type of input devices used in the science fiction film Bid hero 6
Answers
big hero 6 is like most Disney movies, is a well-researched film which uses concepts rooted in reality to tell a fantastic story. Futuristic fiction is always best when it extrapolates on existing concepts audiences can recognize, giving the film an element of believability of how the future might be. For Big Hero 6, the filmmakers met with robotics experts at Carnegie Mellon University, a Pittsburgh-based institution internationally renowned for its robotics research, as well as labs at Harvard and MIT.
Early in the film, protagonist Hiro Hamada (Ryan Potter) invents “microbots,” tiny robots capable of responding to neural stimulation to form and construct nearly anything from a person’s imagination. In reality, such a technology would be one of the most incredible (and potentially dangerous) inventions in the history of man—in the film, Hiro is using it to gain admission to a robotics college. While microbots are miles away from reality in terms of actuator technology, neural response, sustainable power and motion torque, tiny robots that could serve as very early precursors to such grand equipment do exist. And much of the other technology in the film—from GoGo’s (Jamie Chung) maglev wheels to Hiro’s lovable, huggable nurse-robot companion Baymax (Scott Adsit), are much closer to being reality than realesed in 2014