Unveiled: Robotic spy hummingbird
၁၆ စင္တီမီတာ ရွိ၍ AA ဓါတ္ခဲ တစ္လံုးထက္ ေပါ့ပါးေသာ အိတ္ေဆာင္အရြယ္ ေသးငယ္လွသည့္ စက္ရုပ္ငွက္ငယ္ကို ပင္တဂြန္၏ အဓိက ကန္ထရိုက္တာ တစ္ခုမွ ထုတ္ေဖာ္ျပသခဲ့သည္။
တစ္နာရီလ်င္ ၁၇.၇ ကီလိုမီတာႏႈန္း ပ်ံသန္းနိုင္ေသာ ထိုသူလ်ိဳ စက္ရုပ္ငွက္ငယ္ကို အေမရိကန္ေဒၚလာ ၄ သန္း အကုန္အက်ခံကာ ၅ ႏွစ္ၾကာမွ် အခ်ိန္ယူ တီထြင္ခဲ့ရသည္။
ေက်းလက္နွင့္ ၿမိဳ႕ျပ စစ္ေျမျပင္မ်ားတြင္ ၄င္းေမာင္းသူမဲ့ စက္ရုပ္ငွက္ငယ္တြင္ တပ္ဆင္ထားေသာ ေသးငယ္လွသည့္ ကင္မရာမွတဆင့္ ရန္သူအား ေထာက္လွမ္းနိုင္မည္ဟု စစ္တပ္အႀကီးအကဲမ်ား အေနျဖင့္ ေမွ်ာ္လင့္ထားၾကသည္။
လက္ရွိပံုစံ ျဖစ္သည့္ ပန္ကာပါသည့္ စက္ရုပ္ေလယာဥ္ငယ္မ်ားႏွင့္ ႏႈိင္းယွဥ္ပါက ဖြင့္ထားေသာ ျပတင္းေပါက္မ်ားကို ဝင္ေရာက္နိုင္ျခင္း၊ လွ်ပ္စစ္ ဓါတ္အားလိုင္းမ်ားေပၚတြင္ နားနိုင္ျခင္း စသည့္ အားသာခ်က္မ်ား ရွိနိုင္မည္ဟု ကၽြမ္းက်င္သူမ်ား အေနျဖင့္ ေမွ်ာ္လင့္ၾကသည္။
ကမၻာ့အႀကီးဆံုး ေမာင္းသူမဲ့ေလယာဥ္ ေပးသြင္းသည့္ AeroVironment ကုမၸဏီမွ ျပသရာတြင္ တံခါးမွတဆင့္ အေဆာက္အအံု အတြင္းသို႔ ဝင္ထြက္ပ်ံသန္းျခင္း၊ တစ္နာရီ ေလတိုက္ႏႈန္း ၈ ကီလိုမီတာ ရွိေသာ အေျခအေနတြင္ ေလထဲ၌ ရပ္တန္႔ျခင္းတို႔ကို ျပဳလုပ္နိုင္ခဲ့သည္။
ဗီြဒီယိုဖိုင္ကို ၾကည့္ရႈလိုပါက Click here.
Source: dailymail.co.uk
Image/video sources: dailyail.co.uk/AeroVironment Inc.
Published Feb 18 2011
ငွက္ကေလးက ခ်စ္စရာ ေကာင္းလိုက္တာကြယ္။ တန္ေၾကး မနည္းဘူးေနာ္။ စပိုင္ဆိုေတာ့ ေကာင္းေကာင္းေတာ့ အလုပ္လုပ္မွာေပါ့။ အိမ္မွာ တေကာင္ေလာက္ ေခၚေမြးထားခ်င္တယ္။
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LikeDislikeအိမ္မွာ ဆူးမမဂြ်မ္းထုိးေနတာေတြ … ဗီဒီယိုရိုက္ျပီး .. ယူတုေပၚတင္ေပးလုိက္မွ.. ဟုတ္ေပ့ျဖစ္ေနမယ္..။ စပိုင္ပါဆိုေနမွ..။
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LikeDislikeစပိုင္ပါ ဆိုမွ စပိုင္ လုပ္ခ်င္လို႕ေပါ့.. အိမ္ေခၚထားမွ.. သူကို ခိုင္းခ်င္တာ ကြန္မန္းေပးမွ သိမွာေပါ့ ဆရာခိုင္ရဲ႕.. တိ၀ူးလား.. ခိုင္းခ်င္တာေလးေတြ ရွိေနလို႕။
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LikeDislikeေရွးေရွးတုန္းကေတာ့
ေက်းေစတမန္ေတြ
ခိုငွက္ေတြကို ဒီလို စပိုင္လုပ္ခိုင္းေလ့ရိွတယ္
ခုေတာ့ ….
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LikeDislikeသတင္းထဲပါလာရင္… အဲဒီလိုအေကာင္ထက္…၂ဆမကစြမ္းတဲ့အေကာင္ကို ထြင္ျပီးသံုးျပီးေနျပီ..။
ဆိုေတာ့..
ျမန္မာျပည္လည္း.. စပိုင္လုပ္ဖို႔ .. ေရာက္ေနေလာက္ပါျပီ။
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LikeDislikeHere is another article on ‘robotics’
Rise of the machines
Robots are great, but what happens when they start spying on you?
Nov 1st 2007 | from PRINT EDITION
Onera
EVER since Karol Capek, a Czech playwright, used the term in the early 1920s to describe artificial people, robots have usually appeared in popular culture with human characteristics and made by big companies. There was the Model B-9Environmental Control Robot in “Lost in Space”; Rosie, the robot maid in “The Jetsons”; C-3PO in “Star Wars”; and the future Governor Schwarzenegger as “The Terminator”.
In the real world, however, things took a different turn. The number of robots has grown rapidly, but they are not humanoid. After the first Unimate robot-arm began work on a General Motors assembly line in 1961, industrial robots of all shapes and sizes invaded the factory floor: there are now about 1m of them worldwide, around half in Asia. There are also hordes of service robots, vacuuming floors, trimming the grass on golf courses and soon—with luck—doing the ironing. Specialist robots can creep inside a patient’s chest cavity to attach electrodes to a pacemaker or along sewer pipes looking for cracks. Robots have also joined the armed forces: some 4,000 are said to be in action in Iraq and Afghanistan doing things such as clearing mines or, as unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs), flying reconnaissance and even combat missions.
Many of today’s robots still have a human controller somewhere, but they are gaining more and more autonomy. By 2015, America’s armed forces want about half their armed vehicles to be robotised. To further that aim, this weekend the Defence Advanced Research Projects Agency is holding a contest for robot vehicles capable of operating on their own in busy cities (see article).
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