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Robotics

NASA Performs Zero-G Robot Surgery for Mars, Iraq 106

An anonymous reader writes "With rapid-response surgery needed in Iraq and super-long-distance medicine a far-off necessity for a manned trip to Mars, NASA recently sent eight astronauts, roboticists and surgeons on its 'Vomit Comet,' pitting real doctors against new robotic ones. As if the prospect of a portable robo-OR deploying to Iraq by 2009 weren't enticing enough, one of the surgeons on board promised this in his flight blog: 'So far, surgery by hand is still the most efficient way to get the job done in a mobile, extreme environment. But robots are advancing rapidly... The solution that roboticists are working on now is to CAT scan a patient's entire body and beam the results back to Earth. Then a surgeon could program an operation and beam it back to upload into a robo-surgeon, which could carry out procedures like a player piano.'"

Comment Re:Isn't that the point? (Score 1) 323

Yep ... that is the point. Vinge has some interesting and entertaining ideas and "logical derivations" of ideas that he explores across a few books -- see his latest -- and he's an excellent writer. But the idea of component assembly goes back a ways.

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