2015年1月24日 星期六

Jaw-dropping developments in micro-robotics

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This week on TED.com
January 24, 2015

Sarah Bergbreiter: Micro-robots, the size of a grain of rice

06:06 minutes · Filmed Nov 2014 · Posted Jan 2015 · TEDYouth 2014

By studying the movement and bodies of insects such as ants, Sarah Bergbreiter and her team build incredibly robust, super teeny, mechanical versions of creepy crawlies … and then they add rockets. See their jaw-dropping developments in micro-robotics, and hear about three ways we might use these little helpers in the future.

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Join the Conversation


  Yes!

Thank you Mr. Ricard for a wonderful talk!

This is exactly the cultural/social evolution that we as a species needs if we want any quality of life 100 years from now. Currently our technology is advancing at an incredible rate, which is allowing for amazing science breakthroughs, but also allowing us to destroy our planet faster and kill and control larger populations easier.

"Any tool can be used to build or destroy". As we develop and manufacture more drones and more efficient computers, it is up to us to determine if they will be used to cultivate and grow food for the hungry, or wage war on each other and take the lives of the innocent. Standing by and ignoring this, will not make it go away. Only by being aware and challenging the status quo will we ever be able to make it go away.

The altruistic approach may not be perfect, but it opens a desperately needed dialogue. We need to start using these incredible tools we have to further this conversation and find a system that will work, soon, or we risk losing everything."

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