UK Engineers Develop Robotic Professional Chef

UK Engineers Develop Robotic Professional Chef

The robot which the engineers call ‘the world’s first Automated Kitchen’ was created by UK-based Moley Robotics, which aims to develop a consumer version with an affordable price tag within two years.

It is also supported by an iTunes-style library of recipes that can be downloaded for the robo-chef to cook in the home.

It features two fully articulated hands, made by the Shadow Robot Company, whose products are used in the nuclear industry and by NASA.

The dexterous hands are able to faithfully reproduce the movements of a human hand, cooking up Michelin-starred delicacies with all the skill and flair of a master chef.

Key to the robot's kitchen prowess is the way its movements have been 3D-mapped to those of professional chef.

"If it can mimic my hands and any chef's hands, then with some work on it there's no reason why it can't do just about anything; kneading bread, making sushi – all these things that are very hands-on, for lack of a better term. The scope of what it can do is almost endless," said Anderson, one of the chefs.

PUTTING HUMAN CHEFS OUT OF BUSINESS

He added that, instead of putting their human counterparts out of business, the robot chef could be an important tool for getting recipes prepared in people's homes they way they intended them to be.

"I think that this is going to be an incredible tool for chefs, especially chefs who want to have a wide audience for their food. You can write a cook book, you can get recipes out there in different ways, you can make ready meals and meal kits, things like that. But this is a really good way of getting food into people's homes in the way that you would want them to be prepared. And it takes some of the guesswork out of things like people following recipes."

Moley Robotics is now looking to develop a robot chef that can be easily integrated into people's homes.

Founder and inventor of the robot chef, Mark Oleynik, said it's the human-like hands that make the robot chef unique, and a crucial factor in establishing it as a product that people want in their homes.

"The best way to make universal things; it's make it the way people do it. Because people are universal things; everything they create, they create by hand. So this was a key point of transferring their human intelligence, and the product based on this," he said.

If the hands can be taught to cook, according to the designers, there's no reason they couldn't play the piano, learn carpentry and more.

However, the company's primary aim is to produce a technology that addresses basic human needs and improves day-to-day quality of life.

"If you can make the right model, the robot does not make mistakes. So it's fun for humans to make a creative process and keep the boring process for the machine," said Oleynik.

By Musalia Wycliffe

Source: Reuters

Want to send us a story? Submit on Wananchi Reporting on the Citizen Digital App or Send an email to wananchi@royalmedia.co.ke or Send an SMS to 25170 or WhatsApp on 0743570000

Leave a Comment

Comments

No comments yet.

latest stories