Hektor: the Graffiti Robot 222
Lopex writes "Gizmodo has a story about Hektor, a graffiti robot. Apparently it is for the extremely geeky (or perhaps extremely lazy) tagger. Hektor.ch has photos, information (pdf), and a movie (15 Mb) of it in action."
time cop (Score:1)
Re:time cop (Score:2, Informative)
Re:time cop (Score:2)
Doesn't sound like you've watched it too much.
Don't try this at home! (Score:2)
Demolition Man (Score:1)
Re:WRONG! (Score:2, Informative)
I saw this (Score:3, Informative)
Wow (Score:5, Funny)
He also lacks style, but at least it's not just giant bubble letters.
Re:Wow (Score:4, Informative)
Look over the pictures again. Any picture that shows drip will show plenty of areas with none. There are also other pictures with no drip at all.
Re:Wow (Score:3, Informative)
I want one.
Re:Wow (Score:2)
On a side note, I was going to try and bring a Simpsons reference into it from the episode where they goto Shelbyville to get the lemon tree and the Shelbyville kids comment on Bart's excellent can control, but I couldn't figure out a way to make it both funny and have people catch the reference.
Re:Wow (Score:5, Funny)
There are a lot of women out there who just don't understand how challenging that really is.
Drip is IN (Score:2)
Re:Drip is IN (Score:1)
Re:Taggers SUCK (Score:1, Funny)
So you're the one! Ooo, I'm gonna get you...
Re:Taggers SUCK (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Taggers SUCK (Score:2)
The only reason for projecting objectivity onto a subjective phenomenon is human insecurity. The Tipherian so caught up in the worship of his own flawed mind he takes death over reality. The mindless chauvinism of elevating artifacts of thought to the level of mathematics reveals the absurdity of the whole exercise.
Besides, you're not really and expert on something until you can explain it to roadkill. [viewingspace.com]
Communication (Score:2)
You're cool because you say the right thing.
You're sucky because you couch it in verbiage that hides your point in art-fag language.
All you had to say was "The reason there's no objective definition of "good" art is because nothing is so good that someone, somewhere, won't hate it. Isn't it nice that the most social of things gets a free pass on criteria it can't help to meet overall?"
And I've never even been to art school! (Score:2)
Anyway, hate is a subjective qantity. What is hate? Are we using hate in the metaphysical sense? In that case, assuming even so much as to say that mankind is even capable of true hate is patently ridiculous. Even if we stick to common usage, hate would have
15MBLink (Score:1, Funny)
Not really... (Score:2)
OK, that's pretty damn cool... (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:OK, that's pretty damn cool... (Score:5, Funny)
Right, now they just have to lug around twenty cans of spraypaint, one hundred feet of rope, a level, a ladder, something to attach the rope to the side of the building with, a laptop, data cable, and a robot.
Then, if the cops haven't come after someone complained of the racket of ladders hitting the sides of buildings and boltguns bolting the rope onto the side of a brick building, they may do all the lurking in the shadows they wish while the robot spends a half an hour drawing a landscape.
Re:OK, that's pretty damn cool... (Score:3, Insightful)
While you were typing this cynical view, I was considering what I'd have to do to pull off something. What modifications/enhancements I'd need to go 4 color, how to get away from paint cans. A bit of engineering and a decent exercise, but I think it could be done. Honestly, it's already been done
Re: (Score:2)
Hooray (Score:5, Interesting)
A friend and I did something practically identical years ago for a tech shop project in high school, though we werent allowed to use spraypaint, so we had it draw on walls with magic markers, like a giant hanging etch-a-sketch. Worked pretty well, and really wasnt that complicated to build (QBasic "driver" software included)
another possibility (Score:1)
couldn't resist... (Score:5, Funny)
Kind of neat, but not new. (Score:2)
Re:Kind of neat, but not new. (Score:1)
And most plotters plot in multiple colors, this appears to just use 1. It seems like this would take a long time if you wanted to do something in more than 1 color. What would you use this for?
Re:Kind of neat, but not new. (Score:1)
Do all the blue, pop out the can, put in red, do the red part, pop out the can, put in the green can, ect...
Re:Kind of neat, but not new. (Score:2)
I STILL CAN'T FIND A LINUX DRIVER!
Bleah.. (Score:2, Funny)
Quick, take down the post! (Score:1)
.
Now you people at the JPL [nasa.gov], don't go getting any ideas from this...
Re:Quick, take down the post! (Score:3, Funny)
rule.
You'd think... (Score:1)
Just a matter of time... (Score:2, Funny)
Art? (Score:5, Interesting)
Most of the Graffiti kids I have known tag for a bunch of reasons..
Reasons like the art of it (I've seen some fantastic tags), but mostly the challenge of getting to a spot where you have time to throw a good tag. I mean, half of what people graffiti is their own name, or TAG, mostly on the biggest, most difficult thing to get to that they can find.
It's about the art, and about the challenge. Using a robot seems like mere automated vandalism.
Re:Art? (Score:3, Funny)
As opposed to good old fashioned manual vandalism? Yeah, there is a lot of art and challenge in putting up a gang name on every friggin corner.
Re:Art? (Score:1, Insightful)
way to generalize, stereotype and hate what you don't understand
plenty of taggers are both better technical artists than you will ever even dream of being, and also have nothing to do with gangs at all
for such an 'educated' site, /. has some of the most blatant reactionary tunnel vision to be found on the planet
Re:Art? (Score:2)
Most of the people I've known who have done graffiti weren't gang members, and if you know what you are looking at, you can tell the difference.
I don't really want to condone graffiti, but I've been pretty impressed by some of it.
Art? (Score:2)
Re:Art? (Score:1)
Re:Art? (Score:2, Insightful)
In response to another followup - Art (like beauty) is in the eye of the beholder.
There are peeps who say that all graffiti is vandalism, and others that all graffiti is art.
Like any good fence sitter: I've seen some amazing renditions done with spray cans over "public" walls. These to me are art. Amazing use of colour, form. Many with a social message.
"Tagging", which if interpret it correctly, means basically signing your name on every exposed surface you can find, to me is vandal
Re:Art? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Art? (Score:2)
Re:Art? (Score:2, Interesting)
It's somewhat equivalent to scrawling you name over top of a Renoir, and saying you've created a new work of art.
Re:Art? (Score:3, Insightful)
That's an awfully black and white view of the world.
I suppose that all of those cave paintings were some punk kid throwing up gang signs for the bison gang.
You wanna roll with the bison, fool?
Re:Art? (Score:2, Interesting)
Except for the fact that you completely miss the entire point; if you 'steal' my car, I no longer have any use of it; painting a pretty picture (I've seen everything from Marylin Monroe to "I Rok" tagged onto things) on the side of a train or a bus may annoy someone, but it doesn't keep the object form serving its purpose - i.e., the bus can still pick peop
Re:Art? (Score:2)
It now sits in a museum in Europe somewhere.
I'm sure a google for "dada" will give you plenty of reasons on why this work was important.
Just because you have a narrow view of what constitutes art does not mean that something like graffiti is not art.
Re:Art? (Score:2, Insightful)
But hey...art or not, IT'S NOT YOUR FSCKING WALL!!! Buy a goddamn canvas or get someone's permission before you paint their building. This is a simple case of "your right to swing your fist ends where my nose begins."
Re:Art? (Score:2)
As someone who periodically has to repaint his property because of the little assh*les, I second the "BUY A DANG CANVAS!!!" movement.
Re:Art? (Score:3, Insightful)
Not
Re:Art? (Score:2)
Re:Art? (Score:2)
I'm one of them. Let's see what tune you are whistling when someone tags your HOUSE.
Where's the "social commentary" in writing your name on something? It still sounds like hooliganism to me.
Why isn't smashing windows or slashing tires valid social commentary too?
Re:Art? (Score:2, Informative)
1. What is the location of the writing? Is it an appropriate location (i.e. no personal property i.e. houses, small businesses; not on a cultural monument or other work of art; nature is another big no) Is the work appropriate for the location? (does it work off the environment around it to assimilate itself into the general experience of its location?)
2. What is the substance of the writing? Any 12 year old with a spraycan can write his name wi
Re:Art? (Score:2)
Billboard Appliations? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Billboard Appliations? (Score:1)
This has been posted on /. before (Score:5, Informative)
Re:This has been posted on /. before (Score:2)
But somehow, if you dare question why [slashdot.org] we're getting so still getting dupes, inaccurate stories and old "news", then you're shot down as flamebait: must be nice having unlimited moderation so you can silence anyone who dares ask anything you don't want to answer.
Just what every city needs (Score:5, Funny)
Proof-positive tagging isn't art.
*puts on flame retardant underpants*
Re:Just what every city needs (Score:2)
Tagging just isn't the same as it was when I was a kid.
Been there, done that. (Score:3, Funny)
Name change request (Score:2, Funny)
Still got nothin' on Ol' Bender (Score:1)
Bender: Hmm, looks like my antenna's in the wrong place... let me just adjust it...
Fry: Bender, no! You'll make baby jesus cry!
Are they mad?! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Are they mad?! (Score:2)
Yeah. They tagged his office, now he's DDOSing their server in retribution. The punks.
I'd be more impressed... (Score:2)
as it is... it's impressive, but it isn't the graffiti 'Birth of Venus'
This thing is really quite an engineering feat (Score:3, Informative)
Danger Will Robinson, Danger! Annoying Javascript (Score:5, Funny)
Yeah, a nice bit of javascript that opens over a half dozen windows in rapid-fire order, ordered a CD from Amazon using my account, sent a flaming email to GWB, redirected me to the goat-whatever guy, played the Dean Scream, and then crashed Mozilla. Well, ok, only the bit about opening up a bunch of photos.
[RANT]Folks- popup windoid things as part of your website are like talking appliances. Every so often, designers get it in their heads that it's a Hot Idea, and then everyone drags them out into the street and demonstrates how the current generation of designers got their new jobs. If I want to open something on your site in a new window, I'll goddamn hold down the modifier key and THEN click the link, thanks much.[/RANT]
Yay! (Score:1)
How is this "graffiti"? (Score:1)
This is a printer/plotter. Moves on wires. Makes marks. Hooray.
Dang (Score:3, Funny)
Robot (Score:3, Interesting)
A real graffiti robot would have suckers, or crampons, or a big extending ladder, not rely on someone else placing pulleys for it.
short circuit (Score:1)
That ain't no taggin' robot!!! (Score:1)
Check out the GraffitiWriter at Applied Autonomy [appliedautonomy.com].
Cool (Score:2)
Had I written the algorithm, I would have just made it move directly to the point and then start drawing - but this looks like it goes to the start point, waves around the immediate area for a bit and then starts.
(Answer may be in PDF, I can't open it though)
Re:Cool (Score:1)
holy pop ups batman! (Score:5, Informative)
It's all about Scalability! (Score:3, Interesting)
With this thing you just need a longer piece of rope and two mount points. Bigger building? longer rope. Switch the paint nozzle by radio. Even bigger building, just a longer rope.
Re:It's all about Scalability! (Score:3, Informative)
Even bigger building, just a longer rope
This would work up to a point, but it wouldn't scale well for big structures. Rope stretches, even static ropes not designed for climbing still stretch a little. The longer the rope gets the heavier it is so the more it stretches. Unless you account for this when working out the position of the sprayer your pictures are going to be distorted.
You might be able to solve it using steel cables instead of rope which would stop the stretching problem but you might
Re:Not really (Score:2)
Did you not look at the pictures and video? The robot is suspended from two fixed pullies, the amount of rope reeled in and out controls its position. If the rope stretches it will alter the position causing the picture to be distorted.(See wasn't that more polite than just saying RTFA!)
Your second point is true though wind would be hard to compensate for.
Re:It's all about Scalability! (Score:2)
However, to conteract wind gusts blowing the paint off target and making a sloppy mess, you would probably need some serious "on the fly" computing.
Wind could probably be stopped from affecting the nozzle just by having a screen around it to stop wind blowing in from the side.
You could probably reduce the wind moving the robot by using 4 ropes (2 anchored at the top, 2 at the bottom) instead of 2 so it is held in position more firmly.
Re:It's all about Scalability! (Score:2)
Thats what I love about /. there are so many readers it only takes one or two layman opinions before someone who knows their stuff shows up to tell us how its really done. There should be an 'expert opinion' mod category.
Cleanbots too (Score:1)
Re:Cleanbots too (Score:2)
Yes and if you design a new paint brush you should have to make a cleaning cloth too. It is only called a graffiti robot because it paints designs on walls. I doubt they are planning to take it round town to tag bus shelters.
Actual uses would be numerous, interior design being an obvious one. Want a mural on your wall but can't paint, hire one of these from your local interior design place and put any design/picture you want on your walls. It could also be used for repainting billboards, no more sendin
Mirror (Score:5, Informative)
PDF available here [jmu.edu]
Apparently... (Score:2)
...the picture the robot draws in the video is a self-portrait of the peanut gallery who kept commenting throughout the entire movie.
<rimshot> Be sure to tip your waitress, I'll be here all week!
*duck and cover*
extremely lazy tagger (Score:2)
Dupe! (Score:2)
If you didn't see it then, the BBC News story linked in the July posting still works.
~Philly
He should patent this idea before it is stolen by (Score:2)
Anyone else think... (Score:2)
Think about the children! (Score:3, Funny)
My idea with a twist... (Score:2)
Re:My idea with a twist... (Score:2)
An geeky 'artists' collective got a grant to do just that. They put spray paint on the back of a remote control monster-truck. 4-5 cans of different colours were lined up in the back... as the truck moved, it would spray various dots and write slogans.
What you described is mentioned on this geek's website. [cmu.edu]
AH! Here it is! [appliedautonomy.com] have a look at the GraffitiWriter and Streetwriter projects from left menu. These two projects seem more fitting fo
GraffitiBot? What's next StreetPerformerBot? (Score:2)
Imagine all of the great things we could automate with robots:
GraffitiBot - tags all clean walls with cool phrases like "i Ownz j00", "H4x0R", and "Linux Rules"
ThiefBot - hangs out in front of convenience stores and steals hot dogs and candy bars
CoffeeBot - Orders one regular coffee and sits in small groups at Starbucks all day long holding a section of newspaper
BeggarBot - Identifies high traffic sidewalk areas, holds out sign, and pokes at passers by asking for handouts
Rec
Judge Dredd (Score:2)
SPOILER ALERT
ends up discovered to be a robot bored with its job.
Re:Dup! (Score:2)
Re:Graffiti isn't art? (Score:2)