Swarming And Hopping Planetary Robots
An anonymous reader writes "Recently Dr. Penelope Boston (U. New Mexico) and Dr. Steven Dubowsky (MIT) discussed their NASA advances to develop 'hopping microbots' capable of exploring hazardous terrain, including underground caves and planetary extremes. 'We came up with the idea of many, many, tiny little spheres, about the size of tennis balls (slide show), that essentially hop, almost like Mexican jumping beans. They store up muscle energy, so to speak, and then they boink themselves off in various directions. That's how they move...They behave as a swarm [of 1000s]. They relate to each other using very simple rules, but that produces a great deal of flexibility in their collective behavior that enables them to meet the demands of unpredictable and hazardous terrain.' Test prototypes available in March will initially explore terrestrial lava tubes."
Is it just me, or have these people been watching Aeon Flux a little to much? Haven't seen the movie, but the scene from the trailer of the hundreds of explosive balls running down the hall comes to mind.
Man is the lowest-cost, 150-pound, nonlinear, all-purpose computer system which can be mass-produced by unskilled labor.
Yet again, scientific progress goes "boink".
Let the adolescent humor begin!
Iceworms are real
And hey, even better, they do in fact come in clusters! Now in only wonder if in Soviet Russia, swarms are boinking you!?
Windows is like decaf - it tastes like the real thing, but it won't get you through the day.
Ten bucks says that this whole concept was invented just so some NASA scientist could win a bet that he could get the phrase "they boink themselves off" into an official press release :)
At least, this one thing that Douglas Adams didn't think of.
Oh well, what the hell...
I'm sorry. Wouldn't this article been better off posted @ BoingBoing?
No, they run the risk of growing hair on their pa ... well, of becoming hairy balls, I guess.
The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
"then they boink themselves...They relate to each other using very simple rules..."
Sounds like human behavior to me.
These things could pass the Turing Test.
Richard Steven Hack - This sig is TOO GODDAMN SHORT TO DO ANYTHING USEFUL WITH! MORONS!