Curiosity Rover Being Upgraded With Autonomous Sensor Program
DevotedSkeptic writes "Curiosity will be getting a software upgrade called Autonomous Exploration for Gathering Increased Science (AEGIS) which will allow it to take on the go photos to save precious time while exploring our red neighbor. Another interesting feature AGEIS may be able to provide is the ability for Curiosity to call home when it sees something interesting. It won't be a quick upgrade: AEGIS, which has been used on the Mars Exploration Rover Opportunity since 2009, will be installed on Curiosity in the next nine to 12 months, Estlin said in an interview with InformationWeek. The AEGIS software, developed by JPL, was named NASA's 'software of the year' in 2011. Opportunity uses the software to take a wide-angle image with a low-resolution camera, then picks out rocks in the image to see if there's something of interest. If so, it takes a high-resolution image using an on-board science camera that's capable of zooming in on the subject. The software has potential beyond picture taking. Its see-and-react code could be adapted to other instruments."
There's a paper on the software as used in the Opportunity rover.
increased science, what does that even mean?
Think bricking your phone was bad..
Curiosity launched on November 26, 2011. If Opportunity has been using AEGIS since 2009, why couldn't it have been included in Curiosity from the start instead of this 12 month download over a slow connection? It's bad enough that video game companies push stuff out the door and then rely on release-day patches but I expect better from NASA.
Support Right To Repair Legislation.
Does this mean that @SadMarsRover will be able to get his instagram on again?
Is there some form of "reset to factory defaults" option that is non-programmable - i.e. built into the firmware? I would imagine that it is a real nail-biting time for the developers if there is a possibility of bricking a mars rover!
"Hi NASA, I heard you like rocks so I took this picture of a rock. Hope it's good. Tell me if you want me to take a photo if I see another alien" - Curiosity
Not sure if I agree or disagree with anything you said - just wanted to make the observation that NASA et al would definitely get more public funding if they used the words like Tonka more, especially if combined with standard advertising prefixes - maybe "Tonka Mega Launch System"?
No one male would object to slightly higher taxes or a one-off levy to pay for that.
It would make more sense than continually reusing names - according to the wiki, AEGIS is a military system, was the original OS on the Apollo missions, and the name has a bunch existing tech and non-tech uses.
I know there has been some mention of them reusing the name Orion recently - I think it was the Apollo command module that was called Columbia? They need to stop letting the nerds name stuff, maybe hire some marketing people from the toy industry.
http://www.heise.de/ct/schlagseite/2012/19/gross.jpg
Translation: Water! Water! Sensors detect a waterlike substance! And where there's water, there could be life, too ...
OK I just realised I suggested hiring a marketing person for something. Please accept my sincere apologies.
I was going to joke that they couldn't install it before launch because it took them this long to come up with the acronym.
systemd is Roko's Basilisk.
So NASA has created an autonomous robot with nacent thinking capabilities. Did I mention the laser? Good thing this is on Mars! Robocolipses start this way.
Only the dead have seen the end of War. - Plato
How much would it cost them to license the name iLaunchr, and use rounded corners?
(Maybe they can just outsource development to Samsung instead.)
Sigh-of-relief... My first reading of this was, maybe Nasa was reusing Aegis for some sort of swords/plowshares purpose to somehow to control the rover. I guess that isn't the case, and it's just a fancy name for Rover-software 2.0...
The reason that rang a bell with me was a bit of trivia I remembered. One of the first deployed Aegis system was the USS Yorktown. Apparently, the Aegis software was deployed on WindowNT which of course had lots of stability problems. Also the system software itself wasn't that great. For example, when someone accidentally entered some bad data, it caused a divide-by-zero error which caused the software to crash and the ship had to be towed back into port. I think Curiosity would have a hard time being "towed" back to port...
Fortunatly, it isn't the same software, but Nasa has a propensity to tempt fate with unlucky symbols (Apollo 13, Challenger). Let's hope this isn't one of those times...
Why doesn't NASA just buy that motivation engine from Lucas Arts? That way, if the damned thing rolls off a cliff it will try to grab onto something. Hell, it probably won't even get near the edge in the first place, getting a funny scared feeling in its wiener.
(-1: Post disagrees with my already-settled worldview) is not a valid mod option.
IIRC, the reason that giant strip mining equipment looks like Tonka toys is because the original designer was considering what his mega-dump truck should look like, saw his kids toys and used that for inspiration. Might be fun to see if Tonka, Lego and Mattel were interested in sponsoring part of a moon rover based on their toys.
"Think about how stupid the average person is. Now, realise that half of them are dumber than that." - George Carlin
"JPL developed AEGIS on Linux-based systems, then tested the software on research rovers" .. link
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