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MANIPULATION

CONDOR: an architecture for controlling the Utah-MIT dexterous hand

S. Narasimhan, David M. Siegel, John M. Hollerbach

Year
1989
Citations
43

Abstract

The authors describe a fully implemented computational architecture (CONDOR) that controls the Utah-MIT dexterous hand and other complex robots. The architecture derives its power from the highly efficient real-time environment provided for its control processors, coupled with a development host that allows flexible program development. By mapping the memory of a dedicated group of processors into the address space of a host computer, efficient sharing of system resources between them is possible. The software is characterized by a few simple design concepts but provides the facilities out of which more powerful utilities such as a multiprocessor pseudo-terminal emulator, a transparent and fast file server, and a flexible symbolic debugger could be constructed.< <ETX xmlns:mml="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML" xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink">&gt;</ETX>

Keywords

DebuggerComputer scienceArchitectureMultiprocessingHost (biology)Operating systemSoftwareSimple (philosophy)Embedded systemComputer architecture

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