Ocean Robots Upgraded After Logging 300,000 Miles 21
kkleiner writes "Liquid Robotics first generation of wave gliders have successfully navigated from the U.S. to Australia, surviving numerous hurricanes. Now, the next generation of autonomous robots have been outfitted with thrusters that supplement the wave-energy harvesting technology that they use to move. They also are equipped with a weather station and sensors to collect even more data on the ocean. Currently, over 100 missions are in operation around the world."
First wave! (Score:2, Funny)
Posted by Autonomous Coward!
Obama's hitlist grows (Score:4, Funny)
The White House will not confirm whether these unmanned underwater drones are being used to take out Atlantian terrorists.
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Re:Obama's hitlist grows (Score:5, Funny)
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They just had a new round of funding (Score:3)
http://www.technologyreview.com/view/512701/ocean-faring-robot-cashes-in-on-offshore-oil-and-gas/ [technologyreview.com]
The Silicon Valley-based company yesterday [March 19, 2013] raised $45 million in a series E round to grow the companyâ(TM)s sales and services around what it calls âoehigh-value ocean data servicesâ in research, defense, and oil and gas exploration.
They seem to have a really good thing going and I'm glad the recession hasn't crippled their business.
Jupiterfoundation - spinoff research (Score:5, Informative)
International Smuggling (Score:3)
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Or candy. It could be a big sea-piñata, and we could break it open on a reef someplace.
A lesson for space robotics (Score:5, Interesting)
In contrast, the typical space probe is a hideously expensive, one-off design made by people who have no interest in reducing the cost of the platform. In the past, I've advocated developing space probes in batches or iterative generations instead. This is an example of why.
There are some obvious differences. Space is much more expensive to access at $5-10k per kg just to reach low Earth orbit. While these guys can just drive up to a beach. Space also is a harsher environment. It doesn't have full time exposure to sea water, but it does have hard radiation, temperature extremes, and heat dissipation issues.
Even so, this is how you do things economically. Making multiple copies of a probe design means that you spread out R&D costs over more probes - R&D is a large cost currently of space probes. You also get "learning curve" effects where the marginal cost of manufacturing, operation, and management of probes goes down as you make and deploy more of them. You "learn" (or rather exploit various economies of scale for these processes) how to do this better.
End result is more probes and more work done for the same amount of money spent.
Re: A lesson for space robotics (Score:1, Interesting)
Well, the difference is that such sea transports are meant to be practically usable fairly soon, whereas the space exploration is not expected to pay for itself in a foreseeable future -- it exists only, because enough taxpayers view space-travel as interesting.
This leads me, a Libertarian, to think, NASA (except for its military parts) ought to be financed not by taxes (which are collected at gunpoint), but by donations. This will make it responsible not to Congressmen seeking to "fund jobs" in their dis
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For example, the Planetary Society has several projects [planetary.org] cooking. I don't agree with the ideological baggage that comes attached (they're uncritical boosters of NASA's unmanned science program), but at least they practice what they preach. One could do worse than send them some money.
There's also a large number of non profits developing
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That's not the only fixed cost you mention. Many of these very expensive costs can be spread out over more vehicles.
Launch costs are another area where costs can be reduced. Launch frequency is an economy of scale for any working launch vehicle ever made (just due to the
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lol (Score:2)
Use them to clean up trash in ocean (Score:2)
Slightly OT: Dolphins doing the same thing? (Score:2)
Years ago I watched a documentary where scientists determined that dolphins (maybe sharks too?) were migrating much further than should have been possible with the amount of food they were eating. They figured out they were also using some kind of wave-powered cruise mode, but I can't recall how the mechanics of it worked. I tried a while back to look it up but couldn't find anything. This ring a bell w/ anyone?