns blazing meaning I never got bored.

The single best weapon in the entire game is a wonderfully simple yet deadly javelin. Achieving the proper wind up and throw while dodging robot attacks felt like an Olympian feet, and the results were worth it. The entire mechanic was up there with the God of War axe in terms of satisfying feelings, and the drill variant proved damn near unstoppable by the time I finished the game.

The process to flesh the animatronics. Special sponges (Urethane form) are cut out and shaped with a knife to create animatronics dinosaurs. Human skin-like soft special rubbers are processed for Humanoid robots. As you see here various techniques and materials are utilized appropriate to each productions

Procedure to breath lives into robot. Robots are programmed by a experienced craftsmanship for realistic, subtle, and delicate movements. Software functions in general such as sound effects and lightings are also taken care of in this process.

Robert Stephenson (blobbington) posted about his robot dinosaur, Roboceratops, on the Trossen Robotics forums. Roboceratops is a small robotic dinosaur built to resemble a member of the Ceratopsian group. It uses a total of 14 servos for movement that are commanded through two of our Mini Maestro 12-Channel Servo Controllers, which are controlled by serial commands from his custom hand held controller. The controller is directly wired to Roboceratops and uses an Arduino Mega 2560, an LCD screen and two 3-axis joysticks. Robert wants to improve his design by making it wirelessly controlled and battery powered, and he plans to eventually make Roboceratops autonomous.

The mechanical T-Rex is a robot that first appeared when Batman fought in Murray Hart's theme park known as "Dinosaur Island". This theme park should not be confused with the better-known Dinosaur Island.Batman's T-RexGalleryOriginsUniverseEarth-Two  Earth-One  New Earth  Prime Earth  DCeased  ArrowverseOwnersCurrent OwnerBatmanCreatorsCreatorsBill Finger  Paul CooperFirst Appearancetag_hash_108_______ #35

(June, 1946)

The mechanical T-Rex is a robot that first appeared when Batman fought in Murray Hart's theme park known as "Dinosaur Island".[1] This theme park should not be confused with the better-known Dinosaur Island.

After defeating Hart's mechanical contraptions, Batman was given the mechanical dinosaur as a memento of this adventure and he placed it along the rest of souvenirs from Batman's early cases, in a place called The Trophy Room. Later on, the dinosaur became one of the main centerpieces of the Batcave along with the Giant Penny and the Giant Joker Card. It is often used whenever there is an unwanted intrusion in the Batcave. ff782bc1db

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