Automaton is IEEE Spectrum's robotics blog. But wait. What's IEEE and Spectrum anyway? The IEEE (Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers) is the world's largest professional technical society, with nearly 400,000 members in over 150 countries. The IEEE organizes hundreds of technical conferences and publishes dozens of journals.
Published monthly, Spectrum is the flagship publication of the IEEE. It goes to all members and covers all areas of electrotechnology. With Automaton, we hope to improve our coverage of robotics, which we believe will play an ever more important role in people's lives. Meet the team:

Erico Guizzo, an associate editor at IEEE Spectrum, in New York City, has written and edited articles on surgical robots, exoskeletons, autonomous underwater vehicles, AI, and industrial automation. Originally from Brazil, he has a bachelor's degree in electrical engineering with a concentration in control systems (ask about his recurrent nightmare involving Laplace transforms). He lives in Brooklyn, N.Y., with his wife and a fish.

Mikell (pronounced "Michael") Taylor was diagnosed with acute robotics geekiness at a young age. Her current treatments include designing and building AUVs for Bluefin Robotics, in Cambridge, Mass., volunteering for the FIRST robotics competition, and watching her Roombas clean her apartment. When not geeking out, Mikell likes learning foreign languages, getting lost in big cities, and becoming a Guitar Hero. She is a black belt in tae kwon do.

Markus Waibel studied physics and has since been edging his way towards robotics. He has started a popular podcast on robotics and AI, coded a simulator for swarm robots, experimented with artificial ants, and now just finished his PhD in evolutionary robotics. Originally from Austria, Markus has traversed the Alps on skis and now lives in Lausanne, Switzerland.

AuAu, Automaton's robot-logo, was created by Fabio Miranda, a computer science professor at Senac, in Sao Paulo, Brazil.

Automaton
Comments (1)
Mikell,
In a roundup of weird traffic laws http://www.cnn.com/2007/LIVING/wayoflife/12/26/unusual.laws/index.html I found this
"In California, no vehicle without a driver may exceed 60 miles per hour."
A robot car law?
Posted by Sam | January 14, 2008 2:24 PM