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06/23/15 | Uncategorized

#TechTuesday: Meet 5 Robotics Experts Pushing Innovation and Technology Forward

Introducing five of robotics’ most prominent female game-changers.

By Andra Keay (Managing Director, Silicon Valley Robotics)

A version of this post originally appeared on Silicon Valley Robotics.

What do these five women have in common? Aside from robotics, not much. These women are all role models in robotics in quite different ways. (And that means that there are many opportunities for other women to make robotics their area.)

Robotics is much more than just engineering. Robotics includes computer science, mech eng, electrical eng, control systems, user interface, human-robot interaction, psychology, neuroscience, artificial intelligence, biomechanics, industrial design and product management.

Applied robotics (ie. robots working alongside people in the real world) also requires caring about what people are going to need robots for. As Rodney Brooks, the founder of iRobot and Rethink Robotics, says, “Robotics isn’t a technology problem any more. It’s a business model problem.”

Business model problems require people with more than engineering skills. This requires customer development thinking and domain knowledge of areas outside of robotics. To generalize, these are things that women do really well. Here are five women working in robotics you should keep an eye on.

1. Melonee Wise, CEO of Fetch Robotics

@meloneewise

Melonee WiseMelonee Wise is the CEO of a very new startup, Fetch Robotics, which is building autonomous mobile manipulators for things like warehouse and ecommerce operations. Fetch is not her first startup having launched Unbounded Robotics in 2013.

Fetch also draws on Wise’s experience as Manager of Robot Development at Willow Garage, building the world’s most sophisticated personal robot. Wise’s background also includes building Battlebots and the low cost open source Turtlebots for research and hobby robotics.

Wise managed to launch not just one but two logistics robots in a mere 8-month turn around from funding to Fetch and Freight. Fetch, a one armed picker and the mobile autonomous base unit, Freight. The mobile base unit can deliver picked goods much quicker than the full unit can, making the deployment of a combination of robots in several warehouse roles viable.

“For the past 14 years I have been designing, building, and programming robotic hardware,” Wise said. “As part of past projects, I have had the opportunity to develop algorithms, libraries, and hardware for an autonomous boat, autonomous car, personal robot platforms, battlebots, and several low cost platforms. From this experience, I have gained a broad understanding of robotic technologies and have experience developing complex robotic systems.”

2. Erin Rapacki, Director of Marketing at Suitable Technologies

@RobotDiva

Erin RapackiErin Rapacki is Director of Marketing at Suitable Technologies. Suitable Technologies is a spinoff of Willow Garage, making telepresence devices. Suitable prefer not to call them robots because it distracts people from how useful they are.

Rapacki previously worked at Industrial Perception Inc., Adept Technology and Anybots, building robots. She has built on her mechanical and industrial engineering background to become a product “storyteller.”

“I care about fantastic products; so I specialize in market research, writing product requirements documents, leading product launches, and defining emerging customer segments,” Rapacki said. “My strength is the ability to analyze customer processes to discover new value propositions for the latest robotic technology, and communicate the associated technical requirements to engineering teams.”

3. Katherine Scott, Co-founder & Software Lead at Tempo Automation

@kscottz

Katherine ScottKatherine Scott is the co-founder and Software Lead at Tempo Automation. Tempo Automation is a desktop pick and place robot, which automates surface mount assembly and speeds up the electronics prototyping or small batch manufacture process.

Scott was previously a co-founder at Sight Machines, and computer vision engineer at Essess and Cybernet Systems Corp. Along the way Scott developed a large part of SimpleCV Python library, and a number of innovative software prototypes in the fields of computer vision, graphics, augmented reality and robotics.

4. Steffi Paepcke, Co-founder and Lead UX Designer at Open Source Robotics Foundation

@Steffibot

Steffi PaepckeSteffi Paepcke is the co-founder and Lead UX Designer at OSRF, the Open Source Robotics Foundation, which was created to support the development and distribution of open source source software for robotics research, education and product development. Paepcke previously worked at Intuit and Willow Garage and draws on a background in psychology and human-computer or human-robot interaction.

“Managing user expectations of personal robots becomes particularly challenging when the end-user just wants to know what the robot can do, and neither understands nor cares about its technical specifications. … we found that erring on the side of setting expectations lower rather than higher led to less disappointment and more positive appraisals of the robot’s competence.”

5. Dale Bergman, Research Coordinator at Intuitive Surgical

Dale Bergman is the Research Coordinator at Intuitive Surgical, one of the largest and most successful robotics companies in the world. Bergman was previously research coordinator and clinical research manager at companies like Hansen Medical, Acuson and Siemens Medical, transferring her experience with ultrasound and other medical devices into more sophisticated robotics systems. Bergman is a great example of expert knowledge in other domains intersecting with robotics.

6. You?

Robotics is a rapidly growing area, and the combinations of skills and holistic thinking that develop when you work in robotics are also in demand in other employment areas. Robotics needs better business models to make positive change in the world. And also pragmatically, because there just aren’t enough roboticists out there.

Robotics companies are hiring madly and the best startups are proactively looking for women. The first Silicon Valley Robotic Influencer event on April 29 at IDEO SF brought together these robotics experts, all sharing their opinions about the challenges and opportunities in Silicon Valley. The strongest message was “We’re hiring!”.

So if you want to work in robotics, look more into what the engineers, researchers and innovators in this space are doing and get involved!

Are you considering a career in robotics?

Photo credit: science photo via Shutterstock.

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