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Tokyo cafe to open with robot waiters remotely controlled by disabled

News Desk (Kyodo News)
Tokyo
Mon, September 24, 2018

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Tokyo cafe to open with robot waiters remotely controlled by disabled Illustration of robot waiter at a restaurant. (Shutterstock/File)

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cafe will open in Tokyo's Akasaka district in November featuring robot waiters remotely controlled from home by people with severe physical disabilities.

The cafe, which will open on weekdays from Nov. 26 to Dec. 7, will deploy OriHime-D robots controlled by disabled people with conditions such as amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, a form of motor neuron disease.

The robot waiters, 1.2 meters tall and weighing 20 kilograms, will transmit video footage and audio via the internet, allowing their controllers to direct them from home via tablets or computers.

At an event marking the OriHime-D's debut in August, a robot controlled by Nozomi Murata, who suffers from autophagic vacuolar myopathy that causes muscle weakness, asked a family if they would like some chocolate.

"I want to create a world in which people who can't move their bodies can work too," said Kentaro Yoshifuji, chief executive officer of Ory Lab. Inc., the developer of the robots.

Yoshifuji suffered from a stress-induced illness during childhood and had difficulty communicating. With his experience of social isolation, he started developing robots at Waseda University to help connect people, according to the company's website.

Read also: Chip labor: Robots replace waiters in China restaurant

Smaller OriHime robots that are 21.5 centimeters tall and weigh about 600 grams have been introduced by about 70 companies for telecommuting. They can also be used remotely in classrooms by students who cannot attend school due to illness or other reasons.

Ory Lab. aims to set up a permanent cafe featuring OriHime robots and increase adoption by companies in the run-up to the 2020 Tokyo Olympics and Paralympics.

"Everyone should have the freedom to work in the way they like," said Masatane Muto, an ALS patient and one of the organizers of the project, which also involves the Nippon Foundation.

"I want to send out the message toward 2020 that you can show hospitality even if you have disabilities," Muto said.

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