SlugBot, the Slug-Powered Slug-Hunting Robot 166
Adam Foster writes "SlugBot is no ordinary robot. SlugBot hunts down slugs, and is powered by fermenting the slugs' corpses, producing biogas fuel. Find out more from the BBC."
You know you've landed gear-up when it takes full power to taxi.
Re:This is kind of scary. (Score:1)
-New 'hunt-n-peck' ID system.
-New bagger option, for those heavy Luser days.
-Gasoline combustion engine option, for those physically fit Lusers who think they can get away.
Call 1-888-55-LUSER or check out http://www.operationsrocks.com/LuserBot for more details.
Re:Evolutionary pressure... (Score:1)
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Re:I have that comic. (Score:1)
(assuming that noone for a while will be able to feed on the SlubBots)
Interesting idea... The robot is probably not tasty, but perhaps creatures that don't mind eating dead slugs will learn to raid the slugbot hopper? Could be dangerous if they hide in the hopper and don't escape before the return to base, though.
Anyway, the slugs have the most to gain through adaptation here. If the thing is efficient, perhaps slugs in the area will learn to "hide" from it by standing in an unusual posture, or near a bright light or something. Or, since the thing uses a red filter to help identification, gaining any kind of red pigmentation would be very useful.
Any adaptation that successfully defeats the machine for a year would be highly advantageous, since the gardens would be filled with nice, juicy wheat, and no competition from other slugs.
Re:Evolutionary pressure... (Score:1)
Re:recognition software (Score:2)
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Let's hear it for the BOFHBot (Score:1)
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Re:Interesting dilemma (Score:1)
Who needs a Roachbot? (Score:2)
Of course, there were a few problems in the past, such as always having to shake out my shoes before I go to work in the morning; being able to track them; and preventing them from uncontrolled reproducing. Controlling breeding is accomplished by keeping only one male in a tank - all the hunters in home are female(you learn to identify the gender pretty quick). Every now and then, you pop a female in the tank and see if they'll go at it (it looks more like a fight than mating). Tracking is still a problem though. I used to glue keychains to their backs, the kind that beep when you whistle, but well, um, those things fall off after the scorpion molts. I'm thinking of switching to a transmitter to relay to position of each scorpion, so when my database tells me it's time for one of them to molt, I can just find her and keep her in a tank until she's done - the transmitter can then be reglued and she can be released back into my kitchen. The database is already set up; it uses the MSDE, which is simply the engine behind MS-SQL Server. If you want to see the front end (written in VB) I'll be happy to send it to you, but I don't yet have routines to account for input from a receiver - but my current plans call for using two or more to accurately gauge the position of any specific scorpion. Source code available on request.
While on the topic of a Roachbot, you should check out this story [nando.net], where a Japanese company attached electrodes to a roach's brain and take full control of its motor functions. I can just see the implications: you release your robo-roaches armed with extra electronics and assembly instructions into a new slum and within minutes, they have taken new "converts". [Insert evil smirk here]
Skevin
MCSE/MCDBA (Slashdot is also read by us Evil Empire people too)
malusdei@pacbell.net
Re:This is stupid, stupid, stupid (Score:1)
What if someone made a robot that could feed on larger things? Mice? Cats? HUMANS?
Such a robot would require an advanced neural network for its intelligence. I wonder if a cluster of slug brains would work.
Now THAT would rock!
Food & Evolution (Score:1)
but what if bots could do this themselves? And
what if they have a positive feedback that makes
them treating slugs as _food_? Ie, the more slugs
a bot picks, the more powerful it is....
On the other hand, slugs can evolute, can't they?
And change their behaviour to fool the bot, eg
learn to crawl faster or to change the form of
the body to look like something else....
I'm not sure about practical usefullness, but by all means it's very interesting to set a series of experiments.
OT -- Re:Human hair for killing slugs (Score:1)
to be burned, because if it's not and if a bird
makes a nest of it, hair's `ex-owner' will feel
a huge headache while the bird is in the nest.
However, nothing is said about the beard
I'm going to resist the urge to make a joke (Score:2)
This could be a harbinger of significantly more useful stuff to come. Slus are slow, and easy targets, but what about other pests? Another possibility is search and recovery missions. Imagine robots with similar logic looking for, say, the debris from the EgyptAir crash the other day.
Now, a scary thought - Imagine your AIBO hunting slugs. Brrr.....
- -Josh Turiel
Terminator IV - The slugger (Score:2)
As a final desperate attempt the Bots have sent back one of their Terminators to the year 1999 to slay that brave Slugs father/mother, one ordinary garden slug living in a suburb of .....
Cut to a parking place. Suddenly the air starts to shimmer and in a blue light a frightening machine appears (built from Lego Mindstorms (TM))
Re:Evolutionary pressure... (Score:1)
How Expensive? (Score:1)
STEAL ME
Predator robot (Score:1)
The End is near.
Waiting for RoachBot (Score:1)
The digester is a neat idea, but since it has to 'return to base' to ferment the biomass is it really more effecient that just tapping into the mains to recharge? Then there's the post-ferment waste to deal with - fertilizer?
Chuck
Re:Predator robot (Score:1)
Re:Waiting for RoachBot (Score:1)
Re:I have that comic. (Score:2)
The Slugbots don't reproduce, so that's not really true.
Re:Ok WTF (Score:1)
but definately, the European part of the former
SU, especially in the South (Ukraine, Moldova),
every summer is screwed with Colorado bugs,
little pests, of sand colour with black stripes
along the body and orange heads that eat potato
leaves like hell.
The only sure way to get rid of such a bug is to
burn it because even if it's smashed, eggs it
carries develop within days....
Re:Slugbot's natural predator (Score:1)
You mean off of the planet? Ouch.
I have that comic. (Score:3)
Seriously, though. A robot that draws its power from the decomposing bodies of its victims. How cool is that?
Not Baloney, Human Skin (it works better) (Score:1)
The plan is to combine the robots with the software detection program that screens out potentially-dangerous students. All the people who have violent tendencies will be taken on a "special" field trip out to the wheat fields. Then it's a free-for-all with the SlugBots and their surgical-blade equipped mechanical hands.
Personally, I see this as a good use of otherwise wasted resources, plus society avoids all the potential harm of these mal-developed individuals.
What's with these names? (Score:1)
Ugh. If they are going to be this lazy, the least they can do is put out a call for name suggestions. I'm sure slashdotters could think up something better.
- JoeShmoe
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Re:Ironic (Score:1)
Why, adapting these robots to ferment cane toads, of course! Just make them bigger, with a stronger gripping claw so the beasties don't escape, and we have a potent weapon to fight these environmental pests.
If all the cane toads in Queensland got fermented, the roads in Queensland will be safer. All the cars will stay on the correct side of the road, instead of veering across the centre line at random to run over cane toads. (The generally accepted correct technique of running over cane toads is to run over the heads first, so the air inside the cane toad escapes with a pleasing pop.)
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Salt Shaker (Score:3)
Mike
Like Grandpa always said, "It's mine, I can wash it as long as I want to."
Re:Evolutionary pressure... (Score:1)
Uhm. (Score:2)
I guess this is much preffered to pesticide. How many of these SlugBots(tm) to you need for a huge field?
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Re:And just in time for the holiday season (Score:1)
Re:A thought... (Score:1)
Actually, 1,500 was the cost of the prototype. They went on to say that a mass-produced version would cost a lot less.
Asimov Robots (Score:1)
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This is nice and all... (Score:1)
What I'd like to see is something useful in my area (Texas). We need something to take care of our little fire ant problem. Maybe a robo-anteater or a miniature bug-like critter that could run around invading ant mounds and assassinating the queen ants. The fire ant problem has spread from Texas to halfway up California and everywhere in between in the west. It's gone all the way to Florida and as far north as South Carolina (IIRC) in the east. There are some patches where they haven't gotten to yet, but it's not looking good.
I'd love to see a robo-critter created to help fight these nasty imported bugs. At least those bullet ants haven't made it here yet. If they ever do, I think I'll be moving farther north.
And just in time for the holiday season (Score:1)
How about the same thing for Cain Toads (Score:1)
Would have been cooler... (Score:1)
Re:I'm going to resist the urge to make a joke (Score:1)
> say, the debris from the EgyptAir crash the
> other day.
Similiar logic? So they would feed on the passengers to keep on going until they find the black box?
(OK, so thats a bit disgusting)
Worlds first self sustaining robot ? (Score:1)
Personally though, I think it would be cheaper to build a birdbox in your back garden in order to encourage a slug eating avian robot to nest near to a good local food supply.
Of course, a Slugbot has no natural predators, yet.
Interesting dilemma (Score:2)
First, it means a new linux port.
Secondly, it means thousands of linuxheads will anxiously be checking John Romero's .plan to find out when the new slugQ3test will be released.
Third, it means a new O'Reilly book. But what will be on the cover? A slug or a salt shaker?
Four: General Media will recognize value of slugbot, then say it is overhyped. Doc Martens launches a FUD campaign. Sadly, nobody seems to understand slugbot, except for readers of slashslug.org, and they inevitably come into conflict with readers of rival site slugdot.org.
Five: the subject for the first /. action movie:
They were ordinary slug-hunting robots. He was a mild-mannered garden hamster. But when they killed his partner, they made him mad. This Christmas, are you the slugbot? Or are you the slugbotbot? 'Hemos Thunder'."
Re:Evolutionary pressure... (Score:2)
Unfortunately almost every type of animal finds the brown slugs inedible due to their (supposedly) foul taste. Result: the slug population is rampant in urban backyards. People are resorting to methods such as the aforementioned beer, or pouring salt / cutting in half individual slugs. This is really considered a large problem, with sometimes up to a thousand slugs in just a single backyard!
There is one animal that will eat the slugs : an obscure type of duck. Enterprising farmers are renting these ducks to people on a daily basis. It will be interesting to see what the introduction of slugbots will do to this market.
Re:Waiting for RoachBot (Score:1)
Carnivorous Slugs (Score:1)
A robot clone of this might be a good project for the nanotech bods.
Steff
Re:Electric fences (Score:1)
And in light of all the similaritys being drawn with The Matrix, I only have one thing to say. "Salt. Lots of salt"
Re:No more beer (Score:1)
Buy one of these machines, and rent it to your neighbours in exchange for the beer they would have used catching slugs in their own backyards!
Isn't this part of the OSS creed - free beer from technology!
We burn dead plants for fuel! (Score:1)
PanDuh!
Re:Who needs a Roachbot? (Score:1)
Re:How about the same thing for Cain Toads (Score:1)
Re:The Matrix? (Score:1)
high density of slugs?!? (Score:1)
> shortage of prey. Up to 200 slugs per square > metre are found in fields of winter wheat.
doesn't that seem a bit much? Can you even walk without squashing a slug?
Re:I have that comic. (Score:1)
PoliticianBot (Score:1)
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How are they over coming the problem of mobility? (Score:2)
SlugBot (Score:1)
Re:I'm going to resist the urge to make a joke (Score:2)
(/me ducks)
I was actually referring to the way it can independently aquire targets and bring them in. It could collect aircraft pieces, and return them to base whenever it's full - a lot cheaper and safer than sending divers 200+ feet down.
As for power, it's more realistic to think that it would use seawater than dead humans.
- -Josh Turiel
Slugbot's natural predator (Score:1)
Imagine you're driving along a road in a country town, through a wheat field, and there's NOBODY around for MILES - and you see this little square aluminium box on wheels, with a big arm moving slowly along the edge of the wheat field - wouldn't you be even SLIGHTLY inclined to stop, and since there's no-one around, pinch the thing?
I know most people wouldn't actually do so, but I don't think it wouldn't got through anyone's mind - but some people would take them, and I'm not sure that I know of a farmer who could afford to lose a $1,500 tool that easily, especially not several of them.....
I'm not the only one. (Score:1)
I thought the exact same thing! Imagine if the SlugBots get artificial intelligence! I can see it now. Little cocoons with slugs inside, and hooked up to a machine so that the slugs are in an imaginary world, believing that they are eating real leaves. And the agents will be supper powered snails. Until one day the slug "Noa" gets in contact with the slug "Trinity" and wakes up to find the truth behind the SlugMatrix. The slugs overcome the AI and come back to the real world just to be eaten by birds.
Just a thought!
Steven Rostedt
Re:Waiting for RoachBot (Score:1)
"Here kitty, kitty, kitty..."
Re:Asimov Robots (Score:1)
Re:Evolutionary pressure... (Score:1)
Make the thing severel times bigger....give it claws to hold its prey while it struggles. Place a large syringe on it to take a blood sample. Do genetic testing on the sample. Sample does not meet genetic standards, throw them in fuel tank. Now put a large swastika on the beast and you get the idea.
Re:I have that comic. (Score:1)
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New meaning to an old phrase (Score:1)
I'm sure glad Tom Selleck is still around! (Score:1)
The natural predator: goats :) (Score:1)
>tasty, but perhaps creatures that don't mind
>eating dead slugs will learn to raid the slugbot
>hopper?
Yes, why eat a tin can, when you can munch on a nice, tasty, juicy, slugbot?
:)
Do you remember? (Score:1)
We'll feed the cats to the rats
And the rats to the cats
And get the cat skins for nothing!
Neo not Noa --- Sorry (Score:1)
A buddy of mine is named "Noa" and I keep confusing his name instead of the name for the character in "The Matrix".
Steven Rostedt
Correction....Noa was the slug... (Score:1)
BTW, I'm not interested in getting into another religious debate on slashdot so don't flame me.
Mike
As Grandpa always said, "It's mine, I can wash it as long as I want to."
Re:Waiting for RoachBot (Score:1)
Maybe one day I will really create such a gadget. You bet I am not friend of mosquitos.
Screamers? (Score:1)
Dear God... those poor slugs (Score:1)
Re:Slugbot's natural predator (Score:1)
But can it play MP3s? (Score:1)
Ironic (Score:1)
Whatever next?
crunchy on the outside, (Score:1)
Re:Evolutionary pressure... (Score:1)
Get armour (snail)
Technology marches ever on... (Score:1)
We could have vending machines that really do use slugs.
Salt Poisoning (Score:1)
It could 'phone home if it was stolen (Score:1)
Maybe they should equip them with GPS tracking systems... wait, they already have!
All it takes is the addition of a 50-quid GSM modem and hey presto, it 'phones home when it's been nicked- complete with the longitude, lattitude and elevation of the theif's abode.
You could even set parameters so that you could tell the robot the layout of the field, or maybe your entire farm- and if it breaks down, 'phone home with it's exact location.
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Now a termite-eating robot would be beautiful (Score:1)
Re:Screamers? (Score:1)
Even cooler :-) (Score:1)
nahh.... too scary :-)
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Cmdr. Decker (Score:1)
Re: Dogs (Score:2)
Matt.
Re:Interesting dilemma (Score:1)
There have been some interesting recent experiments [ornl.gov] in cooperative robotics; maybe extending the slug-eater model to incorporate slug-herders and zone-quartering isn't such a bad idea...
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with enough eyes, all slugs are shallow (Score:1)
oh boy... (Score:1)
Re:What's with these names? (Score:1)
SlugDot!
Ok WTF (Score:1)
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I live in the ocean
More beer! (Score:1)
Now what's needed is a recipe for beer made from slugs which also attracts slugs...and you thought the slug fermentation was only to generate gas.
No more beer (Score:3)
for long times trapped slugs with glasses of beer embedded in the ground. Unfortunately these traps attracted loads of slugs from neighbours. Of course, for 1,5kQ you can buy quite a couple of crates of beer instead.
This is kind of scary. (Score:3)
Very quickly we can make the connection that this is a possibility for a very frightening future.. or a really bad B-rated sci-fi flick.
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Re:Salt Shaker (Score:5)
I can just imagine a little slug-hovercraft searching for the little slug known as "Neo".
Evolutionary pressure... (Score:4)
Lower their metabolic rate so they show up less well on IR, or change shape so they don't look like slugs to the robot (stealth slugs).
Become too large for the thing to pick up (yuck)
Develop a mechanism so their exothermic decomposition becomes *much* faster. Exploding slugs (ultra-yuck)
There is at least one species of slug (huge brownish ones - too lazy to look up classification) that feeds primarily on other slugs. It would be interesting to do a trial to see if these could be used effectively for slug control. I'm not doing it though. Watching one slug eat another is easily the grossest thing I have ever seen.
It needs to be self-replicating (Score:2)
Re:What's with these names? (Score:2)
How about the old boxing term, "Slugnutty"?
Re:Heaven forbid... (Score:4)
WOW.. what can i say (Score:2)
A slug terminator! And the thing comes with a GPS and costs less than one! ha, this is one gadget to have.
On slug temrinations, I've found that if you mix some salt in water and pour over them, a really weird thing happesn to their bodies (ahem. they dissolve.. this has something to do with Osmosis.. very neat experiment).. Try it.. but be ready to watch solid ooze into slime real quick..
Slug Feast!
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Re:Salt Shaker (Score:4)
:)
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"This isn't the post you're looking for. Move along."
Re:Evolutionary pressure... (Score:2)
heh now thats a dull chase scene.
-Ecc
Porting Quake as a front end to SlugBot (Score:2)
IDOT softarware, annoucned today that they have ported their higly acclaimed game to the Slugbot hardware. This port was done with the help of the Linux kernel and AC's including AC. Quake for Slugbot features among other things (to help censors) gore levels, ability to switch weapons to salt sprinker and the mega salt water spourt
In other news, Microsoft decided to enter the Slugbot OS market and would unveil a new OS entitled Slugggin-dos. With the slogan, "The only Microsoft Product that Lives up to it's name".
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Electric fences (Score:2)
It would be highly profitable and easy for theives just to steel such devices found on the fields.
I wonder what's next.... robotic dogs feeding emselfs with theives?