UWaterloo looks to the future of engineering

Monday, October 29, 2018

CTV News Kitchener visited the RoboHub during the E7 Grand Opening celebrations and received an up-close, personal look at our new fleet member TALOS. Visit their website for the original article and for the video coverage. 

The University of Waterloo is hoping to become a pioneer of the next industrial revolution.

On Monday it opened its newest engineering building, Engineering 7, an $88 million project featuring an robotics research and testing facility facility that has technology unavailable to the rest of the world.

“The whole idea is to be able to generate a very unique environment that will allow different types of robots to be programmed to exhibit intelligence,” said William Melek, director of the RoboHub within the new building.

TALOS, the world's only commercially-available humanoid robot, cost over a million dollars and can speak 30 languages.

TALOS

The facility features the only commercially available humanoid robot in the world, called TALOS, with a price tag of over a million dollars.

It knows thirty languages, does a variety of physical tasks, and can also communicate with other robots in the facility without any human interaction.

The RoboHub is a tinker tank in the facility, where people are working to get walking, flying and rolling robots to work together.

“The future must be robots, not replacing humans, but humans having robots enable them to do things that they prefer not to do,” said Pearl Sullivan, dean of engineering.

RoboHub has had interest from about 40 companies, including two that produce prosthetic hands and brain wave-reading helmets, respectively.

For its opening, the school also received a $25 million donation from former Facebook executive and University of Waterloo alumnus Chamath Palihapitiya.