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Smart Robot Capable of Hunting For Its Own "Food"

Posted by Soulskill on Thu Jan 29, 2009 09:31 AM
from the note-to-robots-i-am-not-food dept.
coondoggie writes "Ok, maybe this is getting a little too close to bringing Terminator-like robots to life. For starters, eco-friendly engine builder Cyclone Power this week inked a contract from Robotic Technologies, Inc. (RTI) to develop what it calls a beta biomass engine system that will be the heart of RTI's Energetically Autonomous Tactical Robot (EATR). The purpose of EATR is to develop and demonstrate an autonomous robotic platform able to perform long-range, long-endurance missions without the need for manual or conventional re-fueling — in other words it needs to 'eat.' According to researchers, the EATR system gets its energy by foraging, or what the firms describe as 'engaging in biologically-inspired, organism-like, energy-harvesting behavior which is the equivalent of eating. It can find, ingest, and extract energy from biomass in the environment as well as use conventional and alternative fuels (such as gasoline, heavy fuel, kerosene, diesel, propane, coal, cooking oil, and solar) when suitable.'" We can only hope they don't team up with the Multi-Robot Pursuit System project to "search for and detect a non-cooperative human."
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[+] Packs of Robots Will Hunt Down Uncooperative Humans 395 comments
Ostracus writes "The latest request from the Pentagon jars the senses. At least, it did mine. They are looking for contractors to 'develop a software/hardware suite that would enable a multi-robot team, together with a human operator, to search for and detect a non-cooperative human subject. The main research task will involve determining the movements of the robot team through the environment to maximize the opportunity to find the subject ... Typical robots for this type of activity are expected to weigh less than 100 Kg and the team would have three to five robots.'" To be fair, they plan to use the Multi-Robot Pursuit System for less nefarious-sounding purposes as well. They note that the robots would "have potential commercialization within search and rescue, fire fighting, reconnaissance, and automated biological, chemical and radiation sensing with mobile platforms."
[+] Company Denies Its Robots Feed On the Dead 154 comments
Back in January we covered the Energetically Autonomous Tactical Robot, or EATR. The EATR gets its energy by "engaging in biologically-inspired, organism-like energy-harvesting behavior which is the equivalent of eating. It can find, ingest, and extract energy from biomass in the environment ..." So many news outlets picked up the story and ran it with titles alluding to the robot "eating flesh" or even "eating corpses" that a company spokesperson put out a press release saying, "This robot is strictly vegetarian." The statement says in part, "RTI's patent pending robotic system will be able to find, ingest and extract energy from biomass in the environment. Despite the far-reaching reports that this includes 'human bodies,' the public can be assured that the engine Cyclone has developed to power the EATR runs on fuel no scarier than twigs, grass clippings and wood chips — small, plant-based items for which RTI's robotic technology is designed to forage. Desecration of the dead is a war crime under Article 15 of the Geneva Conventions, and is certainly not something sanctioned by DARPA, Cyclone or RTI."
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  • by DoofusOfDeath (636671) on Thursday January 29 2009, @09:34AM (#26652917)

    Ok, maybe this is getting a little too close to bringing Terminator-like robots to life.

    No, too-Terminator-like would be if it said, "You are not Sarah Connor. But I am a bit peckish...."

    • by ShieldW0lf (601553) on Thursday January 29 2009, @09:42AM (#26653023) Journal

      Come on... look on the bright side. Instead of your child getting blown apart by a land mine left over from the last invasion, they can get blown apart by a hunter-killer drone. That's WAY cooler.

      Reminds me of Stephen King's The Dark Tower... maybe they could dress it up like a bear...

    • I am weary, and their deaths will bring me little joy.

      Of course, sometimes, a little is enough.

      Then again, that was a vampire...

    • ... more like The Matrix.

    • Oh shoot! (Score:5, Interesting)

      by Bovius (1243040) on Thursday January 29 2009, @11:21AM (#26654431)

      Quote from article, emphasis added:

      ...the EATR robot's inherent advantage is its ability to engage in long-endurance, tedious, and hazardous tasks, such as reconnaissance, surveillance, and target acquisition under difficult conditions, without fatigue or stress...

      So we've got omnivorous assassin bots that consume their "target" after "acquisition" to remove evidence of the mission. That's just great.

      • "So we've got omnivorous assassin bots that consume their "target" after "acquisition" to remove evidence of the mission. That's just great."

        "Whirrrr...click....BLAM!

        OM NOM NOM NOM.

        Sploot.

        Whirr...."

  • by wiredog (43288) on Thursday January 29 2009, @09:34AM (#26652921) Journal

    may just have a point.

  • by ari_j (90255) on Thursday January 29 2009, @09:35AM (#26652929)
    1. Am I "biomass"?
    2. Is my kitten, Fluffy, who likes to go outside, "biomass"?
    3. If I died in my home, would I then become "biomass"? In other words, will Fluffy have any competition for my corpse?
    • I assume you have question #1 there to see if fluffy has any competition for eating your non-corpse?

      Or maybe I'm the only one who's well fed cats want to eat him.

    • by SatanicPuppy (611928) * <Satanicpuppy AT gmail DOT com> on Thursday January 29 2009, @09:48AM (#26653117) Journal

      1) Yes.
      2) Yes.
      3) Yes.

      I think the big limitation against a robot "eating" living things at this point is that the energy required in harvesting anything that moves is far in excess of the energy that the robot will be able to extract from it. Bound to be an inefficient process.

      In the long run, however, I think I'd be leery of giving them any sort of decision tree about whether or not "object A" is edible. Even discounting human.pet accidents, no one wants to wake up in the morning to find that a robot has eaten your picnic table.

      • by nizo (81281) * on Thursday January 29 2009, @10:02AM (#26653327) Homepage Journal

        ...that the energy required in harvesting anything that moves is far in excess of the energy that the robot will be able to extract from it.

        Tell that to every ambush predator on the planet. As an added bonus, I bet the standby mode on the robot burns less energy than most waiting ambush predators too.

        "Hey, is that a new trashcan outside the Dunkin Donuts? Huh I think it moved....WAARGHHHHHHH...."

        • by ceoyoyo (59147) on Thursday January 29 2009, @01:11PM (#26656067)

          I imagine a robot that can eat biomass would do pretty well as a trashcan outside Dunkin Donuts anyway. Lots of fat and sugar getting tossed in when the doughnuts go stale.

          Or McDonalds, for that matter.

          • by MickLinux (579158) on Thursday January 29 2009, @12:44PM (#26655663) Journal
            Nonsense. Humans have the advantage of endurance. Our aboriginals literally can run/walk prey to the point of fatigue, and then attack them when they're weak. Not too different than wolves. We are built to go long times at a moderately fast pace, as opposed to short times at a super fast pace.
  • So this thing can forage for biomass, which means it is not that picky...why can't we put this in our cars for fuel (ala Mr. Fusion - Back To the Future II)
    • by SatanicPuppy (611928) * <Satanicpuppy AT gmail DOT com> on Thursday January 29 2009, @09:54AM (#26653203) Journal

      It's almost certainly wildly inefficient.

      That gasoline engine in your car is inefficient compared to a big power generator that uses the same fuel. The size, the inability to efficiently process the waste heat...It all adds up.

      Taking into account the returns of biomass plants that use high-grade biomass (e.g. corn, unprocessed chicken/pig parts, etc) and then taking into account the efficiency that will certainly be lost by reducing that process to something small enough to be mobile, and I'll be surprised if they can make it work at all.

        • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

          Well, I imagine that after billions of years of work, and uncountable design changes, our robots will be able to do it too.

          In other words, it's not apples to apples. It would take me less energy to build a car from parts than it would take a car to drive a hundred miles. That's because I'm a machine at the end of a multi-million year design process, optimized to live on a wide variety of biomass, in a wide variety of terrains, that is capable of reproducing myself and building semi-autonomous tools.

        • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

          The problem is the heat exchanger has to be pretty big, so they tend to have lower power density... that is, a heat engine (say, a stirling engine) will be larger and heavier than an internal combustion engine of the same output.

          I disagree [nasa.gov].

            • Re:biomass to fuel? (Score:5, Interesting)

              by drinkypoo (153816) <martin.espinoza@gmail.com> on Thursday January 29 2009, @12:19PM (#26655265) Homepage Journal

              Can you elaborate on whatever point you're making?

              With two iterations they were able to make a vehicle more efficient than the original with superior performance.

              This implies to me that with another couple decades (just give it a small fraction of the time that's been spent on your classic ICE four-strokes) the technology could be refined to be a direct drop-in, in terms of mass. Materials technology has advanced significantly since those vehicles were put out as well. And finally, if they had produced a vehicle with the same overall performance characteristics of the original the powerplant would have been lighter - this was a prototype retrofit designed to determine the potential of the technology.

              My point was that using a heat engine does not necessarily have any drawbacks in common use whatsoever, including increased mass. That has only been the case so far.

    • by internerdj (1319281) on Thursday January 29 2009, @10:28AM (#26653733)
      I misread your post and got the mental image of waking up, preparing for work, going to the garage and finding my car has wandered off in search of fuel because it "got hungry."
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      You can, and have been able to for over a century.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steam_car [wikipedia.org]

  • by parascott (962903) on Thursday January 29 2009, @09:44AM (#26653061)
    I have visions of the energizer bunny as a mutant omnivore.

    It just keeps going, and going, and going.....
  • by Locke2005 (849178) on Thursday January 29 2009, @09:44AM (#26653067)
    Please don't give these abominations the ability to make replicas of themselves!
  • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday January 29 2009, @09:46AM (#26653085)

    Limit the robots to a six foot power cord.

  • Well, obviously, all they need to do is invent a Mr Fusion! That should give them enough jiggawatts to run their precious doomsday machines =)

  • by $RANDOMLUSER (804576) on Thursday January 29 2009, @09:46AM (#26653095)
    We can't even safely do an autonomous robot lawn mower that won't grind up the neighbor's cat.
  • Unstopable! (Score:4, Funny)

    by snspdaarf (1314399) on Thursday January 29 2009, @09:49AM (#26653123)

    Great. This thing will siphon your fuel tank, and if that fails, threaten to eat your cat unless you hand over the charge card for the local service station.

    What will it do when it figures out WE are biomass?

  • Piss on Network World and their splash screen.

    here's the story: http://www.robotictechnologyinc.com/index.php/EATR [robotictechnologyinc.com]

  • ...from back in 2001 was UWE's Slugbot, which was supposed to 'live off the land' by finding and digesting agricultural pests:

    http://www.wired.com/gadgets/miscellaneous/news/2001/10/47156 [wired.com]

  • I don't want it to "...find, ingest, and extract energy" from MY biomass! I would look too much like a giant, high-energy, slow-moving fuel depot to it.

    Then again, if it didn't hurt too much ...

  • by i am calliope (1452699) on Thursday January 29 2009, @09:56AM (#26653217)
    While there is the possibility of this giving life to Sci-Fi plots such as Dune, Terminator, and Battlestar, I can't help but think that the eating robot can do a lot to save us. What if this "biomass" were food scraps, animal feces, or some other waste product? Cow dung lets off mass amounts of methane that can then be burned. The eating robot could help decrease a need for landfills and decrease carbon in the atmosphere.
  • What would happen if you fed it a gallon of Olestra [wikipedia.org]? Talk about rear seal leakage!

  • by srussia (884021) on Thursday January 29 2009, @09:58AM (#26653267)
    When can I get a Roomba that runs on nacho crumbs and spilled Mountain Dew?
    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      Technically the Roomba falls into this category.. Not with dust and dirt, but it does seek out its base station when it gets hungry for its EMF food

  • by SL1200MKII (1263800) on Thursday January 29 2009, @10:09AM (#26653411)
    "Cyclone brings to this project one of the most advanced external combustion engine technologies we have seen," stated Dr. Robert Finkelstein, President of RTI"

    Maybe it's just me but I find it a little worrying that this monster of a robot was created by Dr. Finkelstein

    It's alive Igor, It's Alive!!
  • Protection (Score:4, Funny)

    by ohnotherobots (1448571) on Thursday January 29 2009, @10:11AM (#26653441)
    Fortunately my tinfoil hat will cause the robots to think I am not made of organic material.
  • Not a new idea (Score:3, Interesting)

    by Thelasko (1196535) on Thursday January 29 2009, @10:13AM (#26653463) Journal
    Although I've never seen anything exactly like this, I've personally built a BEAM robot [wikipedia.org] that foraged for its own "food". Instead of seeking biomass, or hydrocarbons, my little BEAM robot just looked for a light source to charge its capacitors through photovoltaic cells.
  • by NonUniqueNickname (1459477) on Thursday January 29 2009, @10:52AM (#26654009)

    long-endurance missions such as search and rescue in the mountains and caves of Afghanistan and Pakistan

    Greetings person in Afghan cave.
    I am a robot.
    I am here to rescue you.
    *chainsaw*
    Stand still so I can rescue you.

  • Sun (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Idiomatick (976696) on Thursday January 29 2009, @11:33AM (#26654581)

    Wouldn't solar power be easier? Where there are enough things to eat to survive there is enough sun to survive. Though i suppose its neat.

    • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

      by Anonymous Coward

      So the nuclear war was really just emo-skynet cutting itself?