Has been ruled out for the remainder of the series with a fractured finger. There was late drama as wasps snatched a win over bristol in rugby unions premiership. Nizaam carrs try in the 80th minute earned the visitors a surprise victory. Bristol could have gone top with a win, but were denied right at the end at ashton gate. In the pro 1a, ulster signed off the year in style. They crossed the line five times as they thrashed connacht by 35 points to 3 in belfast to earn a bonus point victory at a sold out kingspan. Tyson fury and Deontay Wilder have finally confirmed the date of their much anticipated rematch. The fight will take place in las vegas on the 22nd of february next year with wilders wbc world heavyweight title on the line. The last meeting between the pair in los angeles 12 months ago ended in a controversial draw. Anthonyjoshua holds the other three major heavyweight titles. The yacht comanche, skippered byjim cooney has won the 75th edition of the annual sydney to hobart race. The race started back in 1945 and covers roughly 630 nautical miles of the tasman sea and the treacherous bass strait. The annual race is australias premier yachting event and considered among the worlds most gruelling. Iam i am always amazed they do not bash into each other. There are so many of them. It is because they are good at sailing, that is your answer. The headlines coming up injust a moment. Hello, this is breakfast with Nina Warhurst and charlie stayt. Good morning. Heres a summary of todays main stories from bbc news the d day veteran, harry billinge, whos helped raise thousands of pounds for charity, has been awarded an mbe in the annual new year honours list. The 94 year old was recognised for his Fund Raising Efforts around this summers d day anniversary. Amongst the celebrities honoured are singer and actor, Olivia Newton john, who has been made a dame. The list also includes four members of englands world cup winning cricket team. Around two thirds of recipients have been recognised for their work in the community. Rhiane mannings set up the charity 2 wish upon a star, which helps families dealing with the sudden death of a child or young adult. It is bittersweet. I would give back any award to turn back the clock for me and the children but the amount of m essa g es me and the children but the amount of messages i have received, i have never set out to do it for any award. Ido never set out to do it for any award. I do it because my boys memories and their legacy but i have had lovely messages from families that we are now supporting and they really do deserve it and without two wish upon a star that probably would not have received anything. A mother whose husband and two children drowned in a Swimming Pool on the Costa Del Sol on Christmas Eve has insisted all three knew how to swim. In a Statement Released through her lawyers, Olubunmi Diya said she believed they drowned because something in the pool made swimming difficult. The hotel, Club La Costa world, insists the pool was working normally at the time of the tragedy. Rescuers have found the bodies of six people after a helicopter crashed at the top of a mountain on the Hawaiian Island of kauai. The aircraft was carrying seven people but officials said there were no signs of survivors. A british man who won one of europes biggest lotteryjackpots, has died after a short illness. Colin weir, who was 71, and wife, chris, from largs in north ayrshire, claimed the £161 million euromillions prize in 2011. At the time it was one of europes biggest ever lottery wins after a series of rollovers boosted the jackpot. The duchess of cambridge has praised the work of midwives in an open letter to the profession. Highlighting the work they do, Kate Middleton said it was of fundamental importance to the Early Years Development of children. Kensington palace released these pictures of the duchess, after she spent two days at a maternity unit. She described the experience as a privilege. Those are the main stories this morning. Now its time for click and this years live show comes from the new v and a in dundee. The team hear about the regions pivotal role in video games, drink waterfrom a pollution drinking car, and have a visit from nasa. Are you well . That was great. Trying to give spencer direction. We just did a stagger through which is about three hours behind schedule. Hopefully its all going to work out in the end when we go live at five oclock. No pressure. Fingers crossed its all going to happen. Im just changing bits, i hope he doesnt mind. Like that . Yeah. I just want these to be in. It was quite nerve racking at this point but im excited. Theres a bit of a buzz, isnt there . Been looking forward to it for weeks. Why are you guys here tonight . I just want to learn, really, and see all the new stuff going on. Theme music plays. Are you sure we shouldnt be there already . Trust me, were going to get there on time. But dundees 500 miles away. The trains going to take hours, even a flights going to take too long. There is no way. Seriously, i had a word with a guy, he knows a guy and he said theres a shortcut. All we need to do is use this. You need to get out more. We just need to press start. Goodness, spencer, are you 0k . Yeah, just, just, just go with it. Go with what . What the . Right, follow me. Ok, this is weird. Come on. Are you sure this is the most direct route . Pretty sure, yeah. Can we at least stop and ask for directions . No need, ive got a map, itll be fine. Over here. Ah, um, oh. Oh, you had it upside down, didnt you . Little bit, yeah. Ok, this is more like it. Dundee, we should only be a couple of blocks away now. Blocks. Nice, i see what you did there. Yep, there it is. V a dundee. Here we come announcer from v a dundee, this bbc click live. Please welcome your hosts, Lara Lewington and spencer kelly. Yes, its that time of year again where we leave the comfort of the click offices and go live to the world, or at least to a crowd of very eager tech fans. V a dundee was the spectacular location for a show that took in everything from Artificial Intelligence to facial recognition. The museum not only celebrates the past but also looks to the future. Most peoples idea of robots are shaped by the robots they see in science so in a film or tv or video games or music. But robots are a bit more real than what we think. So most children now will now grow up with siri or alexa or some kind of smart helper in their life and i think in the future thats just going to increase. Were going to have more robotic helpers helping our children and helping us and increasingly more and more in an everyday basis. Currently on display is the exhibition design between human and machine. So rather than robots coming in and replacing us and replacing our jobs, i think the future is a bit more of an optimistic one. Weve got an amazing Structure Commission thats being specially built here for v a dundee and this is all by the idea of humans and robots collaborating together to create something amazing and wonderful and i think thats a bit more what the future will be like, so, slightly less pessimistic than what we imagine. In recent years, dundee has become something of a digital powerhouse. Its synonymous with video games like lemmings, grand theft auto and yes, minecraft. Dundee has the honour, we believe, of being the city in the world with the highest per capita volume of games developers. Thats come around for a number of reasons. It started off back in the 1980s, there was a lot of us programming away on sinclair spectrums that happened to be made in the city, so you could always pick one up ex factory when they went slightly wrong for less than they cost in the shops. Some amazing video games came out of the city at that point and that gave a lot of us the inspiration to set our own companies up. The worlds first video games degree was offered here by Abertay University all the way back in 1997, so we thought wed check out some of their more recent work. All in the name of social interaction, of course. Why is Abertay University so hot on gaming . At abertay, all the staff have either previously made video games or we currently make video games and we are all part of a research lab called Abertay Game Lab that make really fun, experimental games that push the boundaries of Computer Gaming in different ways. So youve got some other students playing some other of your games over there. That game was created by dr mona bozdog who sloped on with lara. Now, mona, there are a lot of different games here, all telling interesting, different stories. Can you tell me a bit about what youve created here. Yes, so, the game you see is called assembly. Were all in dundee and the year is 1981 and theres thousands of women in the timex factory assembling the first ever computers, so the zx81 and the zx spectrum. These computers changed the face of games. Thats basically a recreation of the assembly line. So we have the women workers trying to assemble the Zx Spectrum Computers from populating the boards to actually packaging and shipping the zx spectrums. This is a actually a bit of social history here as well, isnt it . Yes, it is. It is what we usually call herstories. Because theyre the alternative histories, theyre the Hidden Figures of the video Games Industry and the video games history, and it was the women who assembled, they were tremendously skilled and they basically brought us the first computers. This eerie, stifling hot landscape looks otherworldly but in reality, were a couple of hours drive north of los angeles. This area, known as the coso range, was formed by several volcanic eruptions almost half a million years ago. Back then, rivers would run through here, creating this dramatic, unpredictable terrain. I know we are in california but i want you to picture somewhere completely different. I want you to imagine that im walking across the surface of the moon. Because the technology weve come to see today is going to be put through its paces ahead of a groundbreaking Lunar Mission due to take place in the next decade. One which should teach us more about the moon than weve ever known. This is a team from nasas famous jet Propulsion Lab and this is axel, a robot that might one day explore areas of the moon that have been untouched for billions of years. There are more than a dozen huge caverns found on the moon, created when lava flowed quickly across the surface and hardened, leaving a void underneath. Eventually, parts of that lava surface collapsed like a sinkhole. Its into these holes axel will dive in for a closer look at the layers of rock beneath. Not only that, but the robot might discover locations suitable for human researchers to live on the moon for extended periods of time. But before that futuristic vision can be realised, axel needs to be put through its paces in california. So this particular design youre looking at, its a two wheeled rover that can operate upside down or right side up and thats important, when you are going over extreme terrain, you could be easily tipped up the other way and we want to be able to survive that. The other thing you notice, this has no steering wheels, the reason why it has two wheels is because it is differentially driven, so we can go forward and backward but can also take turns. 0bviously, were not going to test this in the parking lot here but it does mean we have to go 300 metres in that direction and the only way to do that, im afraid, is to carry it. This is a team which certainly knows what its doing. They were involved in getting the incredible mars rover to the red planet. The moon may seem like a shorter, simplertrip, but going back and getting deeper could unravel important mysteries. Were specifically targeting this pit crater in the sea of tranquillity. And this is something that they discovered only a few years ago. Some of the craters on the moon actually arent your traditional impact craters, they are these very strange, vertical bore holes into the moon and no ones exactly sure what those are, but what we do know is that theres a lot of geological history thats exposed there on the side of this crater wall. If axel does make it to the moon, it will be attached to a lunar rover which will land a few hundred feet away from where the team wants to explore. Through that tether, axel will get its power and instructions from the team and itll act like a rope as it abseils down into the moons depths. Today we, of course, dont have the lunar rover with us so axel will be supported by a rock. This is tricky business. If its not secure, we could see axel plummet to the rocks below. Its a long, slow, nervous process with a few hiccups along the way as axel struggled with the unforgiving volcanic terrain. But it was mission accomplished. Axel was able to abseil its way down the cliffs edge, if only on earth for now. This would be the first repelling rover ever to be fielded off world so if we can establish that technology and gain confidence in that, now we can start looking at places like mars. Theyre a little harder to get to but have lots of interesting questions that need answered. And if it works, theres a whole galaxy of possibilities as to where axel goes next. And if you thought that was cool, i was lucky enough to be joined onstage by axels little brother, puffer. Its the pop up flat folding explorer robot. Its fallen over on earth. Its actually designed to take impacts like that. Those balloons you saw is the material these are made out of, that weve landed on mars before. 0k, wow, cause this looks pretty flimsy. Yes, well, this is similar to a bullet proof fabric. We take it and fold it up and that is that robot and this origami shape takes the impacts very nicely. Ok, so its tougher than it looks. Now, tell me what its real world purpose is. This can take any instrument. This ones for a little micro imager, so we can do any science that youre looking to do wherever you want to go. These arent the only wheels we have for our two wheeled robots. Ok, so, if consumers were to buy one of these, because that is the aim, isnt it, what exactly would they be doing with it . Well, we can do Citizen Science so they can take them out into the field, they can have different sensors on them and then we can get huge datasets that we can use to do state of the art science here on earth. 0k, and how much would it cost cause this looks like a pretty pricey bit of kit. This one is, its about 5,000 for the two wheels but we can get them down to tens of dollars. 0k, quite a difference. This isnt the only robot youve got with you . No, it is not. Theres another one literally climbing the walls lets take a look at what weve got over here. What is this exactly . This is our durable reconnaissance 0bservation platform. You can tell its a little bit of an eye that climbs up the wall and you can see the controls right there that can actually sense gravity. So its climbing the lift shaft. Its climbing quite nicely there, but whats it actually for . What is it for . So, its for basically surveillance. This is an earth application but the same wheels we can put on these rovers and we can climb 60 degree slopes on a mars analogue. But youve also created something thats for digging beneath the surface. Were going to take a look at it here. The future of robotics is underground so this is our exobiology extant life surveyor thats trying to get through the open window that cassini found on enceladus, moon of saturn, that goes right to an alien ocean. How easy to break through is that surface, do you think . This surface . Well, theres these active geysers or plume vents that we know are sourced from the ocean. So right here, well get our first taste and smell of an alien ocean. A huge thank you to you, your colleagues from nasa who also came, and of course, to all the bots. Weve got to be nice to them, i think. Applause. Robotic voice speaking. At. Professor Annalu Waller has dedicated 30 years of her life to researching technologies to improve communication for those who have difficulty speaking. Its very much like the predictive text on your phone, but, as we saw when we invited her onto the stage. Robotic voice words. It can be a very slow process. Minute. Actually telling a story in real time is laborious, time consuming. A lot of our focussed communication aids only type 8 10 words a minute. How on earth do you conduct a real conversation in that speed . Annalus team, in partnership with cambridge university, has created a new system that remembers what youve typed before and offers up whole sentence chunks in one go. Its hard to find whole sentences to use as i speak. Applause. So, as humans we always tell stories. So what im telling you now, ive told many people before. And this is where it gets even more clever. A Body Worn Camera observes where annalu is and who shes speaking to. It can then suggest sentences that are relevant to that situation. So, this is the Computer Vision brain behind our system. The camera ive got in my right hand here is the one the person wears around their neck, so the camera can see what they can see. And it can see the person, they are speaking to, so at the moment it sees me. And you can see on the screen it picks out my face to identify whether im a known person, whether im a friend, and if it knows me, who i am. It takes a guess from the whole environment it can see to say where are we . Are we in a cafe, at work . And this information we then use to predict the right sentences i might want to say in this environment with this communication partner. The more annalu uses it, the more it learns and the faster the system becomes. And the system might think were in a museum, im talking to a person ive never met before. That might be an opportunity to talk about my work, so it will bring up sentences ive used before to talk about my work so i can access them timely. Stories are really important because they provide the fundamental essence of being human. We are our stories. We are all very talkative people. Laughter i mean i know people who repeat themselves over and over again. We all do laughter i mean i know people who repeat themselves over and over again. Laughter we all do laughter and applause we were also lucky enough to be joined by the minister for Public Finance and digital economy, kate forbes. And ceo of the Scottish Government backed Innovation Centre, data lab, gillian doherty. For anyone who doesnt know what data lab do, do you just want to tell them a little about what it is, gillian . Sure, so the data lab is scotlands Innovation Centre for data science and Artificial Intelligence. And ultimately, its about driving value for the country by leveraging our data better. And youve already had some life changing partnerships, havent you . Tell me about the cancer one. We have, yes. So, weve been working with the Beatson Cancer hospital on using Computer Vision technology to help the radiologists dealing delineate tumours from healthy tissues and complex neck cancers. Weve also worked across multiple of the health wards, using data to improve patient reported experience measures and Outcome Measures and integrate that with the clinical treatment as part of their unfortunate cancer journey. But looking at some of the issues there are in scotland today, high unemployment is of course one of them, how do you perceive technology affecting that . Because obviously there are pros and cons. Thats right. And technologys definitely going to disrupt the job market as we know it, but on the other hand, we also know that the Technology Sector in scotland is constantly looking for new skills and talent. So ourjob is to match the people that are currently looking for work with the businesses and the organisations that are looking for those skills. Jobs will change. There are jobs we do now that didnt exist 20, 30, a0 years ago. And depending on the research you read, for primary children, up to 60 of those children starting that are school right now will have jobs that dont even existjust now. So its hard to get your head around that, but whose grandmother was a Search Engine optimisation specialist . Whose grandpa was a vlogger . And you are two women working in technology. Do you really think that things are changing . Very, very slowly. So they are changing and were seeing that in scotland, because closing the gender gap is key to what were trying to achieve. But its about going into primary schools and encouraging young women and girls to think that they can actually work in this sector and work in this area and see incredible role models. Now, we all know about cars and pollution, right . But how about a vehicle where the more you drive it, the cleaner it makes the air . Well, the hyundai nexo claims to do just that. Where youd normally have an engine, theres a fuel cell stack, where hydrogen and oxygen combine to create the electricity that powers the car and charges the battery. But can it actually clean the air . Well, we braved the very cold dundee air to put it to the test. So, over here we have robin hayles from hyundai. Hi. Hey, whats gonna happen . So, were gonna demonstrate how the filtration system of a hyundai nexo cleans the air as it drives along. What were going to do is weve got a pump here, which were gonna add this, which is a jar of pm10 and pm2. 5 particulates. Nasty stuff yeah. This is the stuff that comes out of trucks, cars, buses as theyre driving along. So thats soot and carbon and stuff like that . Yes, yep. All right, so, no sniffing that then while we open the jar. No. Were going to bung that in there, arent we . Yep, my colleague, mr shim, hes gonna add that into the system. 0k. Keep an eye on what happens to the air as we do it. Youll see the soon go into the balloon. Wow look at that that looks filthy imagine what would happen if you held this piece of white paper up to the exhaust of your petrol car, its going to get pretty grey, isnt it . Give it a squeeze. Ah, yeah, this is quite satisfying, actually. Get as much air onto that is possible and lets just see. Smells all right, i have to say. All right, lets have a look. Show that to the camera. Thats marvellous. So pretty much, yeah, theres pretty much nothing on there. So thats good, but weve also we can also show you what the car has filtered out of the air. So lets have the clean filter in. This is what the filter looked like when it went into the car, weve taken this on out of the car now. And, hm, can you see the difference . Yeah, so thats what it sucked out of the air in the last two or three minutes. Yep, thats all the particulates out of the air, so its everything in that jar, its now on that filter. Everything in the jar is now on the filter. Nice. Now theres one other thing that Hydrogen Cars produce, and thats water vapour, which youre assuring me is very, very clean, is that right . Its very clean. Ill show you how clean. All right, so were gonna get a glass of water, or as its known in dundee, ice, out of the ball, and you think that is very, very clean water . Yep, thats pure water. So this isnt tap water, this bottled water you get in the shop, this is 100 pure water. And robin assures me its so pure you can drink it and dont keel over. So, uh, well, go on then. You said it. Go on, give us give us a. Ugh a bit plasticky, but better than some supermarket bottles. Three, two, one. Push back inside, and a click live show wouldnt be a click live show without waving, and generally getting a bit overexcited. All that remains is to thank everyone who turned up to see us live and of course you at home for watching. From all of us here at click, we hope you have a very happy new year. Go, go, go yes, yes, yes theme music good morning. Welcome to breakfast with Nina Warhurst and charlie stayt. Our headlines today a new year honour for World War Two veteran harry billinge, who won the hearts of millions for his Fund Raising Efforts around the summers d day commemoratons commemorations. Dont say i am a hero. Im no hero. I was lucky. Im here. All the heroes are dead, and i will never forget them as long i live. Singer and actor Olivia Newton john is made a dame