wired.com — The creation of a cyborg insect army has just taken a step closer to reality. A research team at the University of California Berkeley announced that it has successfully implanted electrodes into a beetle allowing scientists to control the insect’s movements in flight. Eventually, the mind-controlled insects could be used to...
Sep 24, 2009 View in Crawl 4
Closed AccountSep 24, 2009
once the enemies get robots then the "war" will be over. killing mooslims is the whole point in the first place.
wmphxSep 24, 2009
screwing with bugs brains...lovely. Yeah, Im sure mother nature wont mind us tweaking another species to do our bidding.
wmphxSep 24, 2009
actually 10 years from now, BeetleCAM, bathroom and up skirt shots!
galumeSep 24, 2009
Came here to see if there was the obligatory "I for one welcome our new cyborg-beetle overlords."There is now.
3tres3Sep 24, 2009
The rise of the termite-nators!
chiefbandit2200Sep 25, 2009
Snake?
kingsnorkySep 25, 2009
And with this, the Pentagon's 20-year-plan of scaring the Girls' Camp across the lake is one step closer to completion...
obkenobiOct 26, 2009
It is technology that won the battles in Iraq and Afghanistan, not individuals. And I didn't say they did nothing physically. I implied what they did was not a major contribution for the invasion's success. I said nothing about any policing operations that went on after the invasion. Sure, in a policing operation individual soldiers must still expose themselves to direct fire.Speaking of the battle of Fallujah, the US used white phosphorous in that battle. I know war is not fair, the point is that the battle wasn't won by bravery, it was won by artillery. The Iraqis had no chance once they were spotted and artillery could be brought in. It was a massacre.