zzdcar
Home
/
Reviews
/
Tech
/
There's Now a Committee to Develop Standards for Robotic Exoskeletons
There's Now a Committee to Develop Standards for Robotic Exoskeletons-February 2024
2024-02-19 EST 22:10:34

Image for article titled There's Now a Committee to Develop Standards for Robotic Exoskeletons

Advanced technology is just science fiction until some international standards group forms a name to make sure every mind-blowing new advancement is nice and safe and boring, just like it should be. This is now happening to a very exciting technology that was not so long ago: robotic, strength-enhancing exoskeletons.

The international standards group is the , and the committee is called , and they want to

“...develop voluntary consensus standards for exoskeletons and exosuits. Subcommittees will address safety, quality, performance, ergonomics and terminology for systems and components during the full life cycle of the product – from before usage, to maintenance, to disposal – including, security and information technology considerations. The activities cover industrial, emergency response, medical, military and consumer applications covering passive and active systems, enhancing and decreasing effects systems, as well as systems with physical and cognitive integration.”

The committee has been around since 2017, and they’re currently in the process of establishing a comprehensive standards guide, which they must be excited about, because a press release was sent out today to let the world know, in case any of you are considering an exosuit purchase.

There’s a lot of reasons making these standards will be tricky, but it looks like it’s mostly due to the great variety of applications, according to the press release:

“The biggest challenge in creating this standard is that exoskeletons change greatly depending on the task the exoskeleton is designed to help,” says Purcell. “For instance, an industrial exoskeleton is a totally different design from one used for medical rehabilitation use. The proposed standard will need to cover all types and industries.”

That’s a good point; you don’t want to use the exoskeleton that lets grandpa still jitterbug to lift and throw around dumpsters full of scrap metal.

Once this standards guide is completed, it seems like it’ll be known as ASTM WK68719.

It’s strange, but it’s because of this ostensibly boring, regulation-slathered announcement that I’m sort of excited about the idea of exoskeltons again.

Comments
Welcome to zzdcar comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
Tech
Get Off Twitter And Fix The Model 3
Get Off Twitter And Fix The Model 3
A couple weeks back, Tesla CEO Elon Musk sent reporters on a wild goose chase over (possible) plans to send a Roadster into space aboard one of his toy rockets. it was legit. Then he said it was “totally made up.” And then a source told the news outlet it...
Feb 16, 2026
The SEC Formally Investigated Tesla Over The Model 3 Last Year Without Taking Enforcement Action
The SEC Formally Investigated Tesla Over The Model 3 Last Year Without Taking Enforcement Action
Throughout 2016, as Tesla prepped the launch of the all-electric Model 3 sedan, the automaker simultaneously dealt with a formal probe by the Securities and Exchange Commission over the all-electric sedan. That’s what research firm Probes Reporter found out in . No enforcement action was taken, the records show, but...
Feb 16, 2026
The Electric Vehicle Credit Officially Survives The New Republican Tax Bill
The Electric Vehicle Credit Officially Survives The New Republican Tax Bill
In good news for companies developing electric vehicles, and for interested consumers, the federal electric vehicle tax credit will not be repealed in the Republican tax bill going to a vote next week. Everyone else, including non-billionaires, is still by the, though. Earlier this week, worries that the U.S. Senate...
Feb 16, 2026
Volvo Responsibly Delays Autonomous Car Program Four Years Because It Cares
Volvo Responsibly Delays Autonomous Car Program Four Years Because It Cares
Volvo has delayed its by four years and will no longer be testing fully-autonomous cars at launch, after initial plans to get the robots rolling by the end of this year. This isn’t very surprising. The Drive Me program was announced in 2015, and Volvo claimed it would be pushing...
Feb 16, 2026
Mazda Study Finds 71 Percent Of People Still Want To Drive Their Cars
Mazda Study Finds 71 Percent Of People Still Want To Drive Their Cars
Mazda is one of a few automakers without any grandiose plans for autonomous cars quite yet, but the company recently commissioned a study to better understand how drivers feel about them. It found in letting an autonomous car drive them around. Score another point for the driving-focused automaker. The study...
Feb 16, 2026
Autonomous Cars Are Not Really About Safety
Autonomous Cars Are Not Really About Safety
Ever since General Motors rolled out the earlier this month, I haven’t been able to shake a line that CEO Mary Barra, among others, offered up: The carmaker’s vision of an autonomous future, she said, is for traffic crashes to be a thing of the past. It’s noble, sure. Does...
Feb 16, 2026
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.zzdcar.com All Rights Reserved