Thanks to Ericsson, I can check off operating heavy machinery from my bucket
list.
No, the telecommunications equipment manufacturer didn't have a massive
excavator in its booth at theMobile World Congress trade show here. But it had
the next best thing: an Oculus Rift virtual reality headset and an operator seat
with heavy machinery controls. I put on the helmet, and I was instantly
transported 2,500 kilometers, or 1,550 miles, away into the cab of an excavator
sitting on a mound of dirt in Eskilstuna, Sweden.
This was no simulation. Ericsson hooked up the seat and Oculus headset to a
real Volvo excavator in Sweden, using a 4G wireless network for a real-time
video connection. When I nudged the right control stick forward, the giant arm
lifted up. It was a little freaky -- and I loved it.
The excavator setup was one of the whiz-bang demonstrations Ericsson had in
its traditionally massive booth, serving as an illustration of the power of
cellular networks and its vision for a more connected world. It's also a
reminder that wireless networks can do more than just power our smartphones.
Ericsson came up with the idea in early 2011 after the disaster at the
Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant in Japan. After watching volunteers risk
their lives by operating heavy machinery inside the radiation zone, researchers
started thinking about how to remotely control the equipment, according to
Cristian Norlin, master researcher for the company.
Ericsson worked with Volvo to create a fully remote-controlled
excavator.Sarah Tew/CNET
"There's got to be a better way," he said.
Ericsson talked to fellow Swedish company Volvo, which was interested in the
idea. The vehicle maker was dealing with a problem of its own: the lack of young
workers willing to travel around the world to operate heavy machinery at a
far-flung construction site. Volvo liked the idea of remotely controlling the
equipment, and began working with Ericsson.
The company started with a toy excavator a year ago, but this year brought in
two real excavators -- one in Sweden and the other outside the halls of Mobile
World Congress.
On the virtual reality side, Oculus Rift has been prominent among a new wave
of devices designed to provide users with a fully immersive experience -- pop on
a VR headset, and the simulated 3D panorama could put you on a tropical beach
even as snow falls outside your window, or insert you into the shoot-em-up
action of a video game. As a startup, Oculus began its VR efforts several years
ago, and, now owned by Facebook, it has been working with Samsung on a Gear VR
device that the companies plan to have out to consumers by the end of 2015.
In the last year or so, the field has expanded greatly, drawing in technology
giants including Sony andMicrosoft as well as smartphone makers like HTC and
game makers such as Valve. Virtual reality was the big theme at this week's Game
Developers Conference in San Francisco, an ocean and a continent away from where
I was sitting.
The question remains, though, about whether virtual reality can blossom into
a mainstream technology for everyday uses, or will burrow into niches here and
there -- such as industrial applications.
Driving the rig, remotely
My time in the operator seat was spent on the Eskilstuna excavator, a 6-ton Volvo EC55
concept model. With the Oculus Rift device strapped on, I swiveled my head
around and looked up and down, surveying the dirt mound and empty plot of land
around me. Ahead of me was the big digger bucket. The engine noise rumbled into
my ears through surround-sound stereo headsets.
Volvo's standard-issue EC55C excavator in action. The concept version had to
be outfitted with remote controls.Volvo
The operator seat featured dual control sticks -- one for each hand -- and
foot pedals. Given my ignorance of heavy machinery, Norlin acted as my guide,
directing my hands to correctly control the excavator arm and to swivel the cab
and arm. With a subtle move of my left hand, I turned the cab a few degrees to
the right. With my right hand, I lowered the excavator arm and scooped up some
dirt. I raised the arm, turned back to the original position and let fall the
dirt.
The experience was brief, but it left a strong impression. I couldn't stop
thinking about the fact that everything that I was controlling was actually
happening halfway across Europe.
I asked whether I could have really done some damage, and Norlin assured me
that the excavator was placed in an area far away from other people or
buildings. So I then asked about the foot pedals and actually taking the vehicle
for a spin. Norlin politely declined my request -- something or other about
liability.
The video feed was admittedly a little on the blurry side, occasionally
struggling to catch up as I moved my head around. It was a real-time video
stream that captured everything around me. There was also a slight lag between
when I tapped the controls, and when the excavator responded.
Norlin said that the video feed and remote controls were pushing the network
equipment to the limit, and that a fully polished version of this setup probably
wouldn't work until cellular networks move to the next generation of wireless
technology, known as 5G, which will bring even higher speeds when it arrives as
soon as 2020.
"We're understanding what we can do with 5G," he said.
As I stepped out of the operator seat, I couldn't help but wonder about
everything else we'll be able to do with 5G. That, and the briefest
consideration of a second career as a heavy machine operator.
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