Robotic Mine Exploration
Punty writes "CMU has yet again pushed the envelope of robotic technology. After the Quecreek mine incident, technology experts made a quick move to come up with solutions to mine mapping. Well, CMU has made major progress thanks to Red Wittaker, who created the Mobile Robotics Development Course with such goals in mind. It is especially interesting to see that it is the students doing most of the work in such a complex project. The full story, along with links to the "Groundhog" and "Nomad" projects can be found here. . ."
of mines?
you were to get Marcel Marceau to swallow the video-equipped capsules described in this recent /. article, would that be considered "robotic mime exploration"?
"When are you really going to be ready?" he adds, encouragingly. "You know, when they launch the shuttle, it's never ready. It always has dozens of flaws they know about. They launch anyway."
:X
WTF!?
Dude, get a better comparison
That being said, this will be really neat if the robots become cheap. Imagine what could be done in the world of urban exploration with this kind of technology!
I will now redundantly add my name to the end of my post. You know, in case you forgot me or something.
It would be interesting to see whether mine exploration robots would be able to investigate the progress of mine fires.
Really? From my experience it's almost always the students doing most of the work.
The faculty is there to guide them, come up with the ideas, etc. -- but they use cheap student labor to get the job done.
I feel fantastic, and I'm still alive.
... But I initially confused The title for saying actually exploiting mines... Would be cool to have something like that, too... a lot less people would have to risk their lives, that way. Also, imagine robot miners on the moon, on mars... Let them loose for a couple of months, years,... and hey presto: ready to use subsurface tunnels for manned missions, with a bounty of ore, ready to process, to boot.
and some robotic virus...
To have a full real Descent experience!!
We are Turing O-Machines. The Oracle is out there.
Space mining seems like something we need more funding for, if this is the first step then that is great.
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