Hi ROS Developers and welcome to the ROS Developers Podcast: the program, the podcast that gives you insights from the experts about how to program your robots with ROS.
This is Ricardo Tellez, from The Construct.
Today, I would like to dedicate the episode to all those ROS developers that attended the ROSCON 2019 some weeks ago. I can tell you that it was the best ROSCON ever. I hope that you enjoyed it as much as I did, and that you learned as much as I did. I mean, you can learn so much in such a conference that at the end of the day you can feel how your brain cannot handle anymore. Amazing!
Today, we are going to talk with one ROS student that attended the last ROSCON thanks to the Diversity Scholarship that Open Robotics offers.
But before going into that, let me remind you about our ROS online academy. Yes, at the Construct we have created an online academy named The Robot Ignite Academy which contains a ROS learning path for beginners. We start by teaching you Linux and Python for robotics, and we continue teaching you all the basic ROS concepts required to become a master of ROS. We conclude with a course that teaches you how to build your own robot and how to ROSify it, add ROS control to it so you can finally become a ROS Developer. Check it out here: www.robotigniteacademy.com
So now, it is my pleasure to introduce you to Drashti Patel. Drashti is Master student of the Master of Science and computer engineering of the New Jersey Institute of Technology in Newark. There she also works as teaching assistant. She is a ROS developer specialized in Embedded systems and SLAM. Let’s talk with her about her experience in her first ROSCON.
Welcome to the podcast Drashti!
Drahsti_Patel_roscon_1 (picture by Drashti Patel)
Drashti_Patel_ROSCON_Ricardo_Tellez (picture by Drashti Patel)
Today, I would like to dedicate the episode to all those ROS developers that are figuring out new ways to use ROS. We know ROS is used in a robot with a computer that runs Linux Ubuntu and we program in C++ or Python. That’s it. But then, there are a lot of people thinking about how to use ROS in Windows machines, or ROS in a micro controller, or ROS on a fridge!!! Well, that episode is dedicated to you (call me if you are putting ROS on a fridge!!)
Today we are going to talk with one of the persons leading the development o micro-ROS. What is micro-ROS? For what can we use it? Well, those are the questions that we are going to have answered today.
But before going into that, let me remind you about our ROS online academy. Yes, at the Construct we have created an online academy named The Robot Ignite Academy which contains a ROS learning path for beginners. We start by teaching you Linux and Python for robotics, and we continue teaching you all the basic ROS concepts required to become a master of ROS. We conclude with a course that teaches you how to build your own robot and how to ROSify it, add ROS control to it so you can finally become a ROS Developer.
By the way, have you checked our latest course about how to program web interfaces for ROS robots? That is a course that teaches you how to build web pages that connects to to ROS robots and allows us to present information on the screen and also command the robot. Check it out because it is a very good course pioneer in the world.
So now, it is my pleasure to introduce you to Borja Outerelo. Borja is a senior software engineer at eProsima, the company that develops the protocol underneath micro-ROS and also the default DDS in ROS 2. Borja is going to explain us what is micro-ROS, what is this protocol about, for what should we use it and how can we start testing it and doing our experiments.
Today, I would like to dedicate the episode to all those ROS developers that are working already with ROS 2. You are pioneering the next version of ROS, you are solving all the big bugs, you are providing all the. It is like you are moving on an uncharted territory so the rest of us can come later and do an easier job. Thank you for your hard work and making our ROS lives easier.
Today we are going to talk with one of the companies that are pushing ROS 2 forward with their DDS implementation.
But before going into that, let me remind you about our ROS online academy. Yes, at The Construct we have created an online academy named the Robot Ignite Academy which contains a ROS learning path for beginners. We start by teaching you Linux and Python for robotics, and we continue teaching you all the basic ROS concepts required to become a master of ROS. We conclude with a course that teaches you how to build your own robot and how to ROSify it, add ROS control to it so you can finally become a ROS Developer. You can find it at www.robotigniteacademy.com
So now, it is my pleasure to introduce you to Joe Speed. Joe is Field CTO of ADLINK Technology, a company that develops many things, but one of them, the most important for us as ROS Developers is that ADLINK has contributed an open source ROS middleware implementation.
Joe has a lot of experience in IoT systems, since he’s been working on the subject for many years at Linux Foundation, IBM and now ADLINK. Today he is going to talk with us about relation between IoT and robotics and how DDS plays a fundamental role in that relation.
The Robot Ignite Academy, our online academy that teaches you ROS in 5 days using simulations
The ROS Development Studio, our online platform to program ROS online only with a browser
Reproduce the Cyclone DDS benchmark results easily
We created a rosject for ROS 2 Eloquent that allows you to reproduce the Cyclone DDS performance using the iRobot tests. Everything is installed already in the rosject so you can replicate the experiments without having to install anything (Cyclone DDS also installed). Documentation is included. Here the rosject: http://www.rosject.io/l/ebd6221/
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The following podcast episode was recorded during the ROSCON 2019 in Macau.
Lou Amadio from Microsoft being interview for the ROS Developers Podcast during the ROSCON 2019
Today we are going to talk with the person behind the development of ROS for Windows,
But before going into that, let me remind you about our ROS online academy. Yes, at the Construct we have created an online academy named the Robot Ignite Academy which contains a ROS learning path for beginners. We start by teaching you Linux and Python for robotics, and we continue teaching you all the basic ROS concepts required to become a master of ROS. We conclude with a course that teaches you how to build your own robot and how to ROSify it, add ROS control to it so you can finally become a ROS Developer.
So now, it is my pleasure to introduce you Lou Amadio. Lou isPrincipal Development Lead in the core operating system group at Microsoft focusing on robotics and autonomous systems. I presume that that role is the one that leads him to get interested in ROS, but we are going to know about it in this interview.
The following podcast episode was recorded during the ROSCON 2019 in Macau.
Interviewing the Canonical team about Ubuntu and ROS during the ROSCON 2019
Today we are going to talk with a couple of people that work a Canonical, you know, the company behind the development of Ubuntu.
But before going into that, let me remind you about our ROS online academy. Yes, at the Construct we have created an online academy named The Robot Ignite Academy which contains a ROS learning path for beginners. We start by teaching you Linux and Python for robotics, and we continue teaching you all the basic ROS concepts required to become a master of ROS. We conclude with a course that teaches you how to build your own robot and how to ROSify it, add ROS control to it so you can finally become a ROS Developer.
So now, it is my pleasure to introduce you Jeremy Deray and Dragan Stancevic, two guys from Canonical that are attending here to the ROSCON
Jeremie is a software developer at robotics team of Canonical, ROS developer with several years experience building ROS software for humanoid robots, and Dragan is robotics security engineer at Canonical, responsive for securing ROS.
By the way, Canonical is the company behind Ubuntu!
Welcome to the podcast Jeremie and Dragan!
Selected quote
Ubuntu has “low latency” kernel that should work for a lot of people who think they need real-time. So a lot of people probably wouldn’t need to recompile the kernel unless they would need hard real-time.
The following podcast episode was recorded during the ROSCON 2019 in Macau.
Interviewing Roger Barga from AWS Robomaker for the ROS Developers Podcast
Today, we are going to talk with the person behind RoboMaker, the cloud robotics solution from Amazon.
But before going into that, let me remind you about our ROS online academy. Yes, at The Construct we have created an online academy named the Robot Ignite Academy, which contains a ROS learning path for beginners. We start by teaching you Linux and Python for robotics, and we continue teaching you all the basic ROS concepts required to become a ROS Developer. We conclude with a course that teaches you how to build your own robot and how to ROSify it, adding ROS control to it so that you can finally become a ROS Developer.
So now, it is my pleasure to introduce to you Roger Barga. Roger is an expert in computing clouds. First by working as Group Program Manager for Microsoft Azure, and now as the General Manager of Amazon Web Services for robotics and autonomous services. He is the leader of AWS RoboMaker, the robotics cloud solution created by Amazon to speed up ROS development.