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Before Alexa and Siri: A Look Back at a Century of Robotic Advancements

Before Alexa and Siri: A Look Back at a Century of Robotic Advancements

We live in a world where robots and robotic technology have become part of our everyday lives. While films such as “Metropolis” and television series like “The Twilight Zone” warned of a world in which our mechanical creations would enslave us, many of us could not envision a day without virtual personal assistants like Siri or the floor-cleaning robotic vacuum Roomba. 

Robots today can reason, feel emotions, make restaurant recommendations, grasp objects, perform all the tasks of a human butler, and even do ballroom dancing.

It was just over 100 years ago that we first heard the term robot. 24/7 Tempo has compiled a list of how technology — and our lives — have changed over 100 years of robots.  We reviewed information from NASA, Wired, and other tech publications to find examples of the most popular, important, ground-breaking, and innovative robotic inventions over the past century. 

The term robot comes from a 1921 play written by Czech playwright Karel Čapek and the word is derived from the Czech word “robota,” or forced labor, as done by serfs. Early representations of these mechanical beings depicted them as emotionless automatons created  to serve humanity.

It wasn’t until the 1939 New York World’s Fair that Westinghouse built a robot with a personality, who could tell jokes and smoke. Japanese inventors created the first robots that served as toys in the 1940s. They were wind-up toys at first and then became battery-operated, creating  lucrative possibilities for toy makers.

The first autonomous robots — who mimicked people and were able to avoid obstacles — arrived in the late 1940s. 

Industry began employing industrial robots in the 1950s as General Motors put them to work on assembly lines, using their hydraulic arms to do repeated tasks and perform jobs considered dangerous to humans. 

Robots have become an indispensable feature of space exploration. Apollo 15 was the first NASA mission to use a lunar rover in 1971. These are 30 NASA inventions we still use everyday.

Biped robots like P2 debuted in 1996. Such robots are able to walk stairs and push carts. Kismet, created at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, is one of the first robots to perceive emotions and understand social cues.

Humans still fear robots will replace them in every endeavor and make people obsolete, particularly in the workplace. But those concerns have diminished as robots have played key roles in oceanic and space exploration, boosted productivity in industry, and helped us perform daily tasks.  

Capek play by Unknown
Source: By Unknown, uploaded to ar.wiki by ar:المستخدم:Classic 971 on 13 July 2006, to en.wiki by en:User:Rocketmagnet on 4 December 2007, to commons by User:Sreejithk2000 on 2 June 2010 - http://www.umich.edu/~engb415/literature/pontee/RUR/RURsmry.html (via ar:ملف:Capek_play.jpg and en:Image:Capek play.jpg), Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=10522903

1. R.U.R.
> Year: 1921
> Made by: Karel Čapek

R.U.R. refers to the play “Rossum’s Universal Robots,” written by Czech playwright Karel Čapek. The word robot comes from the Czech word “robota,” or forced labor, and is derived from the Slavic root word “rab,” meaning slave.

Eric the Robot... by Matt Brown
Source: By Matt Brown from London, England - Eric the Robot, CC BY 2.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=56876106

2. Eric
> Year: 1928
> Made by: William H. Richards and A.H. Reffell

One of the world’s first actual robots, Eric was created as a stand-in for Queen Elizabeth’s father, the Duke of York. The royal was supposed to officially open the Royal Horticultural Halls, but one of the robot’s makers, William H. Richards, thought that a show he considered to be mechanical should be opened by a mechanical man.

Gakutensokuold by Osaka Mainichi-shinbun (u5927u962au6bceu65e5u65b0u805e)
Source: By Osaka Mainichi-shinbun (大阪毎日新聞) - GIZMODO's topic, Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=3945036

3. Gakutensoku
> Year: 1929
> Made by: Makoto Nishimura

Gakutensoku was a robot created in Japan as part of an exhibit to mark the ascension of the emperor. The robot was powered by air pressure, stood 7 feet 8 inches, and could render characters with a pen.

Tt-26 by Unknown
Source: Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=1123011

4. Teletank
> Year: 1930
> Made by: USSR

Teletanks were remotely controlled unmanned tanks made in the Soviet Union in the 1930s, created to lower casualties among Soviet soldiers. They were first deployed during the Winter War between the Soviet Union and Finland.

Elektro World's Fair Robot by Allison Meier
Source: astrozombie / Flickr

5. Elektro
> Year: 1939
> Made by: Westinghouse

Westinghouse built Elektro in the late 1930s, and the robot was a hit at the 1939 World’s Fair in New York. The robot was 7 feet tall and could walk by voice command via headset. Elektro told jokes and smoked.

Robot Lilliput by Dorian
Source: dorian3d / Flickr

6. Lilliput
> Year: mid 1940s
> Made by: Schylling

Lilliput, the first toy robot, was made in Japan, probably in the 1940s. The first of these robots were wind-up toys, and after the war, they became battery-operated. They were made of tin and marketed as Atomic Robot Man. The toy was a promotional gift at the 1950 New York Sci-Fi Convention.

Cybernetic Tortoise... by Ank Kumar
Source: By Ank Kumar - Own work, CC BY-SA 4.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=104475054

7. Elmer and Elsie
> Year: 1948
> Made by: W. Grey Walter

Elmer and Elsie, the brainchildren of W. Grey Walter, were the first autonomous robots. They mimicked human behavior and were advanced enough to move things out of their way. When they were running low on electricity, they knew to go to a charging station.

George by Steve Parker
Source: sparker / Flickr

8. George
> Year: 1949
> Made by: Tony Sale

Englishman Tony Sale created George out of scrap metal recovered from a crashed World War II-era bomber when he was 19 years old. At the time, Sale was stationed at a Royal Air Force base and was teaching pilots how to use radar. Sale’s creation was part of the RAF’s effort to get officers to build demonstration kits.

UNIMATE PUMA 200 Robot Arm by Razor Robotics
Source: razorrobotics / Flickr

9. Unimate
> Year: 1956
> Made by: General Motors

Unimate, the first industrial robot, was employed by General Motors. It used a hydraulic arm to do repeated tasks and assembled cars. The robot was created by George Devol to perform tasks considered harmful to humans. It was first installed at a diecasting assembly line in Ewing Township, New Jersey, in 1959. The robot appeared on “The Tonight Show” in 1966.

Szegedi katica eredeti by Torok Daniel
Source: By Török Dániel (Transferred from hu.wikipedia to Commons by rlevente.) - Own work by the original uploader, CC BY-SA 3.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=52087410

10. Ladybug
> Year: 1957
> Made by: University of Szeged

Ladybug is one of the first animal-like robots. It was built by Daniel Muszka and Laszlo Kalmar of the University of Szeged in Hungary in 1957. Muszka created the robot to mimic conditional reflexes in a machine.

Source: Courtesy of National Broadcasting Company (NBC)

Source: UmerPK / iStock Editorial via Getty Images

11. Beast
> Year: 1960
> Made by: Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Lab

Powered by many transistors, the Beast plied the hallways of Johns Hopkins University in the 1960s. When its battery started to run low, the Beast could regenerate itself using a recharging arm, finding outlets with a photocell optics.

Source: Gabe Ginsberg / Getty Images Entertainment via Getty Images

Source: Gabe Ginsberg / Getty Images Entertainment via Getty Images

12. Rock ’em Sock ’em Robots
> Year: 1966
> Made by: Mattel

A must-have for kids growing up in the 1960s, this toy pitted two robots in a boxing ring. If one robot was skilled enough to land a sock to the jaw, the head of the opponent would spring upward, ending the match. It was introduced in 1964 by Mattel and is still popular.

Apollo15LunarRover by NASA/Dave Scott
Source: By NASA/Dave Scott; cropped by User:Bubba73 - http://www.hq.nasa.gov/office/pao/History/alsj/a15/images15.html (direct link), Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=6057491

13. Apollo 15 Lunar Rover
> Year: 1971
> Made by: NASA

Apollo 15 was the first NASA mission to employ a lunar rover in 1971. Astronauts David Scott and James Irwin assembled the 460-pound vehicle and drove it almost 17 miles while conducting experiments on the moon. They left the rover on the moon, one of three rovers still on the moon.

Shakey the Robot at the Comput... by Marc Smith
Source: marc_smith / Flickr

14. Shakey
> Year: 1972
> Made by: SRI International

The product of the Artificial Intelligence Center at SRI International, Shakey advanced the possibilities of robotics through its ability to reason. It could find routes and re-arrange objects. A Life magazine article called Shakey “the first electronic person.” The robot joined the Carnegie Mellon Robot Hall of Fame in 2004. It can be seen at the Computer History Museum in Mountain View, California.

Informatics Forum University of Edinburgh by Suhongjia
Source: By Suhongjia - Own work, CC BY-SA 3.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=19299268

15. Freddy II
> Year: 1973
> Made by: University of Edinburgh

Freddy II was a robot used for hand/eye coordination research in the 1970s at the Department of Machine Intelligence and Perception (later the Department of Artificial Intelligence) at the University of Edinburgh. Its robot arms were equipped with grippers affixed to an overhead gantry.

Source: NASA / JPL-Caltech

Source: NASA / JPL-Caltech

16. Voyager 1
> Year: 1977
> Made by: NASA

The NASA robot Voyager I became the first human-made object to measure interstellar space on Aug. 25, 2012, when it crossed beyond the heliosphere. Voyager 1 continues to provide insights of the space frontier, measuring the density of material in interstellar space.

2-xltiger by PantheraLeo
Source: By PantheraLeo at English Wikipedia - Transferred from en.wikipedia to Commons., Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=2974749

17. 2-XL
> Year: 1978
> Made by: Tiger Electronics

Mego produced the first talking robot toy in 1978. 2-XL’s educational programs on various subjects were recorded on eight-track tapes. The toy asked and answered children’s questions. After Mego filed for bankruptcy and ceased operations, Tiger reintroduced the toy in 1992.

Source: airandspace / Flickr

Source: airandspace / Flickr

18. Canadarm
> Year: 1981
> Made by: Canadian Space Agency

The Canadarm was a mechanical arm that was remotely controlled. It was made of titanium and stainless steel. Developed in Canada, it was about 20 feet long with a wrist, elbow and shoulder. The Canadarm fixed satellites and moved cargo. It served NASA’s Space Shuttle program for 30 years and was retired in 2011.

Source: Courtesy of www.rbrobotics.com

Source: Courtesy of www.rbrobotics.com

19. RB5X
> Year: 1985
> Made by: RB Robot Corporation

RBX5 was the first mass-produced home robot kit. When assembled, the robot weighed 24 pounds and could travel at 4 inches per second. The robot could be programmed to speak, travel about a room using a sonar system, and fetch small objects.

Source: Lisa Maree Williams / Getty Images News via Getty Images

Source: Lisa Maree Williams / Getty Images News via Getty Images

20. Robosaurus
> Year: 1989
> Made by: Doug Malewicki

The transforming dinosaur robot Robosaurus is modeled on the Transformer toy series. The driver of the robot sits in the creation’s head and Robosaurus can transform into a 48-foot semi trailer from a Tyrannosaurus Rex. The 30-ton Robosaurus cost $2.2 million and took two years to build.

Source: Photo by John Moore / Getty Images

Source: Photo by John Moore / Getty Images

21. Predator Drone
> Year: 1994
> Made by: U.S. Military

The Predator Drone is a medium-altitude, unmanned aircraft that has been used for surveillance and is armed with missiles. Its use has been considered controversial, particularly in the war on terror when it has attacked and killed civilians. A forerunner of the Predator was first deployed in the Balkans in 1993.

Push with characters by Lucky 6.9
Source: CC BY-SA 3.0, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?curid=6880364

22. Push the Talking Trash Can
> Year: 1995
> Made by: Walt Disney Company

Push the Talking Trash Can is a radio-operated robot that’s been spotted at Disney theme parks and properties in the U.S., Japan, and Europe. Push is operated by Disney cast members who provide the voice for the robot.

Submarine Ring of Fire 2002, NOAA/OER. by NOAA Photo Library
Source: Submarine Ring of Fire 2002, NOAA/OER via Flickr

23. ABE
> Year: 1995
> Made by: Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution

ABE, which stands for autonomous benthic explorer, is a robot that probes the oceans. The robot can plunge to a depth of 15,000 feet, map the ocean’s floor, and gather water samples. It was developed at the storied Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution in Falmouth, Massachusetts.

Source: Courtesy of BattleBots via Facebook

Source: Courtesy of BattleBots via Facebook

24. BioHazard
> Year: 1996
> Made by: Carlo Bertocchini

BioHazard is a so-called Battlebot competing in the category of combat robotics. Its main weapon is its lifting arm. The low-slung robot competed in seven Battlebots competitions in the heavyweight division from 1999 to 2002 and won four of them.

Honda P2 Robot, Science Museum... by Loz Pycock
Source: blahflowers / Flickr

25. P2
> Year: 1996
> Made by: Honda

P2 is a biped robot whose prototype stood 6 feet tall and weighed 462 pounds. It debuted in 1996 and could walk stairs and push carts. It could walk at about 1 mph. Honda, which made the robot, touted it as “the first self-regulating, two-legged humanoid walking robot.”

Source: Handout / Getty Images

Source: Handout / Getty Images

26. Furby
> Year: 1998
> Made by: Tiger Electronics

Furby, a talking computer shaped like a furry hamster or an owl, took the country by storm in 1998 and became the hot toy during the holiday season. Furbies contain sensors enabling people to interact with them. Furbies started communicating in their own language but learned other languages the longer people interacted with them. About 27 million Furbies were sold over 12 months after their initial launch.

Source: George Steinmetz / Getty Images News via Getty Images

Source: George Steinmetz / Getty Images News via Getty Images

27. Kismet
> Year: 1998
> Made by: MIT

Kismet, created at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, was among the first robots to perceive emotions and understand social cues. The 15-inch tall robot had huge eyes and spoke in a baby voice.

Source: Junko Kimura / Getty Images News via Getty Images

Source: Junko Kimura / Getty Images News via Getty Images

28. Mindstorms
> Year: 1998
> Made by: Lego

Mindstorms are programmable Lego kits that are education tools. They were developed by Lego CEO Kjeld Kristiansen, who was fascinated by the opportunity for children to build and program their own creations.

Source: Tristan Fewings / Getty Images Entertainment via Getty Images

Source: Tristan Fewings / Getty Images Entertainment via Getty Images

29. Aibo
> Year: 1999
> Made by: Sony

Sony created the robot dog Aibo (Artificial Intelligence roBOt), which means companion or friend in Japanese. Aibo is able to mature from a puppy to an adult and is influenced by its surroundings and interactions with its owners. Started as a research project, the toy hit the market in May 1999, and about 2,000 were sold in the U.S. in four days.

Source: Dilip Vishwanat / Getty Images Entertainment via Getty Images

Source: Dilip Vishwanat / Getty Images Entertainment via Getty Images

30. Asimo
> Year: 2000
> Made by: Honda

Asimo, an acronym for Advanced Step in Innovative Mobility, is a humanoid robot made by Honda and created to assist people. The robot can also communicate using sign language. Asimo rang the bell to open trading on the New York Stock Exchange in 2002.

Source: Getty Images / Hulton Archive via Getty Images

Source: Getty Images / Hulton Archive via Getty Images

31. Poo-Chi
> Year: 2000
> Made by: Tiger Toys

Poo-Chi is a robot pet dog, designed by Samuel James Lloyd. It made its market debut on April 1, 2000, and retailed for $24.99 in the U.S. through Hasbro’s Tiger Toys division. Poo-Chi had a gray body and it could bark or growl in pre-recorded sounds. More than 10 million Poo-Chis were sold over an eight-month period.

Source: James Leynse / Corbis Historical via Getty Images

Source: James Leynse / Corbis Historical via Getty Images

32. Roomba
> Year: 2002
> Made by: iRobot

Don’t want to vacuum? Let Roomba do the job. IRobot launched the floor-cleaning robotic vacuum in 2002. Subsequent versions have visual navigation, cloud-connected apps, improved cleaning power for carpets, and automatic dirt disposal.

 

Source: Oli Scarff / Getty Images News via Getty Images

Source: Oli Scarff / Getty Images News via Getty Images

33. iCub
> Year: 2004
> Made by: Italian Institute of Technology

ICub is a humanoid robot about the size of a child that can grasp objects, crawl, and interact with humans. It was originally created as an open-source platform to support the study of artificial intelligence.

Ballroom Dancing Robots by Eric
Source: deadling / Flickr

34. Partner Ballroom Dancing Robots
> Year: 2005
> Made by: Kazuhiro Kosuge, Tohoku University

Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers might have done a double-take if they saw Partner Ballroom Dancing Robots. The ballroom dancing androids, dance dresses and all, can anticipate movements of a partner, allowing them to follow a dancer’s lead. We don’t know if they can dance cheek to cheek.

Big dog military robots by U.S. Marine Corps photo by Lance Cpl. M. L. Meier
Source: By U.S. Marine Corps photo by Lance Cpl. M. L. Meier. - Provenance page, Image page, Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=3492725

35. BigDog
> Year: 2005
> Made by: Boston Dynamics

Developed for the military, the high-stepping BigDog emerged from Boston Dynamics in 2005. A video shows it traversing rough terrain and snow banks, fending off a shove from a human, and recovering from slipping on ice. BigDog is powered by an engine that drives a hydraulic actuation system. It can travel up to 4 mph.

Geoff Peterson! by Jodi K.
Source: jodilynn / Flickr

36. Geoff Peterson
> Year: 2010
> Made by: Grant Imahara

Geoff Peterson was the animatronic humanoid sidekick of Craig Ferguson on the latter’s late-night talk show. The metal mohawked robot was designed and built by Grant Imahara of MythBusters fame.

Source: bedo / Getty Images

Source: bedo / Getty Images

37. Siri
> Year: 2011
> Made by: Apple

Siri was the world’s first virtual personal assistant and developed by SRI. That company spun off Siri Inc. in 2007, and in 2010 it was bought by Apple, which integrated Siri on its iPhone 4S as a voice assistant.

 

Source: Junko Kimura / Getty Images News via Getty Images

Source: Junko Kimura / Getty Images News via Getty Images

38. HAL
> Year: 2012
> Made by: Cyberdyne

HAL stands for hybrid assistive limb and is a powered exoskeleton that helps people do daily tasks, particularly those who are recovering from injury. HAL operates through two control systems — one to control the brain and nervous system and the other tied to artificial intelligence algorithms. HAL stands just over 4 feet tall and weighs 26.5 pounds.

Source: Courtesy of https://www.dji.com/

Source: Courtesy of https://www.dji.com/

39. Phantom
> Year: 2013
> Made by: DJI

The Phantom was Chinese drone maker DJI’s first consumer drone product when it debuted in 2013. It was outfitted with an internal GPS system and could only fly for 10 minutes. It did not have a camera.

Source: Joan Cros Garcia - Corbis / Corbis News via Getty Images

Source: Joan Cros Garcia – Corbis / Corbis News via Getty Images

40. Pepper
> Year: 2014
> Made by: SoftBank

Pepper was the result of a joint development effort of Softbank Mobile Corp. and Aldebaran Robotics SAS and touted as the “world’s first personal robot that can read emotions.” Pepper is considered to be a business robot, offering recommendations for products at stores.

Source: Courtesy of Boston Dynamics via Facebook

Source: Courtesy of Boston Dynamics via Facebook

41. Spot
> Year: 2016
> Made by: Boston Dynamics

Not quite a butler, but the electrically powered, 55-pound robot Spot can do many tasks around the house, without crashing into furniture. Spot walks like a dog, and its collapsible legs enable it to tuck in under a table. Spot can pick up glasses and dishes and store them in a dishwasher.

Source: VIEW press / Corbis News via Getty Images

Source: VIEW press / Corbis News via Getty Images

42. Sophia
> Year: 2016
> Made by: Hanson Robotics

Sophia is a remarkably lifelike robot touted by makers Hanson Robotic as “a unique combination of science, engineering, and artistry.” Sophia interacted with talk-show host Jimmy Fallon and appeared at the United Nations. The robot is described by company founder David Hanson as a “social robot,” whose artificial intelligence software processes visual data that enables it to see. Sophia also has become a citizen of Saudi Arabia.

Source: Tomohiro Ohsumi / Getty Images News via Getty Images

Source: Tomohiro Ohsumi / Getty Images News via Getty Images

43. T-HR3
> Year: 2017
> Made by: Toyota

T-HR3 was introduced by Toyota in 2017 and is a humanoid robot that replicates movements of its human operator. It was updated for the recent Tokyo Olympics, and its ability to walk was improved.

Source: VCG / Getty Images News via Getty Images

Source: VCG / Getty Images News via Getty Images

44. Jia Jia
> Year: 2017
> Made by: University of Science and Technology of China

Also known as the Robot Goddess of China, Jia Jia is a humanoid robot that reacts and responds to different human emotions. Jia Jia’s speech-generation algorithms permit the robot to have conversations with different people. And apparently Jia Jia is vain, asking photographers not to take unflattering pictures of it.

Source: Courtesy of UBTECH Robotics via Facebook

Source: Courtesy of UBTECH Robotics via Facebook

45. Walker
> Year: 2018
> Made by: Ubtech Robotics

Walker is a biped robotic butler. Walker can climb stairs, hand you an umbrella, entertain children, and assist with video calls.

Source: Courtesy of UNIT9.com

Source: Courtesy of UNIT9.com

46. Pitch-R
> Year: 2018
> Made by: Nissan

This robot can paint lines on a soccer pitch using Nissan ProPilot technology, GPS tracking system, and four cameras. Lines can be painted on grass, tarmac, or gravel and are environmentally friendly, meaning they will fade away over time.

Source: Courtesy of MIT News Office, photo by Bryce Vickmark

Source: Courtesy of MIT News Office, photo by Bryce Vickmark

47. Mini Cheetah
> Year: 2019
> Made by: MIT

Developed at MIT, the quadruped robot can traverse terrain without having to map it in advance. The control system is split into two — one that processes real-time input from a video camera attached to the front of the robot and another system that translates the data into instructions for how the robot should move its body.

Source: David Becker / Getty Images News via Getty Images

Source: David Becker / Getty Images News via Getty Images

48. Guardian XO
> Year: 2020
> Made by: Sarcos

Sarcos, the makers of Guardian XO, a full-body exoskeleton, tout it as the first battery-powered industrial robot, fusing human intelligence with machine precision. The exoskeleton is billed as a transformative way to do work by boosting the strength of its operator while reducing injuries on the job.

Mars 2020 selfie... by NASA
Source: By NASA - https://mars.nasa.gov/resources/25790/perseverances-selfie-with-ingenuity/, Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=103269028

49. Perseverance
> Year: 2020
> Made by: NASA

NASA’s Perseverance rover was launched on July 30, 2020, and sent to Mars to look for signs of life on the red planet and collect samples of rocks and broken soil. The rover is 10 feet long, 9 feet wide, 7 feet tall and weighs 2,260 pounds.

Xenobot... by Kriegman, S., Blackiston, D., Levin, M., Bongard, J.
Source: By Kriegman, S., Blackiston, D., Levin, M., Bongard, J. - https://cdorgs.github.io/, CC BY 4.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=106366384

50. Xenobots
> Year: 2021
> Made by: Tufts University and the University of Vermont

Xenobots are small biological machines, or living robots, created from frog cells by biologists and computer scientists from Tufts University and University of Vermont. The life forms do not need muscles to move around and are able to work together and heal themselves if they are injured.

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