Robot ”that looks like Top Gear”s The Stig” developed

London, April 17 (ANI): Nasa”s new ”space robot” Robonaut 2, which looks like the secret Top Gear character The Stig, is set to step aboard the International Space Station (ISS).

The 300-pound machine, called R2 in short, will join astronauts permanently on the ISS 180 miles above Earth.

Just like humans, R2 has a head, torso, two arms and hands and sports a white dress alongwith a gold helmet.

The robot, a product of collaboration between Nasa and General Motors, the US car makers, will be launched aboard the space shuttle Discovery later this year.

R2 will assist astronauts on the ISS using the same tools they use.

It is presently undergoing vibration, vacuum and radiation testing.

“This project exemplifies the promise that a future generation of robots can have both in space and on Earth, not as replacements for humans but as companions that can carry out key supporting roles,” the Telegraph quoted John Olson, director of the Nasa”s Exploration Systems Integration Office, as saying.

He went on: “The combined potential of humans and robots is a perfect example of the sum equalling more than the parts.

“It will allow us to go farther and achieve more than we can probably even imagine today.”

“Testing the robot inside the station will provide an important intermediate environment,” Olson added.

Doug Cooke, associate administrator for Nasa”s Exploration Systems Mission Directorate, said: “This cutting-edge robotics technology holds great promise, not only for NASA, but also for the nation.

“I”m very excited about the new opportunities for human and robotic exploration these versatile robots provide across a wide range of applications.”

Alan Taub, vice president of GM”s global research and development, said: “The extreme levels of testing R2 has undergone as it prepares… are on par with the validation our vehicles and components go through on the path to production.

“Partnerships between organisations such as GM and NASA help ensure space exploration, road travel and manufacturing can become even safer in the future.” (ANI)

Sumo Wrestler Steals 200-Pound Cash Machine in Moscow

A sumo wrestler ripped a cash machine out of a Moscow store on Friday, walking off with the bulky 200-pound machine on his shoulders, police said.

The man and an accomplice walked into a Moscow shopping mall and detached the cash machine containing $838, according to police.

A shop assistant who witnessed the crime called police and the two men were arrested as they tried to escape in a getaway car.

The strongman later told police he was a professional sumo wrestler.

2,500-pound machine strapped around Flintoof’s knee to save his cricket career

London, Aug 30 (ANI): England all rounder Andrew Flintoff is praying that the 2,500 pound machine strapped around his knee will save his cricket career.

The Lancashire all-rounder has to strap himself to the contraption for eight hours every day as he starts his gruelling rehabilitation from his latest operation.

The state-of-the-art Continuous Passive Motion equipment was prescribed by surgeon Andy Williams and is designed to bend the 31-year-old Ashes hero’s knee up to 1,500 times a day, News of the World reported.

“I had a choice of either using this machine or doing three sets of 500 knee bends a day, so I thought the machine might be the way forward. I strap my leg into it for eight hours a day. It bends my knee up and down all the time and makes sure the movement is controlled,” Flintoff revealed.

“I will have the machine on most of the time, even when I’m sleeping. The hard part is getting used to having your leg strapped into a machine for most of the day. It’s designed to help with the healing but, inevitably, my right leg is going to waste away a bit and the muscles are going to disappear. There’s not a lot I can do about it because I can’t bear any weight on my right leg for six to eight weeks.”

Flintoff underwent keyhole surgery in London on Monday night – just a day after helping England beat Australia at the Oval to regain the Ashes.

It was the second op on his troublesome knee and the ninth of his career, following four on his left ankle, two for hernias and another on his back.

Flintoff announced his retirement from Test cricket during the Ashes after admitting his 16-stone body could no longer cope with five-day cricket.

“I have set myself a target of returning for the tour to Bangladesh, which is from mid-Febuary to the middle of March, but whether that’s realistic or not, I’m not sure,” admitted Flintoff.

“There is a possibility I may not play again. It’s something I’m going to have to be prepared for in case the operation is not as successful as I hope. There will be a question mark in my mind about whether I have played my last game until I know how the operation has turned out.

“I’d be lying if I said it hadn’t crossed my mind, but the success rate for an operation like this is pretty good,” the paper quoted him, as saying. (ANI)

Now, a ‘book vending machine’ that can print 540-page book in 9 mins!

London, April 28 (ANI): It may take several months for an average reader to complete ‘Crime and Punishment’, but a copy of the book can be printed in just nine minutes, thanks to Britain’s first ‘book vending machine’.

The Daily Telegraph ordered a freshly bound edition of Fyodor Dostoevsky’s classic, which was one of the first tomes to drop out of the Espresso Book Machine when it opened for business for the first time yesterday.

The book is one of more than 400,000 titles that can be printed on demand at Blackwell bookshop on Charing Cross Road in central London.

To see the machine’s process, the Telegraph ordered a warm copy of the 540-page book to compare to the published versions available on shelves.

With pages spewed out at the rate of 100 a minute, the printing itself was over in a little over five minutes.

The sheets were then shuttled into the binding section of the machine were they were pressed, covered, glued, and cut to shape in under four minutes.

The results were impressive, as the work looked and felt like a standard edition.

The paper and ink are the same quality used in larger presses, and the binding appeared flawless.

Phill Jamieson, head of marketing at Blackwell, said that the firm was uncertain how the 68,000-pound machine – one of only three such printers in the world – would be used during its three-month trial period. (ANI)