
Following the success of Nintendogs video game on Nintendo DS game console, publisher Activision in collaboration with Segatoys will offer commercialization of WappyDogs a robot dog for the Nintendo DS. Mix of toy and robot, Wappy Dog takes the form of a dog that can be controlled from a Nintendo DS. Just like Nintendogs, the game will foster small animal of puppy to adult dogs, while doing new action.
For this, the console will translate the 350 barking and barking the dog in order to understand, and mini games also will enable to evolve.
More information and video Wappy Dog, the robot dog for the Nintendo DS
It can also recognize the voice of his master or his friends, and because of itwould be their best friend, as long as the take care of it, nurtured and fed …
So the puppy will respond to different actions, wagging his tail, also barking and fluttering, like a real pet! So the puppy will respond to different actions, wagging his tail, also barking and fluttering, like a real pet!
Wappy has touch sensors, speakers, several LEDs and a microphone that will allow the user to interact.
Video Wappy Dog, the robot dog for Nintendo DS:
| Title | : | WappyDog, robot dog for Nintendo DS |
| Category | : | Robotics Videos. |
| Tags | : | robot dog, robot dog for Nintendo DS, Video Wappydog, Wappydog, |
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The word robotics was derived from the word robot, which was introduced to the public by Czech writer Karel Čapek in his play R.U.R. (Rossum's Universal Robots), which premiered in 1921.
According to the Oxford English Dictionary, the word robotics was first used in print by Isaac Asimov, in his science fiction short story "Liar!", published in May 1941 in Astounding Science Fiction. Asimov was unaware that he was coining the term; since the science and technology of electrical devices is electronics, he assumed robotics already referred to the science and technology of robots. In some of Asimov's other works, he states that the first use of the word robotics was in his short story Runaround (Astounding Science Fiction, March 1942). However, the word robotics appears in "Liar!"

