Friday Fun: Party robot bartender

Bartenders beware: A robotic drink-dispensing rig is aiming to steal your customers while pouring cocktail creations at the push of a touchscreen button. This Open Source Robot Bartender Pours the Perfect Mix article tells about bartender robot that the creators call Bartendro: Operated through an iPad interface, this device holds up to 15 bottles of beverage plumbed into custom-designed, Raspberry Pi+microcontroller-controlled peristaltic pumps.

As simple as the concept seems it’s actually the result of a lot of R&D. But the designers say that the software testing has never been more fun: Drink Testing Gets You Drunk.

Partyrobotics page has more information on the robot, including a video. The designers have raised funds to put the Bartendro into production. The system uses open source hardware and software.

35 Comments

  1. Tomi Engdahl says:

    Robotic bartender assembles personalized drinks, monitors alcohol consumption, and takes social mixing to a whole new level
    http://robohub.org/robotic-bartender-assembles-personalized-drinks-monitors-alcohol-consumption-and-takes-social-mixing-to-a-whole-new-level/

    The ‘mixology system’ tracks your order from start to finish: a large display behind the bar shows you the number of drinks ahead of yours in the queue, the current wait time, and lets you know when your drink is ready to be picked up. It also shows you what’s popular to drink tonight among both the ladies and the gents in the crowd, and lets you influence drinking trends in realtime by incorporating your suggested tweaks on popular recipes.

    This clearly isn’t your parents’ neighbourhood watering hole, but it could be your kids’

    Makr Shakr is one of MIT’s SENSEable City Lab projects, where the goal is to study and anticipate how sensor technologies can inform and transform our built environments. The project’s creators say that it’s not about trying to replace bartenders with robots, or even about drinking; it’s about exploring the dynamics of consumption and social networks in the context of sensor and digital fabrication technologies. In other words, its a mini-lab for learning about how we, the social creatures that we are, might interact with each other and our environments in the sensor-augmented cities of tomorrow.

    “Drinking happens to be a very social activity,” Turgeman said. “At a bar, you’re looking to meet people. You might think ‘hey that’s a great drink I just invented’ and want to share it or iterate on it … by exploring the realtime behavioural dynamics in this situation, maybe we can learn something about how people interact with and influence each other’s consumption habits.”

    Reply
  2. Tomi says:

    Roboxotica (Barbot Festival in Vienna)
    http://hackaday.com/2013/12/13/roboxotica-barbot-festival-in-vienna/

    Just this past week was this year’s Roboexotica 2013! The annual event was the world’s first and is perhaps the finest festival of cocktail serving robotics out there!

    Founded 15 years ago in San Francisco, Roboexotica brings together scientists, hackers, and artists from all around the world to build the most awesome drink dispensing technologies. It’s also an opportunity to discuss innovation, science fiction, and the world of robotics to come — after utilizing some of the robots of course!

    Reply
  3. Tomi Engdahl says:

    Automated Drink Mixer Is the Life of the Party
    http://hackaday.com/2013/12/22/automated-drink-mixer-is-the-life-of-the-party-2/

    Free yourself from drink slinging duties with the Automated Drink Mixer created by Cornell University students [Justin] and [Austin].

    Reply
  4. Tomi Engdahl says:

    Barbot Mixes Drinks Perfectly with Web Interface
    http://hackaday.com/2013/12/31/barbot-mixes-drinks-perfectly-with-web-interface/

    Are you good at mixing drinks? We think this Barbot might give you a run for your money!

    Not only does this Barbot have room for 5 different liquors, but you can combine them any way you want with an extremely slick web interface that you can check out for yourself.

    The hardware behind this build is a BeagleBone Black running Ubuntu 13.04 with Apache2, MySQL, and PHP to host the web interface — bind and DHCP are used to create the web portal using a USB WiFi dongle. The online interface directly controls the pumps using PHP via the GPIOs.

    Reply
  5. Tomi Engdahl says:

    Make me a Drink, Drinkmo.
    http://hackaday.com/2014/01/21/make-me-a-drink-drinkmo/

    [Cabe Atwell's] latest project is a work of art. Let us introduce the Drinkmotizer: a Raspberry Pi Drink Mixing Robot.

    As [Cabe] says, almost every engineer has a drink-mixing robot on their project todo list. We’d probably have to agree; they’re functional, cool, and useful at parties.

    Reply
  6. Tomi Engdahl says:

    The Drinkmotizer – a Raspberry Pi Drink Mixing Robot
    Posted by Cabe Atwell in Raspberry Pi Projects on Jan 18, 2014 12:52:54 AM
    http://www.element14.com/community/community/raspberry-pi/raspberrypi_projects/blog/2014/01/17/raspberry-pi-drink-mixing-robot–aka-the-drinkmotizer

    “Make me a drink, Drinkmo.”

    On every engineer’s senior design short list is/was a drink mixing robot. One of the few projects that’s fun at parties. You want the Drinkmotizer at your party… You need the Drinkmotizer at your party… At some point, dexterity for drink mixing is lost at a gathering. Drinkmo is your designated, sober, mixologist. Your enabler. Your friend.

    I know what you are thinking, “hey, there are other drink mixing bots out there, what makes this one different?” This one doesn’t break the bank. It’s DIY, Open, expandable. Artistically speaking, It isn’t just a nozzle that sprays alcohol at objects, it uses the actual bottle, and gravity.

    Here were my requirements of

    - Use the original drink bottles
    - Be expandable
    - Single button interface
    - Be inexpensive (relatively to the other bot options)

    Reply
  7. Tomi Engdahl says:

    Barobot Serves Cocktails While Using Open Design the Right Way
    http://hackaday.com/2014/05/20/barobot-serves-cocktails-while-using-open-design-the-right-way/

    Oh for the day when we can stop repeatedly looking up our favorite drink recipes on Wikipedia. Those may be just around the corner and you’ll have your choice of single-click delivery or toiling away in the workshop for a scratch build. That’s because Barobot is satisfying both the consumer market and our thirst for open hardware goodness. They’re running a Kickstarter but to our delight, the software and mechanical design files are already posted.

    Reply
  8. Tomi Engdahl says:

    Margarita Drip Infuser Ensures a Perfect Mix
    http://hackaday.com/2014/10/14/margarita-drip-infuser-ensures-a-perfect-mix/

    n order to get a margarita just right, the various ingredients need to be mixed together quite vigorously to over-come the different viscosity of the fluids. Looking to create his own barbot of sorts, [TVMiller] decided to make a Margarita Drip Infuser to help make margaritas a bit easier.

    Using various chem lab supplies, [TVMiller] has cobbled together something pretty awesome. The Infuser can take up to 8 different ingredients into its test tube reserves, and after the drink ingredients are programmed on the computer, the magic begins.

    Margarita Drip Infuser
    Drop by drop to a smoother cocktail
    http://hackaday.io/project/3167-margarita-drip-infuser

    A semi-traditional Margarita pour requires vigorous agitation in an attempt to blend the varying viscosity fluids constructing the cocktail. As an alternative, less abusive and theoretically smoother method, we affixed an Arduino Uno to an 8 channel relay controlling 8 solenoids to drip each ingredient, of any varying recipe, one drop at a time; allowing the blend to occur in real time. The glass is held in a copper wound that a coolant fluid is pumped through. Forgive the impoverished components, both mechanical and delicious.

    Reply
  9. Tomi Engdahl says:

    HardWino Takes The Effort Out of Happy Hour
    http://hackaday.com/2016/08/15/hardwino-takes-the-effort-out-of-happy-hour/

    A personal bartender is hard to come by these days. What has the world come to when a maker has to build their own? [Pierre Charlier] can lend you a helping hand vis-à-vis with HardWino, an open-source cocktail maker.

    The auto-bar is housed on a six-slot, rotating beverage holder, controlled by an Arduino Mega and accepts drink orders via a TFT screen. Stepper motors and L298 driver boards are supported on 3D printed parts and powered by a standard 12V DC jack.

    HardWino, an open source cocktail maker
    This project is a open source cocktail maker, based on an Arduino
    https://hackaday.io/project/12937-hardwino-an-open-source-cocktail-maker

    Reply
  10. Tomi Engdahl says:

    Barbot: Cocktail mixing robot © GPL3+
    https://create.arduino.cc/projecthub/sidlauskas/barbot-cocktail-mixing-robot-0318aa?ref=platform&ref_id=424_recent___&offset=1

    Barbot is an open source Arduino cocktail mixing robot controlled with the hybrid mobile app via Bluetooth.

    The Barbot has been designed to hold up to 9 bottles of ingredients for making the cocktails, dispensing the correct amount from each to mix your cocktail of choice.

    Cocktails can be chosen using the mobile app (available for iOS and Android) that connects to the Barbot via Bluetooth.

    Reply
  11. Tomi Engdahl says:

    Open Source Barbot Needs Only Two Motors
    https://hackaday.com/2017/08/31/open-source-barbot-needs-only-two-motors/

    Most drinkbots are complicated—some intentionally so, others seemingly by design necessity. If you have a bunch of bottles of booze you still need a way to get it out of the bottles in a controlled fashion, usually through motorized pouring or pumping. Sometimes all thoe tubes and motors and wires looks really cool and sci fi. Still, there’s nothing wrong with a really clean design.

    [Lukas Šidlauskas’s] Open Source Barbot project uses only two motors to actuate nine bottles using only a NEMA-17 stepper to move the tray down along the length of the console and a high-torque servo to trigger the Beaumont Metrix SL spirit measures. These barman’s bottle toppers dispense 50 ml when the button is pressed, making them (along with gravity) the perfect way to elegantly manage so many bottles. Drink selection takes place on an app, connected via Bluetooth to the Arduino Mega running the show.

    Barbot is a cocktail mixing robot controlled with the hybrid mobile app via Bluetooth
    https://github.com/sidlauskaslukas/barbot

    Reply
  12. Tomi Engdahl says:

    Trinket Chills Your Drinks
    https://hackaday.com/2017/11/22/trinket-chills-your-drinks/

    Who wants warm drinks? Well, coffee drinkers, we guess. Other than them, who wants warm drinks? Tea drinkers, sure. How about room temperature drinks? No one, that’s who. It’s silly to buy a refrigerator to cool down a single drink, so what option are you left with? Ice cubes? They’ll dilute your drink. Ice packs and a cooler? Sure, they’ll keep your drinks cold, but they’re hardly cool are they? No, if you want a cold drink the cool way, you build a thermoelectric cooler. And if you want to build one, you’re in luck, because [John Park] has a tutorial to do just that up on AdaFruit.

    Chilled Drinkibot
    Make a nice, cold beverage using thermoelectric cooling!
    https://learn.adafruit.com/chilled-drinkibot/overview

    Reply
  13. Tomi Engdahl says:

    THIS DIY MACHINE MIXES YOUR FAVORITE THREE-INGREDIENT COCKTAIL
    https://blog.arduino.cc/2017/12/12/this-diy-machine-mixes-your-favorite-three-ingredient-cocktail/

    The device is capable of mixing three liquids, which in GreatScott’s case consist of vodka, cranberry juice, and grapefruit juice (also known as a Sea Breeze), in a drink size selected via a rotary encoder and LCD screen.

    An Arduino Nano provides the brains for this operation, and each component is poured using a series of three peristaltic pumps. Meanwhile, a load cell underneath the glass holder ensures that the correct amount of liquid is dispensed.

    Reply
  14. Tomi Engdahl says:

    Naomi Wu’s BarBot Automates Bartending Safely and Reliably
    https://blog.hackster.io/naomi-wus-barbot-automates-bartending-safely-and-reliably-599e121dee57

    Naomi Wu (better known by her handle SexyCyborg), wanted to build an automated bartending system for her friend King. King owns a small bar in Shenzhen, China, and the goal was to construct a novelty drink-making bot to attract new customers with a fun experience

    Reply
  15. Tomi Engdahl says:

    Beautiful Pi-Powered Cocktail Machine
    https://hackaday.com/2018/04/09/beautiful-pi-powered-cocktail-machine/

    Science fiction has long had the idea that a good drink should just appear from a sliding panel in a wall. Bartending is to be the preserve of robots and AIs – manual control is for the past, and in an effort to continue our progress to towards that sci-fi future, Reddit user [HighwingZ] has built a beautiful machine that mixes and serves drinks.

    DIY RaspberryPi powered cocktail machine
    https://imgur.com/a/Ow600

    Reply
  16. Tomi Engdahl says:

    Smart Bartender
    https://www.hackster.io/hackershack/smart-bartender-5c430e

    Why spend lots of money going out for drinks when you can have your own smart personal bartender at your service right in your home?!

    Reply
  17. Tomi Engdahl says:

    Barbot: Cocktail Mixing Robot © GPL3+
    https://create.arduino.cc/projecthub/sidlauskas/barbot-cocktail-mixing-robot-0318aa?ref=search&ref_id=cocktail&offset=0

    Barbot is an open source Arduino cocktail mixing robot controlled with the hybrid mobile app via Bluetooth.

    Reply
  18. Tomi Engdahl says:

    BOOZER TELLS THE INTERNET HOW MUCH YOU DRINK (IF YOU WANT IT TO)
    https://hackaday.com/2018/05/28/boozer-tells-the-internet-how-much-you-drink-if-you-want-it-to/

    Over the past few years, Reddit user [callingyougoulet] has created Boozer, a DIY beer dispenser that keeps track of how much of your brew you have left in your kegs.

    Inside the freezer is the Raspberry Pi and four flow sensors, each one connected to a GPIO port on the Pi. After some calibration, the Python code running on the Pi can calculate a pretty close estimate of the amount of liquid poured. There’s also a temperature sensor in the freezer, so that you can tell how cool your beer is.

    https://m.imgur.com/a/7jnrc

    Reply
  19. Tomi Engdahl says:

    ESP8266 And Alexa Team Up To Tend Bar
    https://hackaday.com/2019/02/04/esp8266-and-alexa-team-up-to-tend-bar/

    After a hard day of soldering and posting memes online, sometimes you just want to yell at the blinking hockey puck in the corner and have it pour you out a perfectly measured shot of your favorite libation. It might not be the multi-purpose robot servant we were all hoping to have by the 21st century, but [Jake Lee] figures it’s about as close as we’re likely to get for under fifty bucks or so

    Alexa Controlled Drink Machine (DrinkMaster9000)
    https://jakelee.info/post?blogid=24

    Do you love home automation? Do you love controlling machines with your voice? Hell yeah you do! So do I, so what better then to build then a machine that can pour you a drink just by saying “Alexa pour me a drink.”

    Reply
  20. Tomi Engdahl says:

    MGM Resorts to Replace Bartenders With Machines (No, Really)
    https://vitalvegas.com/mgm-resorts-to-replace-bartenders-with-machines-no-really/

    Several sources inside MGM Resorts have confirmed the company will soon roll out automated cocktail dispensing machines in its service bars (also called “well bars”) in Las Vegas and across the country.

    Reply
  21. Tomi Engdahl says:

    Cisco Switches Converted to Drink Mixer
    https://www.hackster.io/news/cisco-switches-converted-to-drink-mixer-0f95087ba832

    Remember back in the old days when you used to whip up cocktails by hand? Sure, some still do this… but any good hacker knows that one should build a machine to take care of this task before partaking in a mixed adult beverage.

    https://beastiebytes.com/robarboter.html

    Reply
  22. Tomi Engdahl says:

    While it can’t help the social isolation of this pandemic, the Pi MixMakr can serve your drink like a robotic version of your bartender.

    Pi MixMakr Is a Robotic Bartender That’ll Keep the Cocktails Coming Through Quarantine
    https://www.hackster.io/news/pi-mixmakr-is-a-robotic-bartender-that-ll-keep-the-cocktails-coming-through-quarantine-f3b810c6d82a

    While it can’t help the social isolation of this pandemic, the Pi MixMakr can serve your drink like a robotic version of your bartender.

    The coronavirus pandemic continues, and you probably can’t go out to bars right now. Even if bars are open where you live, it’s probably smart to avoid them for the time being. That can feel very frustrating to those of us who enjoy a nice adult beverage. Grabbing a beer from your refrigerator just doesn’t feel the same as paying three times as much for it at your local watering hole. While it can’t do much about the social isolation of this pandemic, the Pi MixMakr can serve your cocktails like a robotic version of your favorite bartender.

    https://www.reddit.com/r/raspberry_pi/comments/g7ybgp/pi_mixmakr_you_can_order_your_favourite_drinks/

    Reply
  23. Tomi Engdahl says:

    The VK-01 Off-World Bartender is the coolest looking cocktail robot we’ve ever seen, and we’re sure it makes some pretty tasty drinks, too.

    Blade Runner Inspired This Robotic VK-01 Off-World Bartender
    https://www.hackster.io/news/blade-runner-inspired-this-robotic-vk-01-off-world-bartender-1cccc025d9b3

    The VK-01 Off-World Bartender is the coolest looking cocktail robot we’ve ever seen, and we’re sure it makes some pretty tasty drinks, too.

    Every year, San Francisco’s DNA Lounge hosts the Cocktail Robotics Grand Challenge. This annual event exists solely for makers to show off their robotic bartending machines, and is basically a Maker Faire for the kinds of people who enjoy a nice labor-free adult beverage. Exhibitors are free to express their creativity, so long as their creations are capable of automatically making alcoholic drinks.

    While this year’s event was canceled due to COVID-19, Bell decided to go ahead and assemble another machine anyway. The result is this VK-01 Off-World Bartender inspired by Blade Runner.

    https://www.instructables.com/id/VK-01-Off-World-Bartender/

    Reply
  24. Tomi Engdahl says:

    Let the ESP32-powered MyBar mix you the perfect quarantine!

    DIY MyBar – Cocktail Mixing Machine
    https://www.hackster.io/juano2310/diy-mybar-cocktail-mixing-machine-d84c3f

    DIY MyBAR (Bartender Assistant Robot) makes the perfect cocktail, time after time! With a simple app discover and share like never before.

    Reply
  25. Tomi Engdahl says:

    Concoct your own robotic cocktail mixer using a Nano RP2040 Connect, some simple components, and the Arduino Cloud.

    This robotic bartender serves up drinks using a Nano RP2040 Connect and the Arduino Cloud
    https://blog.arduino.cc/2021/09/22/this-robotic-bartender-serves-up-drinks-using-a-nano-rp2040-connect-and-the-arduino-cloud/

    Reply
  26. Tomi Engdahl says:

    Impress your holiday guests with an Arduino Cloud-connected cocktail maker! Simply tap your phone and let the bar-bot mix you a drink: create.arduino.cc/projecthub/jithinsanal1610/drink-like-james-bond-diy-cocktail-mixer-using-arduino-ef2cef

    Reply
  27. Tomi Engdahl says:

    AI BARTENDER SLAMS OUT 120 DRINKS PER HOUR WHILE CRACKING STUPID JOKES
    https://futurism.com/the-byte/robot-bartender-cecilia

    Reply
  28. Tomi Engdahl says:

    BoozeBot Mixes the Perfect Cocktail Every Time
    BoozeBot is a DIY cocktail mixing robot that can handle up to six bottled ingredients.
    https://www.hackster.io/news/boozebot-mixes-the-perfect-cocktail-every-time-37af6c8a9e0f

    This machine can mix up to six liquid ingredients, which allows for a wide range of cocktails. The user can decide which bottles to use in order to accommodate their drinks of choice. One could also expand Schwartz’s design to include additional bottles if they want more cocktail options. The only downside is that the bottles aren’t cooled and there is no automatic ice dispenser, so users have to fill their glass with ice by hand. But BoozeBot takes care of all of the hard work of mixing cocktails in the correct parts.

    BoozeBot: A DIY Cocktail-Making Machine
    https://russ-stuff.com/projects/boozebot/

    BoozeBot is a bartending, drink-mixing, cocktail-making robot! Load the machine with ingredients of your choice, select a cocktail from the list shown on the touchscreen, and watch as BoozeBot dispenses the right amount of each required ingredient into your glass.

    Six peristaltic pumps, controlled by an ESP32 microcontroller, are turned on and off at precise times to move ingredients directly from their bottles, out the dispenser nozzle, and into your glass via food-safe flexible tubing. The ESP module communicates with a cheap android tablet running a react-native app that displays the menu to the user. The app also allows for direct manual control of the pumps (which is useful for cleaning).

    Reply
  29. Tomi Engdahl says:

    The bartender of the future always gets your drink right!
    https://fb.watch/fVuLWpoVQw/

    Reply

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

*

*