[P2P-F] Fw: A swarm of flying ROBOTS

robert searle dharao4 at yahoo.co.uk
Mon Mar 5 10:54:37 CET 2012




----- Forwarded Message -----
From: THIS WEEK on TED.com <no-reply at ted.com>
To: Robert <dharao4 at yahoo.co.uk> 
Sent: Friday, 2 March 2012, 22:13
Subject: A swarm of flying ROBOTS

Email not displaying correctly? View it in your browser 
 March 2, 2012  
This week: Three jawdropping talks fresh from stage at TED2012 -- and two powerful talks on our oceans to celebrate the launch of mission-blue.org.
      In his lab at Penn, Vijay Kumar and his team build flying quadrotors, small, agile robots that swarm together. Watch now >> 
      Have we used up our resources? Have we filled up all the livable space on Earth? Paul Gilding suggests we have, in this clear-eyed and oddly hopeful talk. Watch now >> 
      Peter Diamandis makes a case for optimism -- that we'll invent, innovate and create ways to solve the challenges that loom over us.  Watch now >> 
      The ocean has degraded within our lifetimes, says Daniel Pauly, as shown in the decreasing average size of fish. Can we stop the baseline drop? Watch now >> 
      Paul Snelgrove shares the results of the 10-year Census of Marine Life, and shares amazing photos of some of their surprising undersea finds. Watch now >> 
  NEWS FROM TED 
TED2012: Read all about it
Catch up on everything
about TED2012 in our
"insanely detailed" coverage 
on the TED Blog >>      
Join the Conversation
  Brooks Wagner on
Vijay Kumar: Robots that fly ... and cooperate    
  The real power of technology like this comes down to scale. Sure the little flying robots are impressive but how about integrating this concept with our cars? How about using it to assist air traffic controllers? How many lives can be saved if your car has situational awareness and prevents you from turning into the path of that bus?"    
  Manuel Perez on
Paul Gilding: The Earth is full    
  My problem with this talk is the total lack of solutions and alternatives being put forward.

The only real solution is to get out of this planet, we are going to keep on trying to get more resources from the planet full stop, let's face this, saying the opposite is the real denial.

China, Russian, Brasil cannot stop, and after them it will be someone else ... So we better put the systems in place so humanity keeps growing outwards from Earth, getting the metal and energy resources it needs from space, while we implement more aggressive recycling strategies in Earth." 
  Most Emailed This Week
  Jeffrey Kluger: The sibling bond  
  Shawn Achor: The happy secret to better work  
  Brené Brown: The power of vulnerability  
  Bunker Roy: Learning from a barefoot movement  
  Simon Sinek: How great leaders inspire action    
Stay in touch with TED

Become a fan of TED on Facebook  
Follow TED on Twitter: @TEDNews | @TEDTalks  
Get TED news, speaker Q&As and more: TED Blog    
You are receiving this newsletter because you subscribed to it on TED.com
Subscribe | Unsubscribe | Update email info | Forward to a friend | Email us
TED Conferences LLC, 250 Hudson, 10th floor, New York, NY 10013  
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: https://lists.ourproject.org/pipermail/p2p-foundation/attachments/20120305/c86fb4b3/attachment.htm 


More information about the P2P-Foundation mailing list