COMPUTERS
ROBOT "SHAKY". TELEVISION PICTURE ROBOT POV. BUILT BY THE ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE SECTION OF THE STANFORD RESEARCH INSTITUTE OF CALIFORNIA ROBOT'S TASK IS TO PUSH A BOX OFF A PLATFORM. PUSHES A RACK INTO PLACE, THEN PUSHES THE BOX ONTO THE PLATFORM.
WRIST PAGER
00:00:00:00 CUs Motorola & Seiko pager-beeper wristwatch sys worn on wrists// EXT Motorola corp// VS,INT Motorola corp w pager wristwatches being processed & constructed on robot assembly ...
Robotic Monitor - 8
In a studio setting against a white backdrop, a robotic monitor moves around. A partial view of the set is seen in the shot.
The Challenge of Change
Various shots of "Unimate" automated machine tool in operation, of automated television assembler in operation in "Man the Producer" theme pavilion. MLS of Indian restaurant on Expo '67 site, freighter passing on Saint Lawrence River in background. Several night shots of rides, brightly coloured lights at La Ronde. Shot of concessions on midway. Daytime MCS of people laughing and enjoying themselves on ride at La Ronde. Various shots of activities in Expo '67 operations room. LA PANs along bank of computers in computer room. MCSs of television camera on roof of building, pointed towards crowds below.
Flying bombs rocket launching with radar system (WW2)
A GB-4 glide bomb in a hanger, suspended from the ceiling. A robot bomb, possibly V-1, launching from a catapult ramp. A United States Air Force bomber drops GB-4 glide bomb during World War II. United States army air men use a television screen with radar system to direct the GB-4 glide bomb to its target. POV view target via GB-4 glide bomb camera. GB-4 glide bomb seen at ground level gliding to target and exploding. United States soldiers preparing a V-2 rocket for launch in the desert in the United States. Men working on radar system. V-2 firing room engineer gives the "go" signal for launch. V-2 rocket lift off in the desert. Scientists in radar control room at Fort Evans. Soldiers at controls of early field radar control system. Large radar console with circular CRT display. A United States soldier repairs radar console. Various types of radar antennas and dishes moving while in operation. Location: United States USA. Date: 1945.
AFP-44-I 16mm; VTM-44CF 1 inch
UNDERSEA KINGDOM CHAP 11
TSUKUBA EXPO / JAPAN EXPOSITION 1985
VS OF JAPAN EXPOSITION 1985. VS OF ROBOTS AND ELECTRONIC TOYS. CR:35. VS OF A SONY TELEVISION THE SIZE OF 4 TENNIS COURTS. VS OF A ROBOT PLAYING A PIANO. VS OF LOCAL POLICE GUARDING THE EXPO WITH A ROBOT THAT DISARMS BOMBS. CR:76 REFEEDS. CR:152 NO PICTURE. CI: EXHIBITS: JAPAN EXPO '85. MACHINES: ROBOTS.
Robot Baby; 01/11/00
ODD: Clips from a TV commercial featuring a robotic baby; Behind the scenes Cus of a robotic baby, face moves in weird animatronic Disney fashion; CU hands manipulating a remote control to make the child's parts move; Very "Chucky" like.
Talking TV Head Robot
Funny singer robot on stage sings or presents with microphone in hand. Humanoid robot developed with artificial intelligence technology saying something on green background. / You can watch the monitor video with facial expressions on my iStock video portfolio. Video number: 1486286353
Animation
cartoon - animation - mechanical robot flies through the air - flying robot - police fire machine guns at giant robot - robot robs jewelry store - Television Playback for kids - Children's TV Show
FILM NOW, LAND LATER
MOON PICTURES <br/> <br/>Cape Kennedy, United States of America (USA). <br/> <br/>GV. Rocket blasts off at Cape Kennedy. Zoom in to animation shot of moon. SV. Lunar orbitor two moving, its cell panels open and a small flap opens to reveal twin lens taking pictures of the moon. CU. The twin lens camera taking pictures, & LV. LV. Receiving aerial. SV. Two operators looking at film pictures of the moon. CU. Moon pictures on film strip. LV. Officials of N.A.S.A. looking at moon pictures. CU. Magnified pictures of the moon, pan, & LV. <br/> <br/>TINKER THE ROBOT <br/> <br/>Leeds, Yorkshire. <br/> <br/>CU. Tinker, the robot, walking along pavement with shopping. CU. Side view of the Tinker. SV. The robot outside home - in his right hand he holds a newspaper and in his left hand a shopping basket. CU. Hand moving up holding newspaper. SV. Woman leaves home and walks down garden path. SV. She takes the shopping basket from the robot and the newspaper from the robot's hand and says thank you, turns and walks back to house. SV. Interior, man in a room surrounded by television sets and equipment controlling the movement of the robot by electronics. He is also watching a monitor screen of the robot. Television screen with robot moving. SV. The robot walks along pavement, & CU. Back view, robot walking with garage in background. SV. Interior, husband controlling the movement of the robot. LV. The robot as the garage door closes in front of him.
News Clip: Robots
Video footage from the KXAS-TV/NBC station in Fort Worth, Texas, to accompany a news story about the current state of robots and robotics. Children are seen observing and operating robots.
Newsreels 1962 Year In Review Headlines, 1962
President John F. Kennedy Announces The Arms Blockade Of Cuba World peace was threatened by the most critical period in history. Cuban Dictator Fidel Castro had tightened his grip on Cuba and Russia had shipped offensive weapons to Cuba. Shows U.S. reconnaissance aircraft in flight over Cuba. Reconnaissance plane crew member taking photographs of the Russian missile sites under construction in Cuba. Shows President Kennedy speaking from the White House. With the backing of the Organization of American States and Western Allies, President John F. Kennedy announces an arms embargo of Cuba and issued an ultimatum to Russia; the removal of offensive weapons from Cuba. Shows U.S. aircraft in low flight over Russian ship with missiles on deck covered by tarpaulins that had been removed from Cuba. 1st Anniversary Of The Berlin Wall East Germany continues to reinforce the "Wall of Shame" or Berlin Wall in an attempt to stop the East Germans from fleeing. East German guards shoot a 15 year old boy and left him to die increasing tension along the border. Shows East German Border Guards removing dead body of 15 year old boy. The East German people vent their anger on a bus carrying East German guards. CU Image of West Berlin Freedom Bell or Freiheitsglocke ringing. U.S. Troops march in review pass General Lucas Clay in West Berlin. General Lucas Clay salutes the troops and continued to be a leading spokesman for German freedom. Shows a column of U.S. tanks. France At Peace For First Time Since 1939 Low aerial view of the Arc de Triomphe in Paris France. France is at peace for the first time since 1939 as Charles de Gaulle brought the war in Algeria to an end. CU image of French President Charles de Gaulle. The African nation of Algeria wins it's freedom. Shows Algerian Vice Premier Ben Bella surrounded by supporters. Chinese Troops Cross Over Border Into India Red China pours troops over India's northern frontier and India mobilizes troops to meet this Red Chinese threat. Shows people of India protesting Chinese troops crossing India's northern border. Banner reads "Chinese Out". Shows Indian people donating their gold jewelry and savings to the defense effort. CU image of Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru. Former First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt Passes Former First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt dies leaving a legacy as an advocate for peace and as an international humanitarian. CU image of President Roosevelt and Eleanor Roosevelt waving to a group of people from White House balcony. CU various images of Eleanor Roosevelt with children. Pope John XXIII Opens Second Vatican Council Pope John XXIII made history by starting the Second Vatican Council, which was, as he said, a way to "open up the windows of the church and let the Holy Spirit in". NASA Astronaut John Glenn First American To Orbit Earth U.S. Space Achievements. Colonel John Glenn becomes the first American to orbit earth and is given a hero's parade. Scott Carpenter quickly follows in Glenn's footsteps. Walter Schirra then made six orbits of earth. Shows launch of Mercury-Atlas 6 (MA-6) rocket carrying the Mercury spacecraft "Friendship 7" into orbit. CU image of John Glenn. Shows ticker-tape parade down Broadway in New York City. Broadway street sign temporarily changed to "Astronaut Way" for the occasion. Shows Scott Carpenter and wife riding in open automobile in parade. CU image of Astronaut Walter Schirra. Shows President John F. Kennedy with Astronaut Walter Schirra and family in the White House. New Satellite Provides World-Wide Communications Communications took a leap forward with the orbiting of Telstar with the dream of worldwide communications between any two points on earth at any time. Animation image of Telstar satellite and how it works. Shows clarity of images on television that was broadcasted from America to Europe and back. Shows launch of Mariner 1, first spacecraft launched by Nasa in the Mariner Program of robotic interplanetary probes.
Bridgeman Images Details
Labour Technology
Several shots of the last day of production at Windsor's Chrysler plant, it is being closed down temporarily to be refitted with industrial robots, shots of last car coming off assembly line, numerous TV crews cover event.
Various Subjects
Commercials containing remote controls: television remote controls, toy remote controls, robots.
21054 HUGHES GLOMAR EXPLORER MINING MINERALS IN THE DEEP OCEAN MAGANESE NODULE RECOVERY (Print 1)
“Oceanography: Mining Mineral In The Ocean” is an issue of the Science Screen Report, presented by United Technologies Sikorsky Aircraft, that discusses the potential and problems of have deep-sea mining for minerals. The issue opens with shots of the sea, which is a “reserve of global resources,” including metals from deep-sea nodules (polymetallic nodules). These nodules cover vast areas of the sea bottom, and their potential is the reason for a major deep-ocean project being carried out. Deep Sea Nodules can be the size of potatoes, and their porous structure accumulates layers of various metals. They are very slow growing, but sizeable nodules cover areas of the sea floor, providing a significant reserve of metals. As part of the project to determine the mining feasibility of nodules, the first self-propelled robot miner (01:38) is developed and tested. Scientists examine nodules in a lab (02:52), but to answer a number of questions surrounding them, the National Science Foundation uses Research Vessel Melvillle (03:12) to carry out underwater tests. Members of the crew lower sound beacons to create a grid (03:35). Then a robot mapping vehicle is lowered into the water to gather data within the grid. In the control room (04:10), the team monitors the robot’s data. The next step is the collection of sea floor samples (05:08); a box corer is lowered into the water to gather sample nodules, transporting nodules and their environment to the surface. Scientists examine the contents, conduct tests, and record data. The results indicate nodules may grow similar to coral. Next, piston corers (06:52) are used to take out samples of core sections of the floor to add to the mission’s overall understanding. After two weeks, the samples and data are collected, stored, and made accessible to over 50 research centers throughout the world. The next phase involves exploration ship Governor Ray (08:06), which monitors a sea mining research site, and Glomar Explorer (08:22), a surface platform ship (originally built as a deep-sea recovery platform for the CIA as part of Project Azorian also known as Project Jennifer) with an internal dry dock that holds the advanced robot miner. The crew preps for launch day by filling the dry dock, opening the doors (11:00), and moving the robot miner into the water. The robot miner hangs under the ship as pipe attachments are installed, connecting the miner and processor to transport nodule slurry. The robot miner is positioned and the processor is attached to it, enabling the mining operation to begin (12:18). Sonar and TV images show how easily the miner collects nodules as is moves across sea floor capturing images and harvesting nodules, which are crushed into a slurry and piped up to the ship. A commercial miner would be 10 times the size of the robot miner, but the smaller robot miner is the first step in the eventual commercial mining of the sea’s unique nodules.<p><p>Background on this ... historic film is that it shows techniques used to conduct deep ocean mining of the sea floor, which were pioneered in the 1960s. The potential for this type of mining (particularly of manganese nodules) was never fully realized. Ironically, the program did end up providing the cover for the USNS Hughes Glomar Explorer (T-AG-193), a deep-sea drillship platform built for the United States Central Intelligence Agency Special Activities Division secret operation Project Azorian to recover the sunken Soviet submarine K-129, lost in April 1968. Hughes Glomar Explorer (HGE), as the ship was called at the time, was built between 1973 and 1974, by Sun Shipbuilding and Drydock Co. for more than US$350 million at the direction of Howard Hughes for use by his company, Global Marine Development Inc. This is equivalent to $1.67 billion in present-day terms. She set sail on 20 June 1974. Hughes told the media that the ship's purpose was to extract manganese nodules from the ocean floor. This marine geology cover story became surprisingly influential, spurring many others to examine the idea. But in sworn testimony in United States district court proceedings and in appearances before government agencies, Global Marine executives and others associated with Hughes Glomar Explorer project unanimously maintained that the ship could not be used in any economically viable ocean mineral operation.<p><p>We encourage viewers to add comments and, especially, to provide additional information about our videos by adding a comment! See something interesting? Tell people what it is and what they can see by writing something for example: "01:00:12:00 -- President Roosevelt is seen meeting with Winston Churchill at the Quebec Conference."<p><p>This film is part of the Periscope Film LLC archive, one of the largest historic military, transportation, and aviation stock footage collections in the USA. Entirely film backed, this material is available for licensing in 24p HD, 2k and 4k. For more information visit http://www.PeriscopeFilm.com
"Lost In Space" Robot Found
"Danger Will Robinson" was a quote from this famous robot. He was from the movie "Lost In Space"... and now he is in pieces. The robot was found smashed to pieces in Tennessee after being abducted.
POWER SLAVE (aka SLAVE AUTOMATION or RADIO ACTIVE POWER MANIPULATOR or ROBOT HAND or REMOTE CONTROL MANIPILATOR)
Erith, Kent. <br/> <br/>C/U of a robotic arm - its full title is a "Remotely Operated Power Manipulator" - lifting a "supposedly radioactive" valve wheel. Panning shot follows the arm as it lifts the wheel and sets it down on a table. M/S of the entire robotic arm, in the background is the operator, George Tulfry standing behind a window. The arm is the first of its kind to be made in Europe and was produced by the General Electric Company Ltd. C/U of George's hand turning a switch on the control panel. C/U of the arm still holding the wheel. C/U of George's face. M/S of the arm lifting a brush dipped in red paint from a tin and painting a block of metal - the narrator explains that during a nuclear accident the arm would be useful for marking affected material a distinctive colour. C/U of the arm painting. Tilt down to show the delicate brushing movements the arm is capable of. M/S from the side showing the entire arm. Tilt up to show how the arm moves back and forth by sliding along a rail attached to the ceiling. C/U of George using the controls - the narrator points out that with closed circuit television the operator could potentially be miles away. C/U of the arm picking up a block of frozen carbon dioxide. C/U of the George. C/U of his hands on the controls. C/U of the arm gently dropping the block into a beaker of water. C/U of the controls being operated. C/U of the carbon dioxide fizzing and smoking in the beaker - the narrator jokes that "you could use it at home for putting sugar in your tea but when you realise that it can quite easily lift 750 lb. at a time ... well, it is rather like taking a steamroller to press your clothes with". C/U of the George. C/U of the arm lifting the beaker of carbon dioxide and carefully decanting the gas into another smaller beaker resting on a metal block. The arm almost knocks the beaker over and in response the narrator japes: "Steady George!" M/S of George's back and the control panel. C/U of a dial on the control panel. <br/> <br/>M/S of a young woman, Eve Ward, sitting on the table holding a tube of lip stick. The arm moves menacingly close to her. She places the lip stick between its pincers. C/U of the girl and the arm. C/U of the operator. C/U of the arm applying lipstick to the girl's lips.
Entertainment Japan Robot Suit - Scientists display robot suit that improves mobililty
NAME: JPN ROBOT 20090803E TAPE: EF09/0737 IN_TIME: 10:26:35:10 DURATION: 00:01:49:09 SOURCES: AP TELEVISION DATELINE: Tokyo, 3 August 2009 RESTRICTIONS: SHOTLIST: AP TELEVISION Tokyo, 3 August 2009 1. Various of people wearing robot suit walking in street 2. Man filming people wearing robot suit with his mobile phone 3. Various of people wearing robot suit walking in street 4. Mid of people with robot suit standing in room 5. Tilt up of feet 6. SOUNDBITE: (Japanese) Takatoshi Kuno, from Japanese robotics company Cyberdyne: "When you wear this, it is less tiring as you feel supported by the robot suit. So, even if your leg strength gets weak, you can still conduct normal life if you wear this suit." 7. Various of people wearing robot suit walking on street STORYLINE ROBOT SUIT Japanese scientists on Monday (3AUG09) displayed a robot suit that they claim improves mobility and enables the wearer to carry more. Three people enjoyed an unusual stroll wearing the robot suits in Tokyo's busy city centre on Monday afternoon. Japanese robotics company Cyberdyne, said the hybrid assistive limb or HAL suits will help the injured and weak to get around. The suit also makes the mobility easier and increases user strength to carry heavier objects. The 10-kilogram (22-pound) machine belts at the waist, and has a battery and computer system at the back. The system also has sensors that pick up weak electric signals that are sent along the skin's surface to the brain. This allows HAL to help wearers move in the way they are thinking. The average walking speed with the assist of the suit is 1.8 kilometres per hour. The company began renting out the suits last October. The rental cost is 220-thousand yen (2,200 US dollars) a month. Keyword wacky science technology
COMMERCIALS
Toy TV Commercial. ROBOT TOY Robot Commando
LE 13H: [issue dated 04 December 2023]
News Clip: Robotics
Video footage from the KXAS-TV/NBC station in Fort Worth, Texas, to accompany a news story.