The Haptic Creature – robot rabbit talks with touch

The Haptic Creature - robot rabbitIn an effort to deepen the experience of humans interacting with robots, Steve Yohanan has been concentrating on the largely-neglected fifth sense of touch. The Haptic Creature is a robot rabbit that only communicates through a haptic interface – in other words, it responds to touch with movement. [image borrowed from NewScientist article]

Yohanan and others believe that haptics are a faster route to creating an emotional response … I wonder if the guys at Ai Robotics have included haptics in their soon-to-be-launched “Perfect Woman” robots?

Meet Japan’s new tourism ambassador to China

Further proof (if such were needed) that the world is a stranger place than we possibly need or deserve it to be. Japan’s new tourism ambassador to China is someone that you probably recognise and indeed may well have met at some point in your life: Hello Kitty. [image by Adam Greenfield image removed at owner’s request]

Hey, you got post-modern cuteness in my international relations! That said, Hello Kitty has been the US children’s ambassador to Unicef since 1983 (who knew?).

Have we finally accepted the idea that talking heads and ambassadors don’t need to be real people? There are embassies in Second Life, as well. Maybe we could get Captain Planet to take a run at re-establishing some of the Kyoto directives … [via MetaFilter]

Friday Free Fiction for 23rd May

Like a beachcomber, I’ve been plucking bits of genre fiction flotsam from the beach of the intarwebs …

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A couple of old-school novels from Manybooks.net:

  • The Defiant Agents by Andre Norton (“Alien technology scavenged by U.S. and Russian scientists has started a race to colonize planets outside our solar system — and the U.S. scientists are losing! In a desperate move the U.S. government decides to use a group of Apache volunteers in an experimental attempt to colonize a primitive planet, but before they can even begin their spaceship crashes on the planet Topaz …”)
  • Black Oxen by Gertrude Atherton (According to the notes, “[t]his tale of scientific rejuvenation was the number one best seller of 1923.” Crikey!)

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Here’s the fifth and final instalment of the WTFBBQ extras/teaser/supplementary gubbins from Shadow Unit:

Chaz craned his neck to peer over Brady’s shoulder at the kebabs. “Don’t leave them too long,” he said, because he knew it would be annoying.

Lau grinned at Chaz across the barbeque, and the heat in his face had nothing to do with the gas fire. “You have no sense of self-preservation.”

Less than a fortnight until the season finale, folks!

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We’ll let the Subterranean gang speak for themselves:

It’s been a busy couple of weeks for Subterranean Online. First up, we have Part One of a new novella by SubPress favorite Norman Partridge. Hit the pavement with “Road Dogs,” but be sure to pack the proper armament.

Meanwhile, Joe R. Lansdale’s Unchained again, this time on the subject of Henry Kuttner. If that’s not enough new material, take a quick look at Kealan Patrick Burke’s review of Thomas Ligotti’s worthy gathering of tales, Teatro Grottesco.

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I got some email from Sam J Miller:

Two weeks ago, the new issue of the fabulous free online sci-fi magazine Atomjack went live and it includes my story “Monkey Heaven, narrated by a dissatisfied helper monkey. Hoped you might be able to include a link to it when you do this Friday’s fabulous free fiction lineup.

We’d have done it even without the flattery, Sam – thanks for the tip!

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A couple of brief mentions cribbed from SF Signal (who in turn got them via Locus Online):

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The unstoppable (and, sadly, still unlinkable) Cole Kitchen brings yet more additions and alterations to the Sidebar of Free Fictional Justice::

  • Flashquake – a paying online market for ‘flash literature’, no less
  • Goblin Fruit – a webzine devoted to “poetry of the fantastical”
  • COSMOS Magazine offers online fiction as well as pop science articles.
  • Apex Digest seems to have changed its name to Apex Online. Starting in the first week in June they plan to become a weekly publication.
  • Abyss & Apex (which is not the same as Apex Online). Their issue 26 is now up.

Thanks, Cole. I was pretty sure I had added Abyss & Apex before now, but it appears I hallucinated that particular episode. I think it’s time I cut down on the coffee and Red Bull …

CORRECTION: From Jason Sizemore (see comment below): “Apex Digest is still a print publication. Apex Online (which we’ve been doing for three years) is a separate entity. The change is that Apex Online will become weekly instead of monthly.” Sorry Jason – I’ll check my facts properly in future!

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So, that brings us to the Friday Flash Fictioneers – let’s see who we have this week:

  • Greg O’Byrne missed the boat last week (sorry Greg) with this reworking of his earlier piece “Interstellar“.
  • Ian Hocking delivers his microscopic pieces (which he limits to a mere 100 words) in audio format (because, like most Mac users I know, he’s an insufferable show-off*); today’s offering is called “Rescue
  • Neil Beynon gets nostalgic when he thinks about “Mary“.
  • I’m not even going to ask Gareth L Powell about his “Brown Water“.
  • Clive Birnie aims to strike terror into the hearts of all web2.0 enthusiasts by explaining “How Twitter Stole His Life“.
  • Sarah Ellender examines some of the perils and pitfalls of urban living in “A Stupid Place To (Jurassic) Park“.
  • And in the midst of all this fictional frivolity, Greg O’Byrne returns to remind us “What Really Matters“.

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That’s your lot, folks. Don’t forget to keep sending us your plugs and tip-offs … and there’s still time to apply to be a blogger here at Futurismic, too. Have a great weekend!

[* He’s a lovely man, really; I don’t hold the Mac stuff against him. Not much, anyway. 😉 ]

‘Beetlepunk’ – biomimicry and the photonic weevil

Lamprocyphus augustus - photonic weevilWith designers and engineers increasingly turning to the natural world for inspiration, biomimicry is an increasingly important part of the sciences. Author Janine Beynus offers an outline of the discipline’s key principles;

The core idea is that nature, imaginative by necessity, has already solved many of the problems we are grappling with. Animals, plants, and microbes are the consummate engineers. They have found what works, what is appropriate, and most important, what lasts here on Earth. This is the real news of biomimicry: After 3.8 billion years of research and development, failures are fossils, and what surrounds us is the secret to survival.

Like the viceroy butterfly imitating the monarch, we humans are imitating the best adapted organisms in our habitat. We are learning, for instance, how to harness energy like a leaf, grow food like a prairie, build ceramics like an abalone, self-medicate like a chimp, create color like a peacock, compute like a cell, and run a business like a hickory forest.

As an real-world illustration of biomimetic principles, this morning, Wired‘s Brandon Keim presented a design problem from the field of optical computing;

For decades, scientists have dreamed of computer chips that manipulate light rather than electricity. Unlike electrons, photons can cross paths without interfering with each other, so optical chips could compute in three dimensions rather than two, crunching data in seconds that now takes weeks to process.

For now, though, optical computing remains a dream. The chips require crystals that channel photons as nimbly as silicon channels electrons — and though engineers have been able to imagine the ideal photonic crystal, they’ve been unable to build it.

Earlier this month, a team of American material scientists found a biomimetic solution in the body of Lamprocyphus augustus – a Brazilian weevil. According to the research,

the inch-long Brazilian beetle’s iridescent green scales are composed of chitin arranged by evolution in precisely the molecular configuration that has confounded the would-be fabricators of optical computers.

The “scales’ molecular arrangement, which had the same pattern as the atoms of carbon in a diamond.” So, with real diamonds too dense for the task, and artificial diamonds taking months to construct, the L. augustus scales offer a quick and easy solution.

Of course – as co-author Michael Bartl notes – optical computers won’t use actual weevil scales. The plan is to use the scales as a mould, replacing the chitin with something more suitable for the industrial context.

For someone approaching the issue from a science fictional standpoint, this sent my mind careering down a whole new avenue of speculation. Imagine a world in which Bartl’s mould plan is ineffective. Here, much of the high-end computing infrastructure is entirely dependent on this tiny Brazilian insect.

Our protagonists are rogue entomologists, forced to balance the “bug bounties” offered by the military-industrial complex with the ‘pure’ research of their underfunded university departments. Academic soul-searching, Brazilian protesters, university politics, intellectual property wrangles, and a left-wing subtext. It’s got it all.

I call it ‘Beetlepunk’. 😀

Finally, if this whole ‘biomimicry’ thing strikes you as interesting, be sure to check out Janine Beynus’ presentation from TED 2005. She’s a skilled orator, and her TED talk is a really good way of getting your head around the subject.

[Image by Barbara Strnadova at God of Insects]

Farewell, third molars – five vestigial organs that humans no longer need

Four Wisdom TeethNew Scientist has a top-five run-down of vestigial organs that humans (arguably) no longer need.

(I imagine a number of readers will share in my vehement agreement that wisdom teeth (more properly known as third molars) are on the list … my unreasoning dislike of dentistry has been mentioned here before, and the consequences of an overcrowded jaw were a major contributing factor to that reaction.) [image by Lone Primate]

So, now we know which stuff we don’t need, how do we go about removing it from the human system? Permanently?

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