Cyborg Plants Render Humans Even More Obsolete
From PCWorld's GeekTech:
Cyborg Plants Render Humans Even More Obsolete
By Rachel Martin, PCWorld Sep 20, 2011 10:08 AM
The cyborg plant is not a new concept. The robot plant replacement is even less new: You can buy one for a price of $4.19 from ThinkGeek, after all. But a team at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Zurich isnt interested in solar-powered plastic toys or surgically-altered self-lighting plants that hang on a wall (creepy!)--
theyre giving plants the ability to feed, water, and sun themselves, by augmenting them with iRobot technology and wheels.
Aline Veillat and Stéphane Magnenat fitted an iRobot Create platform with light and sound sensors, as well as wheels, according to New Scientist. The plant that perches on top of the platform is carried toward light and water so that it can photosynthesize, away from noises so it stays out of the path of humans and interested animals, and back to a set charging station so that the platform itself doesnt run out of juice.
The project basically lends autonomy and interactivity to plants--objects that humans often regard more as decoration than as living things. Veillat and Magnenat intend to hold an exhibition of several plant-borgs in one space, able to hang out with each other and do whatever it is that mobile plants would most like to do--although with the current algorithms they have, it seems like the plants will mostly be interested in staying out of each others way.
The plant-borg differs from previous cyborg plant projects in that it lends mobility, as opposed to just stationary self-sufficiency. And unlike the nomadic plant by Gilberto Esparza, created in 2008, that set out on its own with a solar-powered rig to take care of itself, its distinctly for domestic plants
uh, house plants, of course.
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