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Feed Homebrew robots reach dime size (engadget.com)

Filed under: Robots

While we're a bit skeptical of its claimed status to be "quite possibly the world's smallest robot," this so-called Pico bot is certainly impressive enough in its own right -- especially considering that it's the result of a DIY project. As you can see above, the bot is small enough to sit on a dime, yet it still packs enough brains (and power) to move around autonomously (if a little recklessly), motoring about at a top speed of 0.5 feet per second and lasting about 15 minutes before its battery runs dry. While it currently doesn't seem to be capable of much more than the antics on display in the video after break, its creator does see plenty of room for improvement, including adding ZigBee wireless communication, as well as an on-board camera and built-in GPS. Of course, there's also the possibility that someone could take things one step further and amass a pint-sized robot army, letting them annoy their co-workers on a hereto unheard of scale.

[Via MAKE:Blog]

Continue reading Homebrew robots reach dime size

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Submission + - Ipod For Every Kid In Michigan

mikesd81 writes: "Over at C|Net there is an article about Michigan spending $38 Million dollars to distribute to every kid an iPod for learning purposes. From the article: "On Thursday, House Democrats delivered a spending bill that includes the idea of putting $38 million worth of public funds toward outfitting every student with a digital music player."

The plan included measures to tax soda and satellite TV services, among other things, to raise funds. After all, the state is apparently facing a budget crisis — to the tune of $1 billion. This sounds like an interesting ideas because iPods can be useful learning tools to transport projects, lectures, etc. If you recall, Duke University tried this too with mixed results. How financially strained will Michigan residents feel about paying higher taxes to buy someone else's kid an iPod?"

Feed Weak Immune Response Critical To Disease That Causes Most Infant Hospitalization (sciencedaily.com)

For the past four decades, medical science thought it knew how severe RSV infections arose. Scientists blamed an overreaction in the lungs by specific immune-system cells, T lymphocytes (also known as "T cells"), for the most drastic symptoms of infection. But now, researchers have shown that severe RSV infections in the lower respiratory tract actually are associated with an inadequate immune reaction -- a characteristic they share with fatal influenza infections.

Feed Why Nanocylinders Deliver Medicine Better Than Nanospheres (sciencedaily.com)

Researchers have discovered a better way to deliver drugs to tumors. By using a cylindrical-shaped carrier scientists were able sustain delivery of the anticancer drug paclitaxel to an animal model of lung cancer ten times longer than that delivered on spherical-shaped carriers. These findings have implications for drug delivery as well as for better understanding cylinder-shaped viruses like Ebola and H5N1 influenza.

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