Finalists for Museum of Discovery Robot Name

The Museum of Discovery received hundreds of wonderful name suggestions for our robot and narrowed the list down to ten. If we received the same suggestion more than once, we took the person who suggested it first. Here are the name suggestions chosen:Buttons (by Milo Krain)
I MOD (by Campbell Beazley)
Lunchbox ( by Jann Greenland)
Sebastian Razorbot (by Josie Parker)
Hoover (by Patrick Burnett)
AR-D2 (by Whitney Haynie)
Sheldon Tinkerton (by Sherry Berry)
Squeakers (by Sara Kamps)
Clamps (by Matthew Berry)
Sparky (by Sara Drew)

Thank you to everyone who participated by submitting suggestions. Now we need to vote on the above names. Voting will close Friday, January 24. You can only vote once per computer/mobile device.

Name the Robot Contest Survey

Help Name the Robot at the Museum of Discovery

A new robot is excited to have a permanent home at the Museum of Discovery but is sad that it doesn’t yet have a name.  The Museum is asking the public’s help to find the perfect name for this great addition to the museum? Submit a suggestion today (contest open through January 14 at noon.) The contest winner will receive a museum prize pack and a co-starring role in a video with the newly-named robot!

1. Keep it clean!

2. Keep it unique. We love famous robots such as R2-D2, WALL-E and Johnny-Five too but want our robot’s name to be an original. That way, we can avoid confusion (and trademark infringement).

3. Submissions must be made between January 3 through January 14 at noon. A committee will choose the best robot name suggestions and the public will vote on those names from January 16 through January 24. The winner will be announced on Saturday, January 25.

4. Submissions can be made in the following ways:

5. One submission per person.

The winner will receive four Museum of Discovery passes, an Explore Store gift pack and will appear in an official museum video with the robot.

Robotics focus of exhibit at Museum of Discovery

In science fiction, robots look like R2D2. In stores, they look like vacuum cleaners and robotic pets. On Saturday, October 12, visitors at the Museum of Discovery will see what robots look like in real life when the brand-new Robots and Us exhibit makes its debut. The exhibit will give visitors a lighthearted look at modeling artificial life after humans.

“Robotics is a growing field of research and an activity increasingly being undertaken by high school and college students around the world, including right here in Arkansas,” said Kelley Bass, CEO of the Museum of Discovery. “The museum is happy to have this very engaging, relevant exhibit for our visitors to explore and enjoy. We are glad to give our loyal fans another very compelling reason to visit us.”

Robots and Us encourages museum visitors of all ages to compare sci-fi fantasies of robots with today’s technical realities and to explore why it’s so hard to build robots to be like humans. Enjoy directing light-sensitive robots through mazes in the Robot Arena; experimenting with walking machines in the Leg Lab to learn how simple changes in anatomy can affect how they walk and handle obstacles; interacting with Lena, a computer-generated character and learning to race and outwit the Robot Arm.

Robots and Us will remain at the Museum of Discovery through January 26.

Museum of Discovery’s mission is to ignite a passion for science, technology and math in a dynamic, interactive environment.

Museum Information
Hours of Operation: Tuesday – Saturday: 9 am – 5 pm; Sunday: 1-5 pm; Closed Mondays except major holidays and in summer.
Admission: $10 adults; $8 ages 1-12; free under 1; members free
Phone Number: 501.396.7050
Website: www.museumofdiscovery.org