Autonomous RoboFish at the London Aquarium
mikael writes "The London Aquarium currently has an exhibit based on autonomous
robotic fish. Each fish is 50 cm long, 15 cm high, and 12cm wide with a maximum swim speed of 50cm/second with battery life lasting up to 5 hours at half speed. The BBC has more details (with video). Many more videos are available at the Robotics Video Gallery." From the article: "We have embedded sensors on board - so, unlike the previous fishes that have remote controls, these are fully autonomous and artificial-intelligence based ... This one is more life-like - it mimics normal swimming and sharp turning ... People get confused and think it's a real fish."
this will soon evolve into a human (given millions of years) and then it will be a police officer. So then we have:
RoboCop
Just think, if they were only solar powered...
Do not use Happy Fun Electric Fish in Bathtub or Aquarium.
Do not taunt Happy Fun Electric Fish.
Keep Happy Fun Electric Fish in refrigerator when not in use.
Do not let Happy Fun Electric Fish locate Sarah Conner..
Bill Stewart
New Fast-Compression-only CPR http://preview.tinyurl.com/dy575ks
RoboSushi
Do they float up to the surface upside down?
They require more frequent care than real fish, since you have to recharge the battery every five hours. Now, what they really ought to do is make an automatic charging station shaped like a little castle...
"[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz
Now, if the fish get confuded and think they're real fish, then, we've got something.
You know, I have one simple request. And that is to have sharks with frickin' laser beams attached to their heads!
Can real fish tell the difference? Do they react like they would to another fish...assuming real fish DO react to other fish, I mean. I don't know anything about fish but at least I'm anonymous.
I've been to dozens of aquariums all over the world and that one is nearly the worst.
Well, that explains the "robotic fish" They don't die if they aren't fed. Clearly they became the main attraction as a result of natural selection - all the other exhibits went belly-up.
1. See /. story about fish
2. Make comment about "friggin lasers on their heads"
3. Get modded +X Funny
4. Profit??
One very interesting example of this is when they made a robotic pike or some species of fish that propels through water in a more efficient way than we previously thought was possible. Someone came up with a theory that its movements generate eddies that help propel it along more efficiently. So, they built a robotic model to test this theory and it worked. It did swim like a pike. Does that mean that really is how pikes swim? Not necessarily but it does give some credibility to the theory.
In any case, building robotic models of lifeforms isn't as pointless as it may seem. It's not always just for entertainment.
EvilCON - Made Famous by
This would be great for displaying an extinct species or a species that is difficult in captivity. Sure, it's not the real thing, but it is a nice alternative. Also, this sort of thing might be good for aquariums that have little funding to maintain many living fish.
I don't know why this would be useful, but it wure would be cool to have a robotic fish buddy while SCUBA diving.
Welcome to the land of the free...pay toll ahead...no photography...please open your bag...
I believe just charging the water would not create a current within the fish unless the fish had a ground that didn't also ground the water. Path of lease resistance and all that.
An easier solution would be induction charged fish.
"Everything you know is wrong. (And stupid.)"
Moderation Totals: Wrong=2, Stupid=3, Total=5.
...welcome our new robotic fish overlords.
British robo-fish vs. the US Navy's poison-dart-wielding dolphins.