Reuters has published a story on Keepon after his ICRA HRI Challenge victory.
Press
Keepon shared first prize with EPFL’s HOAP-3 in the first ICRA Human-Robot Interaction Challenge. The two robots whiled away the hours of the competition by dancing and crashing conference talks. Watch out for a video soon.
UPDATE: A Japanese article on the Challenge can be found at Robot Watch.
UPDATE: Engadget has a caption contest on this photo.

The Albany Times Union ran this story based on an interview with Daniel Wilson in which he talks about Keepon and the videos we made together:
Further blurring the line between cuddly toy and robotic helper is the experimental Keepon, a mini-robot that resembles a couple of tennis balls with googly eyes that moves in response to its environment.
In a short promotional video for Carnegie Mellon, where researcher Marek Michalowski is using Keepon’s ability to synchronize its movements with people around to make it more engaging, Wilson himself snuggles up to a Keepon as it bops to music.
But the robot isn’t just a novelty: Keepon is being used to teach autistic children to make eye contact with others.
“That’s the thing about robots,” Wilson says. “You look at it and it’s neat, but there’s a long-winded explanation (of how and why it came to be developed). You always find a trail of technical papers following behind a robot, no matter how cute.”
Jake Coyle wrote an AP article in the South Florida Sun-Sentinel on the phenomenon of YouTube music videos:
Acts are increasingly giving up at least some control, leaving them sometimes wondering what their role is in this new, post-MTV, democratic world of music videos.
For the unofficial video for Spoon’s Don’t You Evah (tinyurl.com/yp38wh) produced by Wired magazine, the band gave its blessing to the robot-dancing clip. If you look closely, though, you can spot Spoon frontman Britt Daniel on an escalator — only a background figure in his own video.
Gizmodo speculates, upon seeing “Keepon: Friend or Foe,” that Daniel Wilson will soon be amassing a dancing army of Keepons. We neither confirm nor deny that he has made such a request.
Remember cute Keepon, the little robot that’s part Muppet, part dancing dynamo? He’s back, teaching Daniel H. Wilson, author of How To Build a Robot Army, how to stop worrying and embrace cybernetics. Now that Wilson and Keepon are friends, we’re imagining the undefeatable army of Keepons that will result: every opponent would compulsively drop his weapon and start to disco gently on the spot. At least, that’s what we’d do.
Update: This was also picked up on Gizmodo Japan.