Posted Jan 17th 2008 9:20AM by Darren Murph
Filed under: Robots, Wearables

Hard to believe we're seeing
yet another wearable robot suit
emerge from Japan, eh? All sarcasm
aside, there actually
is a newcomer to the curiously growing market courtesy of Shigeki Toyama and colleagues from the Tokyo University of Agriculture and Technology. The aptly dubbed farming robot suit is a strap-on contraption that makes lifting objects much easier than nature intended, reportedly reducing the wear and tear (read: force) placed on one's joints, knees and back by around 50-percent. Additionally, the suit will be programmable depending on the type of work being done, but we've no idea if any third-party attachments (you know, rubber band launchers, integrated HMDs, etc.) are in the works. On the real, you'll be looking at around ¥500,000 ($4,559) to ¥1,000,000 ($9,117) to ease your load, but that could dip as low as ¥200,000 ($1,823) per suit if mass production becomes viable.
[Via
The Register]
Tags: exoskeleton, farm, farmer, farming, farming robot suit, FarmingRobotSuit, japan, japanese, robot suit, RobotSuit, suit, Tokyo University, TokyoUniversity
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