Human resource agency hires Wakamaru robot receptionists

Wakamaru ---

When Mitsubishi put its Wakamaru receptionist robot up for hire last month, it was clearly just a matter of time before the droid would actually find work. On July 11, People Staff, a major temporary staffing agency based in Nagoya, announced it has accepted 10 of the robots as dispatch workers and is ready to send them out to work at businesses and institutions in the Tokai area of central Japan.

The 1-meter (3 ft. 3 in.) tall, 30-kilogram (66 lb.) Wakamaru, who moves around on wheels and features a bright yellow shell and kooky smile, was developed in 2003 by Mitusbishi, who wanted to create a servant robot able to carry out a range of household chores. Wakamaru appeared at the World Expo in Aichi in 2005, and has since become one of Japan’s most recognizable robots.

In terms of job skills, Wakamaru can recognize faces, carry on simple conversations with a vocabulary of 10,000 words, and perform simple manual tasks. More importantly for its expected job as a receptionist in offices and hospitals, Wakamaru is adept at thanking visitors for waiting and can sing songs as it shows the visitors to their destination within the building.

Wakamaru’s paycheck can reach as high as 120,000 yen ($1,000) per day for short-term gigs, but the wage decreases dramatically for longer-term contracts, to as low as 3 million yen ($25,000) for one year, which is on par with a flesh-and-bone human temp worker.

A spokesperson for People Staff said, “As Japan’s labor shortage expands, we would like to create an environment where humans and robots can work more closely together.”

No word yet on whether People Staff has any plans to change the company name.

[Source: Sankei Web]

14 responses to: “Human resource agency hires Wakamaru robot receptionists”

  1. […] The Wakamaru robot has recently been hired for work by a temp staff agency in Nagoya. It will be payed a regular salary based on the detail of its contract. [link] […]

  2. […] Source… […]

  3. […] Traducido de Human resource agency hires Wakamaru robot receptionists […]

  4. […] Pink Tentacle Via Gizmodo Published in: Technology News, Future Tech, Gadgets 0 Comments […]

  5. […] Link: http://www.pinktentacle.com/2007/07/human-resource-agency-hires-wakamaru-robot-receptionists/ […]

  6. […] Pink Tentacle Prohibida su copia total con o sin fines comerciales. Copias parciales deben citar la fuente. […]

  7. […] Wie war das? Jobs im Dienstleistungssektor sollten die verlorenen Arbeitsplätze in der automatisierten Industrie auffangen? Pech gehabt: Die Automatisierung ist jetzt auch in der Dienstleistung angekommen. Diese Roboter von Mitsubishi werden in Japan an Rezeptionen in Hotels und Institutionen eingesetzt. Vermittelt werden die Dinger von der Zeitarbeitsfirma „People Staff“. […]

  8. […] Read the source article about the Wakamaru […]

  9. […] servants, others may sense the beginning of the end for humanity. It might be a little of both. [Pink Tentacle, via […]

  10. […] In Japan robots (finally) enter the work force as independent contractors:A spokesperson for People Staff said, “As Japan’s labor shortage expands, we would like to create an environment where humans and robots can work more closely together.” — via PinkTentacle.com  […]

  11. […] Pink Tentacle blog has a post up today with news that “People Staff, a major temporary staffing agency based in Nagoya, [has] […]

  12. […] servants, others may sense the beginning of the end for humanity. It might be a little of both. [Pink Tentacle, via […]

  13. […] Human resource agency hires Wakamaru robot receptionists: “When Mitsubishi put its Wakamaru receptionist robot up for hire last month, it was clearly just a matter of time before the droid would actually find work. On July 11, People Staff, a major temporary staffing agency based in Nagoya, announced it has accepted 10 of the robots as dispatch workers and is ready to send them out to work at businesses and institutions in the Tokai area of central Japan.” […]

  14. This is such a shame, I think. Instead of creating 10 jobs, they buy ugly robots. Labor shortage may expand in Japan, but I seriously doubt it does in the field concerned; you don’t need outstanding qualifications to be a receptionist, just to be able to communicate and be organized. And surely, with the recession they had, they must have a significant unemployment rate in Japan too. This just proves how hypocritical executives are, they don’t mind wasting money in all sort of foolish enterprises but when it comes to people, they’d rather cut jobs than making a single concession.

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