List of robotic dogs

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The robotic dog Zoomer

Robotic dogs are robots designed to resemble dogs in appearance and behavior, usually incorporating canine characteristics such as barking or tail-wagging. In addition, many such "dogs" have appeared as toys and in fiction.

Military and research[]

BostonDynamics Spot
  • BigDog, quadruped robot created by Boston Dynamics with funding from the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency that is capable of traversing varied terrain and maintaining its balance on ice and snow.
  • LittleDog, another Boston Dynamics' robot that is much smaller than the original BigDog project.
  • Rhex, hexapod robot.
  • , quadruped with a flexible spine created by the U.S. Army Research Laboratory and UPenn.
  • , DARPA M3 program with a Boston Dynamics hydraulic quadruped and the MIT created electric Cheetah
  • , hydraulic quadruped robot able to run up to 2 m/s,[1] developed by the Advanced Robotics Department of the IIT (Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia)
  • , climbing and walking quadruped robot developed by the Florida A&M University[2]
  • Rise, hexapod
  • , several versions of this quadruped were created
  • , quadruped robot

Consumer[]

Sony's AIBO
  • AIBO (Sony)
  • Big Scratch & Little Scratch (Trendmasters)
  • Build Your Own Robo Pup
  • Bow-wow[citation needed]
  • CHiP (WowWee)
  • F.I.D.O.
  • Gaylord (Ideal Toy Company), robotic dog controllable by leash, produced in the 1960s [3]
  • Genibo, robotic dog produced by the Korean company Dasatech.
  • I-Cybie (Silverlit Electronics)
  • iDog (Hasbro) and (Tiger Electronics)
  • iDog amp'd (Hasbro) and (Tiger Electronics)
  • iDog Clip (Hasbro) and (Tiger Electronics)
  • iDog Dance (Hasbro) and (Tiger Electronics)
  • iDog soft speaker (Hasbro) and (Tiger Electronics)
  • Lucky the Incredible Wonder Pup (Zizzle)[4]
  • Mio Pup (Tiger Electronics) An "emoto-tronic" robot pet with over 100 "eye-cons" to show its feelings[citation needed]
  • Poo-Chi (Tiger Electronics)
  • Robopet (WowWee)
  • Rocket the Wonder Dog (Fisher Price)
  • Smartpet, robot dog that uses an iPhone to be powered
  • Space Dog (KO CO)[citation needed]
  • Spotbot, retro style robotic dog
  • Tekno the Robotic Puppy Appeared on the cover of Time magazine
  • Teksta Popular in the 1990s, this toy was intended to be able to perform card tricks and respond to commands.[citation needed]
  • Wappy Dog
  • Wrex the Dawg, robot dog[citation needed]
  • Zoomer & Friends
  • I Robot, available in three different types i.e. DuoDuo, Lele, QiQi[citation needed]
  • Tombot, a robotic companion animal designed to be a viable option to a real dog for dementia patients

Joinmax Digital Robot Dog JM-DOG-001], offered as a semi-assembled kit (no soldering required) at $331, it offers a 15 servo-based impressive freedom of motion. Control is possible through a serial connection to the included controller board, or through simple commands sequences stored in memory.[5]

  • Flip over dogs – there are many examples of many flip-over dogs designed to look like robots, such as F.I.D.O and Sparky.[citation needed]

In fiction[]

K9 (Dr Who)

In art[]

In music[]

  • MC Chris wrote a song named robotdog, describing his adventures with his robotic Aibo that takes over his life.

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ "HyQ - IIT's Hydraulic Quadruped Robot - Balancing and First Outdoor Tests" – via www.youtube.com.
  2. ^ "Scansorial and Cursorial Ambulation in a Robust and Agile roBot (SCARAB) Quadrupedal Runner and Climber".
  3. ^ "Gaylord the Dog TV Commercial" – via www.youtube.com.
  4. ^ https://web.archive.org/web/20071015034708/http://www.zizzle.com/products/product-lucky.html
  5. ^ "Joinmax Digital Robot Dog". Pololu. Retrieved 2012-09-12.
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