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Re: RockoTaco post# 87020

Thursday, 05/02/2019 12:45:16 AM

Thursday, May 02, 2019 12:45:16 AM

Post# of 140474
No you have to show that there is a such a VERB based completed product and that it is not PR manufactured vaporware. I don't have to do a thing. PR or hearsay are not valid references. I have read about many vaporware products in my life that have yet to be fully functional or approved. Unlike Verb, Titan is not vapor so it has a real value.

It is rather easy to prove that I am right in fact. Auris is not using auditory commands and that is what Verb is about according to themselves. Where is such a thing in any spec about Auris. Why aren't they specifying Verb in their product specs.

I have no doubt that any technical person in a short time will figure the same thing. And this VERB thing had been selling wool for ages and two companies have bought into their wool.

If you look into it, you will find that they had integreded two products. The the M7 thing which allows for distance robotic operations and Verb operating system. And where are they at? and why was it a secret!? The secret is typically in the vapor.

There are a lot of incredible and good ideas that do not make it to finish line because the scope of products been mixed with grandiose expectations that turn into vaporware.

Here are some 3 references below identifying what they were working on and you if don't like my analysis so be it. We have to agree to disagree.

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Additionally, Verb Surgical’s new VP of Research and Technology is Pablo Kilroy, who worked at SRI International for 20 years.

We believe that the SRI licensed technology may be the M7 telerobotic surgical system. This system has been in development by SRI since 1998.
https://www.rbcinsight.com/WM/Share/ResearchViewer/?SSS_522561613B1ADBDE80B721B19D8A2330
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Along with Taurus, SRI also has been developing more traditional surgical robots, which could also be part of Verb’s new robotics platform. The M7 telerobotic surgical system is designed to do all kinds of crazy things, providing auditory, visual, and tactile sensation, tremor compensation, and even motion compensation for operating in a moving vehicle (!). Over the last decade, the M7 has been demonstrated in an underwater laboratory and in microgravity. The most recent look at the system that I can find is this very brief overview from SRI’s 2015 open house
https://spectrum.ieee.org/automaton/robotics/medical-robots/google-verily-johnson-johnson-verb-surgical-medical-robots

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https://www.sri.com/newsroom/video/simulated-zero-gravity-robotic-surgery-demo-0