A Robotic Cable Inspection System 65
Roland Piquepaille writes "In a short article, Popular Science reports that researchers at the University of Washington have built a robotic cable inspection system. This system should help utility companies to maintain their networks of subterranean cables. The robot, dubbed Cruiser, is about 4-feet-long and is designed like a snake. When it detects an anomaly on an underground cable, it sends a message to a human operator via Wi-Fi. The first field tests took place in New Orleans in December 2006. But a commercial version should not be available before 2012."
Hmm... (Score:3, Funny)
bring on the pr0n jokes...
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A few more generations... (Score:1)
Then we can cue the jokes.
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This one (Score:1)
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warning, this comment contains sarcasm
had to be done (Score:2, Funny)
Re:had to be done (Score:4, Funny)
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Samuel L. Jackson appointed DIRNSA! (Score:5, Funny)
"That's IT! I have had it with these muthafuckin' splices in these muthafuckin' fiba-optic cables!"
The Garbageman and the Landscaper (Score:5, Insightful)
The world will be a more beautiful place when the autonomous robots start to finally appear.
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The world will be a more beautiful place when the autonomous robots start to finally appear.
Why? Then you'll just be tripping over discarded robot bits -- battery packs, broken manipulators, spent fuel-cell refills -- instead of beer cans and sh
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It's kind of a nice concept, assuming that everything worked correctly...
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Oh, but it's fiendishly clever.
We make smaller robots, to pick up the discarded bits from the bigger ones cleaning up after us.
I know, I know, what about their waste, well we just make even smaller robots. And then smaller still.
It's robots, all the way down.
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*sarcasm off*
Your point is entirely valid, the real danger presented by the cart is minimal. Additionally, the fact that the cart is there (and any litter in the world) is because of humans.
Nevertheless, I still see nothing wrong with letting robots handle dirty and potentially injurious tasks.
How about a park lined with cleaner robots who wil
I foresee a need for many spares. (Score:2)
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That is what we always do wrong (as techies that is)
Trying to solve a social / behavioural problem with a technical solution.
Don't go there it wil fail (see DRM)
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It's my favorite cognitive bias. For example, "Settin' up a server is like fishin' sturgeon..." That kind of thing
I would ask, however, if technology has not indeed solved any social issues. Has it yet?
If it has not yet, then it probably never will. However, if there is even one social issue that technology has solved or remedied, then there is reason to believe that other social issues can be relieved with the help of technology.
blog spam (Score:5, Informative)
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Main Seal project homepage [washington.edu]
Movies and pictures of it in action [washington.edu]
Don't just dismiss Roland, I found the popsci link rather lacking in comparison.
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It Begins (Score:2)
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Yeah, when I read "designed like a snake" I thought the same thing.
Then I saw the photo and decided there's a long way between a fully autonomous Sentinel and this thing built from parts out of the Maplin catalogue.
Why does our new technology always look so lo-tech? Get some of those Hollywood designers involved early on ;-)
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Metric (Score:1)
Already available in Paris (Score:1)
A biological particle accellerator cleaner (Score:3, Interesting)
And while offtopic, definitely funny is that one time after they'd sealed the tube back up, they couldn't get the beam to go through a particular section. Investigators found a couple beer bottles spaced several meters apart inside the tube.
Not new... (Score:2)
This can leave iron filings in the tube that could screw up the beam. I was told when I spent the Summer of '93 there that the way they clean the pipe out is to attach a brush to the tail of a weasel and have him run down the tube.
Richard Gere has some prior art on this method of "cleaning" his plumbing.
And while offtopic, definitely funny is that one time after they'd sealed the tube back up, they couldn't get the beam to go through a particular section. Investigators found a couple beer bottles spaced several meters apart inside the tube.
Hehe, but they are not the first ones either [blogspot.com] to whom this happened.
holy #$%& a subject! (Score:4, Interesting)
I guess that IMHO a robot should be a machine that could do something that would seem "random" to a casual observer.
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Re:Wireless thermometer? (Score:2)
Oblig: Pls tag 'ohnoitsroland' (Score:1)
Please join me in tagging this article as 'ohnoitsroland' -- thank you.
How does this work? (Score:2)
Steam tunnels or old sewers, perhaps? (Score:3, Insightful)
Not sure how useful that is, or who it's most useful to, because in my area all the underground utilities are laid right in the dirt, cut-and-cover fashion, with a backhoe (or, one assumes, the really early parts with steam shovels or picks and spades). The only places I personally know of that have big underground vaults and tunnels are universities that have centralized
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What about aerial cables? (Score:2, Informative)
link [buffalostate.edu]
PS, thats a helicopter he's sitting on...
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The photo you have is of a lineman performing actual repairs on an energized line. He is wearing a corona suit (a conductive covering that prevents discharge from exposed skin) and is clamped to the conductor to maintain the same voltage (like birds sitting
Roland rides again (Score:2)
What? Again?? (Score:2)
The main problem with this device is that it only works with cables installed in cable trays. Most utilities install their cable either in conduit or direct buried. Even with cable trays like they have at the University of Washington, its rare to find an unobstructed run of more than a few hundred yards between walls, gates, vertical rises, or other blockages. While it might produce some cost sav
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What will happen when it hits a wiretap? (Score:1, Interesting)
Big Deal (Score:2)
I trained a dog to smell weak spots in power cable insulation. When it found one, it pee'd on it.
Damn! Poor dog. Back to the drawing board.
I see no advantage to this unit (Score:2)
Vaguely offtopic (Score:1)
Tethered Versions (Score:2)
So its battery powerd and has wifi ( like pretty much everything else on the planet it seems ) am i supposed to be impresed? Sounds like natural evolution to me, not worthy of being called 'news'.