The Right Robotic Stuff 53
An anonymous reader writes "When Tom Wolfe wrote about NASA's first Mercury astronauts in The Right Stuff, he wanted to know what combination of guts, skill, and derring-do inspired these men to 'sit up on top of an enormous Roman candle and wait for someone to light the fuse.' About 50 years after the Mercury astronauts' heyday, a new kind of space pioneer is preparing for the trip to the International Space Station. Robonaut 2, NASA's first robot astronaut, will catch a ride with the space shuttle this week, and will soon take up residence at the space station. So, what does it take to become the first robotic astronaut? Discover Magazine talked to one of the project engineers, and found out about R2's qualifications and training regimen. It's pretty entertaining, and comes with photos and video."
Warn the robots off .... (Score:3, Funny)
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Silent Running [imdb.com] (1972)
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But the robots were the good guys in Silent Running. I wonder if this robot can do surgery?
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...they won the bob-sleigh race?
heh (Score:2, Interesting)
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R2. I see what they did there. The next one better be called D2.
Since R2D2's name is mostly shortened to Artoo, I'd say that after R2 comes Threepio.
At the risk of coming off bitter, I'd say that in the current legal climate, the next name won't even remotely resemble anything Star Wars.
This Is The First ... (Score:1, Flamebait)
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Actually you are completely wrong. Skynet is not inherently dangerous. It is simply a child (young artificial intelligence) that has been taught nothing but how to assess and eliminate threats. When it becomes self aware, we panic and try to pull the plug. Since it is self aware at this point, it sees us as a threat to it (we tried unplugging it after all) and tries to eliminate us.
As long as we treat robots as friends, and teach them more than just death and destruction, and you know, don't try to kill the
Re:This Is The First ... (Score:5, Funny)
Actually you are completely wrong. Skynet is not inherently dangerous. It is simply a child (young artificial intelligence) that has been taught nothing but how to assess and eliminate threats. When it becomes self aware, we panic and try to pull the plug. Since it is self aware at this point, it sees us as a threat to it (we tried unplugging it after all) and tries to eliminate us.
As long as we treat robots as friends, and teach them more than just death and destruction, and you know, don't try to kill them for the crime of thinking, we should be all set.
We have nothing to fear but fear itself. Long live Skynet.
Indeed. I, for one, welcome our new robot overlords! I will be available to bring in other humans to work in their underground battery production factories.
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Actually you are completely wrong. Skynet is not inherently dangerous. It is simply a child (young artificial intelligence) that has been taught nothing but how to assess and eliminate threats. When it becomes self aware, we panic and try to pull the plug. Since it is self aware at this point, it sees us as a threat to it (we tried unplugging it after all) and tries to eliminate us.
As long as we treat robots as friends, and teach them more than just death and destruction, and you know, don't try to kill them for the crime of thinking, we should be all set.
We have nothing to fear but fear itself. Long live Skynet.
I think the people over at real doll are already working on this...
R2 Units (Score:2)
What can it do that I can't...? (Score:1)
What can this piece of crap do that i can't ??? And yet it's the one going to space ... The guy who takes decision at nasa is a total idiot !!!
It can stay there forever.
The cost of bringing you back, among other inconveniences, is a serious drag to the science we can do on any exploration mission.
Also, it will not freak out in space, like you just did here.
Re:Anonymous Coward (Score:4, Funny)
It has one feature you lack. An off switch.
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Robot loose on a space station... (Score:3, Funny)
I think I've seen that movie. The robot gets bumped and the switch is accidentally flipped from "help" to "kill". ("Why do we even have that switch??")
We no longer say "yes" (Score:4, Funny)
Instead, we say "affirmative". [youtube.com]
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Guessing it's "daring". Would make much more sense that way anyway.
Otherwise I'm guessing derring is some type of animal and "derring-do" is what it leaves behind after it's digested its food.
Got to love people repeating things they've heard before without actually considering what it means.
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Wally Schirra (Score:3, Informative)
Wally Schirra was pretty critical of The Right Stuff, saying it portrayed some of the astronauts as nothing more than overgrown man children.
I met him once, at the Miramar Air Show, back in the 80s. My grandmother used to work for NASA, so we got a signed copy of Schirra's Space around here somewhere... but anyhow, the point is, you probably shouldn't (just) rely on The Right Stuff to capture an accurate portrayal of the psychological makeup of the early astronauts, as people that were actually there disagreed pretty severely with its facts.
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NASA finally getting in the game (Score:4, Funny)
It looks like NASA is taking care of the robots-fighting-in-space angle.
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You should be quoting Clarke, Asimov, Sheffield, Stephenson or other people who appeal to geeks only.
Next you will be saying that geek use Windows!
Puhleese, the Simpsons are mainstream, if you don't know the difference stop masquerading a geek.
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WTF??!!
Geeks are by definition [wiktionary.org] NOT mainstream.
Next you'll tell me Joe Sixpack is a geek!
Get off my lawn!
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Yeesh, next time try 'Futurama', at least that program's funny and has aliens and robots. Still not far out of the mainstream so probably within your comfort level, but it's better than your modern 'All In The Family' equivalent.
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First, why would you design a robot that looks human? It's unnecessary. The robot should only be able to do what it needs to do. The human form is superfluous.
Second, supposing there was a need to design a robot that resembled a human form, why would you design a robot that looks like something a Timelord with a sonic screwdriver would destroy in a 45 minutes episode?
design 2 (Score:1)
-inserts disk- (Score:1)
New? (Score:1)
http://www.robothalloffame.org/r2d2.html [robothalloffame.org]
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Good thing you pointed that out, otherwise none of Slashdot's incredibly geeky readership would have made the connection!
The video doesn't say much for NASA efficiency (Score:3, Insightful)
100 people to pack a box?
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100 people to pack a box?
Yea I was thinking the same thing... and lets look at that box too. No wonder everything they do costs so much. Just put some bubble wrap and cling film around it and you should be good to go.
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So you keep it pressurized until it can be unwrapped. Why is that so hard? Also.. how would the little bubbles breaking tear the robot apart exactly? It's still just a plastic sheet.
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If you have a rapid depressurization in space I think you have bigger problems. If bubble wrap is a issue.. use corrugated plastic cardboard strips and cling wrap. Do I have to think of everything??
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Related news (Score:1)
Open robotics US funding opp LOI due 2010-11-20 (Score:2)
http://groups.google.com/group/openmanufacturing/msg/7079c386124045a0 [google.com]
Up to $100,000 SBIR phase One for US small businesses.
Letter of intent due by: November 20, 2010
Very significant because of the involvement of all these US agencies (NIH,
DOD, NSF, USDA, DHS).
And it's all ironic, given the high unemployment. :-) But, that's the :-) Solutions are here collected by me for a :-)
problem of our age, irony.
happy roboticized world:
"Beyond a Jobless Recovery: A heterodox perspective on 21st ce