This week's New Scientist reports: "The next time a moth lands on your window sill, watch what you say.
"It may look like an innocent visitor, irresistibly drawn to the light in your room, but it could actually be a spy - one of a new generation of cyborg insects with implants wired into their nerves to allow remote control of their movement.
"Be warned, flesh-and-blood bugs may soon live up to their name."
Such mechanised animals, or cyborgs, have many advantages over robots. Sharks, moths and rats, for example, have an amazing sense of smell that allows them to detect the faintest traces of chemicals.
And if you can hide the controls within the creature's body, it would be virtually indistinguishable from any other animal - and so the perfect spy.
Chief among the cyborg inventors is the U.S. military, with its research bureau ploughing money into projects from remote-controlled rats to battery-operated beetles.
Trained to sniff out particular scents, such as human bodies or explosives, the rats' movements are controlled by electrodes implanted in their brains.
Video camera backpacks transmit images of their mission back to the spymaster. Although the U.S. has stopped funding the rat research, the Israeli government is keen to use the creatures to search for survivors of explosions.
While rats might be big enough to carry video cameras and other paraphernalia, their size makes it difficult for them to blend into the background.
With this in mind, the U.S. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency has switched its focus to insects such as moths and beetles.
In an attempt to make the insects as inconspicuous as possible, miniaturised brain probes are inserted during the pupa stage.
The idea is the ultra-light implants will naturally integrate into the body of the developing insect.
DARPA's ultimate aim is to create cyborg insects that can fly more than 300 feet to their target and then stay put until commanded to buzz off again. -dailymail
The back up Blog of the real Xenophilius Lovegood, a slightly mad scientist.
Friday, March 7, 2008
Insects become fly-on-the-wall spies with tiny cameras, radio controls and microphones
Labels:
Strange,
Technology
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3 comments:
hi sir this is tippu i want to buy this cyborg insect sir plz sir i want to buy it plzzzzzzzzzzzz this is my email id :mylifeisinmyhands2007@yahoo.com plzzzzz sir sir send me a message to my email id sir plzzzzzz
fool boy this is used in military not in home or for plying
Alright i will create Insect Killer for this Cyborg Insects..!!!
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