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Harvard's Robotic Bees Generate High-Tech Buzz

coondoggie writes "Harvard researchers recently got a $10 million grant to create a colony of flying robotic bees, or RoboBees, to (among other things) spur innovation in ultra-low-power computing and electronic 'smart' sensors; and refine coordination algorithms to manage multiple, independent machines. The 5-year, National Science Foundation-funded RoboBee project could lead to a better understanding of how to mimic artificially the unique collective behavior and intelligence of a bee colony; foster novel methods for designing and building an electronic surrogate nervous system able to sense and adapt to changing environments; and advance work on the construction of small-scale flying mechanical devices, according to the Harvard RoboBee Web site."

7 of 105 comments (clear)

  1. Missing an important benefit by Iamthecheese · · Score: 4, Interesting

    They really should be trying to find something else: more reliable pollination. Yes real bees already do this but mass-produced robo-bees, besides being really cool, don't catch colony-dropping diseases.

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    If video games influenced behavior the Pac Man generation would be eating pills and running away from their problems.
    1. Re:Missing an important benefit by religious+freak · · Score: 3, Interesting

      mass-produced robo-bees ... don't catch colony-dropping diseases

      Who says? The minute a viable robo-bee is created, I'm guessing someone will be thinking up a robo-bee virus. (In fact, a robo-bee virus actually sounds kinda cool!)

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    2. Re:Missing an important benefit by camperslo · · Score: 2, Interesting

      They really should be trying to find something else: more reliable pollination.

      Yes! Perhaps they can even make a variety good at pollinating cherimoya. Apparently South America has some bugs absent in the U.S., so most have to resort to hand-pollination with a small brush or something to get good yields from a cherimoya tree. The fruit is delightful.

  2. Military applications? by RNLockwood · · Score: 2, Interesting

    This appears to have military applications, say a swarm of cheap cruise missiles that any country could afford. Other than that it is way cool.

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    Nate
    1. Re:Military applications? by TwistedGreen · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Exploding bees? That doesn't seem very useful given the small payload capacity. A more practical military application would be in targeted chemical/biological warfare. A sentry hive placed outside a military outpost could sniff intruders for a chemical friend-or-foe signature and, if it's absent, they could attack. This could even be used as a non-lethal weapon if the robotic insects injected a paralytic agent rather than a toxin.

      The military applications are actually extremely interesting!

  3. Re:Democratizing power of tech by anagama · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I've been thinking similar things, and although I would be loathe to go back to the days of having to head down to the library and look through cards to find a book that answers a question I can get an answer for from google in seconds, the search trail I leave says a lot about me. Anyone who actually played around with the AOL search data realizes this.

    My first thought when thinking about a network of tiny robots, was that someone in some government in this world will definitely turn this into a surveillance and data gathering tool. So while I love technology and the ease it brings to my life, I am also becoming more aware that my privacy is at much greater risk now than it was even as recently as the early/middle 90s. As technology becomes more pervasive, the ability to abuse it becomes more pervasive and I'm worried about that, in a non-Luddite fashion.

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    What changed under Obama? Nothing Good
  4. Re:"Ultra" low power by mirix · · Score: 2, Interesting

    They'll just start adding them together.
    UltraUltra low power
    UltraSuperMicroMini low power
    PicoPicoPicoPicoPower

    Or we could skip all that and do what ST does; Embellish a bit and call it "zeropower" (which is trademarked no less).

    Zeropower NVRAM - Which of course is battery backed, and uses... power.

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