Chief Delphi

Chief Delphi (http://www.chiefdelphi.com/forums/index.php)
-   General Forum (http://www.chiefdelphi.com/forums/forumdisplay.php?f=16)
-   -   Dean Kamen on The Colbert Report (April 5th, 2010) (http://www.chiefdelphi.com/forums/showthread.php?t=84904)

DarkFlame145 06-04-2010 12:19

Re: Dean Kamen on The Colbert Report (April 5th, 2010)
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by RoseJ (Post 948967)
Gotta love how Colbert mentioned the jeans and denim shirt~ XD

It is a Dean specialty :p

Dancin103 06-04-2010 12:29

Re: Dean Kamen on The Colbert Report (April 5th, 2010)
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by RoseJ (Post 948967)
Gotta love how Colbert mentioned the jeans and denim shirt~ XD

Haha yeah. I thought that was perfect. Now it was actually publicized on television. :)

synth3tk 06-04-2010 12:31

Re: Dean Kamen on The Colbert Report (April 5th, 2010)
 
Here's the link to only the interview portion of the show:
http://www.colbertnation.com/the-col...010/dean-kamen

StuMac 06-04-2010 13:29

Re: Dean Kamen on The Colbert Report (April 5th, 2010)
 
for us Canadians, Colbertnation won't play in Canada, use the comedy network link instead: http://www.thecomedynetwork.ca/shows....aspx?sid=3351

Brandon_L 06-04-2010 13:42

Re: Dean Kamen on The Colbert Report (April 5th, 2010)
 
Apparently this wasn't his first time on the show

http://www.colbertnation.com/the-col...006/dean-kamen

TVwazhere 06-04-2010 14:52

Re: Dean Kamen on The Colbert Report (April 5th, 2010)
 
im watching it now =D S.C. is so funny

J_Miles 06-04-2010 15:03

Re: Dean Kamen on The Colbert Report (April 5th, 2010)
 
I really enjoyed the section of the show. Dean Kamen has once again come through with something truly incredible with this arm. I also gotta love the shout out to FIRST in there, but he didn't talk about it as much as I thought he would. Great segment. Hopefully FRC and other FIRST events continue to gain exposure, so that soon enough I won't have to be explaining to most people who ask that we don't build "Battle Bots" ;)

Wayne TenBrink 07-04-2010 19:43

Re: Dean Kamen on The Colbert Report (April 5th, 2010)
 
I am an engineer for Kaydon, a manufacturer of specialty "thin section" bearings. This morning I got a call from one of the engineers at DEKA. Apparently the Luke arm uses our bearings, and he wanted to spec out a modified version for the next generation of the arm. It is very gratifying to play even a small role in something as cool as this.

Many years ago I worked on some bearings for Dave Lavery's "other car".

artdutra04 07-04-2010 19:48

Re: Dean Kamen on The Colbert Report (April 5th, 2010)
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by sircedric4 (Post 949140)
It starts after the third white increment and timestamp 16:06 if you don't want to sit through the whole show and it's extra long web commercials.

What do you mean "don't want to sit through the whole show"? The Colbert Report rocks! :p

ras103 07-04-2010 21:00

Re: Dean Kamen on The Colbert Report (April 5th, 2010)
 
That man could pick up a grape AND use chopsticks. Dean is amazing, denim and all! Also, he presented himself so well, this was a great outlet to spread the word about FIRST and robotics. Good Job Dean, and Colbert for that matter, high five! :)

DinerKid 07-04-2010 21:11

Re: Dean Kamen on The Colbert Report (April 5th, 2010)
 
It was an awesome interview. I have to say, CHOPSTICKS i was in aw. It was hilarious when Dean was talking and the arm twitches and he looked at the arm nervously. It reminded me a little bit of the guy from Spiderman with the robotics arms.

~DK

qzrrbz 07-04-2010 22:13

Re: Dean Kamen on The Colbert Report (April 5th, 2010)
 
OK -- time to ask the obligatory engineering question! How the heck was he *controlling* that thing??? :-)

He had a series of objects strung across his back (one would think battery and cRio :-) ), but where are the fine motor control input devices? And for a double version of this arm, wow... How is the wearer to control that?

That, to me, was the neatest part of the interview! The "how the ... is he doing this" part!

qzrrbz 07-04-2010 22:29

Re: Dean Kamen on The Colbert Report (April 5th, 2010)
 
OK^2

After reviewing the tape again a few times, it is beautifully subtle. He has "something" in his real left hand. Reminds me of a ventriloquist a bit - the dummy/arm commands your attention, and his lips/fingers barely move while he talks/articulates the arm.

Beautiful.

But, I'm still wondering about control for a pair of these!

DonRotolo 07-04-2010 22:39

Re: Dean Kamen on The Colbert Report (April 5th, 2010)
 
From an article I read somewhere recently (I think IEEE Spectrum magazine) the control system uses the wearer's actual nerve impulses for control.

Amputees generally have "phantom limb syndrome", where they can still "feel" their missing limb. Doctors find the nerve endings , connect to them electrically, and have the wearer move their "limb" - "bend at the elbow a little. Now a lot", and so on. They map the electrical impulses they get from the nerves to arm functions...and the wearer controls the arm with the same thoughts/impulses as they used to with their real limb.

Makes me want to get into biomedical engineering. The problems in human interfacing, noise management and amplification are fascinating, the arm mechanicals themselves notwithstanding.

I had one class in Biomedical - it was interesting, but a 3-credit undergrad elective barely scratched the surface (and, it was 30 years ago...). Wish I had the finances to change careers. (Maybe in my spare time in the basement?)

Bill_B 07-04-2010 23:03

Re: Dean Kamen on The Colbert Report (April 5th, 2010)
 
This year's FLL challenge is entitled Body Forward. Undoubtedly related to the amazing device shown on colbear repore. If think that prosthetic machine is awesome and you'd like to delve into the topic some more, you should check in with a local FLL team and offer to mentor for the research aspect of this subject.


All times are GMT -5. The time now is 09:03.

Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2017, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright © Chief Delphi