Talk:Future of robotics
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Moved from Robot
This is material I moved from Robot; Robocup doesn't list an official nano-sized contest on their official website at the moment, and the rest is WP:CRYSTAL. I'm a fan of the material, though; and Drexler himself is working these days on the kinds of things discussed at the yearly FNANO conference (Google it), modeling things made out of protein strands, including things that function as motors. There's lots going on in the field, but none of the stuff below passes the WP:CRYSTAL test. - Dan Dank55 (send/receive) 19:33, 22 September 2008 (UTC)
Nanorobotics is the still largely hypothetical technology of creating machines or robots at or close to the scale of a nanometer (10-9 meters). Also known as nanobots or nanites, they would be constructed from molecular machines. So far, researchers have mostly produced only parts of these complex systems, such as bearings, sensors, and synthetic molecular motors, but functioning robots have also been made such as the entrants to the Nanobot Robocup contest.[1] Researchers also hope to be able to create entire robots as small as viruses or bacteria, which could perform tasks on a tiny scale. Possible applications include micro surgery (on the level of individual cells), utility fog[2], manufacturing, weaponry and cleaning.[3] Some people have suggested that if there were nanobots which could reproduce, the earth would turn into "grey goo", while others argue that this hypothetical outcome is nonsense.[4][5]
Refs
- ^ Techbirbal: Nanobots Play Football
- ^ KurzweilAI.net: Utility Fog: The Stuff that Dreams Are Made Of
- ^ (Eric Drexler 1986) Engines of Creation, The Coming Era of Nanotechnology
- ^ Chris Phoenix (2003-12). "Of Chemistry, Nanobots, and Policy". Center for Responsible Nanotechnology. Retrieved 2007-10-28.
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(help) - ^ "Nanotechnology pioneer slays "grey goo" myths". Institute of Physics Electronics Journals. 2004-06-07. Retrieved 2007-10-28.
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