A Vancouver artist and engineer, Jonathan Tippett, is building an alternative racing machine, the Prosthesis, a rival to Formula One, that more closely aligns man and technology.
Prosthesis is controlled by a person strapped inside an exoskeleton. When the pilot moves an arm, the arm of the machine will move with it, until a person is running along with a giant piece hunk of metal.
Because the Prosthesis isn't autonomous, Tippett calls it the 'anti-robot.' "It can't walk or balance or do anything by itself," he says. "It's completely human-controlled. The whole point of building this machine is to create a new experience for the user, or the athlete, inside. The machine is built for humans, by humans."
Tippet and his team at eatART are now looking for
$100,000 in funding to complete the project:
"We've built a 2:3 scale prototype leg called the Alpha Leg which has allowed us to develop and refine the lithium-ion power plant, hydraulics, control systems, and human control interface technologies," Tippett says.
Tippett eventually hopes to organize a whole racing circuit where man-robots can compete against each other. The idea already sounds interesting.
To find out more about the "Anti-Robot," watch Tippett explain it here:
And check out the promotional video below:
Visit
Prosthesis The Anti-Robot for more info or to support the campaign.