[SGVLUG] Fw: [HP3000-L] Biomechanical evolution of vertebrate
evolution
Solomon K. Chang
skevin521 at yahoo.com
Tue Mar 25 13:31:40 PST 2008
But it has no head?
How am I going to strap on a laser if it has no fricking head?
Oh, I guess that's the next 2 million dollars of funding...
Solomon
--- Tom Emerson <osnut at pacbell.net> wrote:
> heh heh heh -- finally, my main three mailing lists can come together on the same
> not-entirely-on-topic post :)
>
> This is REALLY COOL
>
> -- for the linux folks, you may recall the talk we had with Virgil Griffith
> regarding "artificial life" and Polyworld, well, this is "real" world...
>
> -- for the Rocket folks -- the ultimate recovery "vehicle"
>
> ----- Forwarded Message ----
> From: Wirt Atmar <atmar at AICS-RESEARCH.COM>
> To: HP3000-L at RAVEN.UTC.EDU
> Sent: Monday, March 24, 2008 12:58:06 PM
> Subject: [HP3000-L] Biomechanical evolution of vertebrate evolution
>
> I posted the following a few minutes ago to a vertebrate paleontology list that
> I participate in, and I thought that the list might enjoy the video that I
> mention in the posting as well.
>
> Wirt Atmar
>
> ==========================================
>
> In a burst of youthful enthusiasm 32 years ago, when I founded AICS
> Research, the "AICS" stood for "Artificially Intelligent Cybernetic Systems." We
> long ago tired of explaining what that phrase meant so we condensed the
> name to simply AICS. Over time, we moved away from robotics and became
> primarily a software supplier to Hewlett-Packard and their customers, but the
> original intention was to design and build self-learning, biologically-inspired
> autonomous mechanisms.
>
> With that introduction, let me show you this video and simultaneously express
> my admiration for what the people at Boston Dynamics have been able to
> accomplish. This 3 minute video clip was released just a few days ago:
>
> http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W1czBcnX1Ww
>
> The clip is of "BigDog." It is at once eminently reminiscent of naturally evolved
> locomotion and at the same time enormously unsettling in its alienness.
>
> BigDog has a gasoline engine to power the hydraulic system acuators that act
> as its musculature. Proprioception is accomplished by angle and pressure
> sensors located at every joint and foot pad, and the CNS is encephalized in a
> central CPU, which also processes visual and equilibrium inputs as well.
>
> The end result is quite impressive.
>
> Like most work of this kind, it is funded by the US military, in this case, the
> Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA), but DARPA is lot more
> willing to fund flights of fancy than any of the civilian research granting
> agencies and at much higher dollar amounts, and a lot of good work does
> eventually come out their efforts. The internet was one of their funded
> projects.
>
> Wirt Atmar
>
> ===========================================
>
> * To join/leave the list, search archives, change list settings, *
> * etc., please visit http://raven.utc.edu/archives/hp3000-l.html *
>
>
>
>
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