Japanese Professor Builds Fantastically Impractical Anti-Wasp Robot

Logan Westbrook

Transform, Roll Out, Etc
Feb 21, 2008
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Japanese Professor Builds Fantastically Impractical Anti-Wasp Robot

The latest in anti-wasp technology has a lot more legs than it needs to, and much sillier hair.

Professor Sekine from Utsunomiya, Japan is building a robot that can spray wasp nests with insecticide, thus keeping fleshy humans safe from the wasps' cruel stings. But rather than build a remote controlled helicopter with a can of bug spray strapped to it, or something equally simple, he's working on a humanoid robot with a mohawk that can climb ladders.

Sekine started working on the robot when a friend who was involved in local pest control efforts asked him to come up with an alternative to getting up close and personal with the nest. Clad in a bright yellow t-shirt, the robot - named Mohican, after its hair - is around 5'6", made of lightweight metals and wood and powered by small motors. The operator can issue commands to Mohican, such as "climb the ladder," via a small microphone and then remotely control its finer movements. The robot's hair, which started off on a barbershop mannequin, is supposed to look silly, so that people realise that the robot is friendly. Mohican should go into action next spring, once people have had an opportunity to train with it.

Japanese wasps are actually more like hornets, and getting stung can in some cases lead to hospitalization, so it's not hard to imagine why people might want a better way to deal with nests than a ladder and nerves of steel. Even so, Mohican is an astoundingly impractical solution to the problem, when dozens of more elegant - and cheaper - options are available. Plus, I'm not entirely sure that teaching a robot to kill is such a good idea. Sure, it's just wasps in the beginning, but where does it end? The utter subjugation of the human race, that's where.

Source: Plastic Pals [http://www.plasticpals.com/?p=25243] via io9 [http://io9.com/5671959/hilariously-impractical-mohawk-robot-really-hates-wasps]


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Sevre

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Apr 6, 2009
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Hah, if you want to take on a Japanese wasp, you use a Japanese bee. Or a few thousand of them!


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i7omahawki

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Mar 22, 2010
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Bwahahahahah

The robot's hair, which started off on a barbershop mannequin, is supposed to look silly, so that people realise that the robot is friendly
A MOHICAN haircut, to make it look FRIENDLY?! Aren't mohawks usually donned to intimidate people? Why does it even need a haircut? Or eyes? Or anything at all? Ohh, Japan, you've done it again.
 

Flamma Man

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Jul 23, 2009
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"Hey, I have an idea! Why don't we make a robot that climbs a ladder and sprays bee nests?"

"That's idiotic and a waste of money."

"It has a mohawk."

"Where do we get started?"
 

Distorted Stu

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Sep 22, 2009
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Seriously, they could of made more practical robots by now. Like robots in the shape of dogs to retreive my mail of fetch me a beer.
 

The Cheezy One

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Dec 13, 2008
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Logan Westbrook said:
The latest in ant-wasp technology has a lot more legs than it needs to, and much sillier hair.
I hate those Ant-wasps so much!
This is one step closer to having robot soldiers that will destroy mankind. Someone make one that looks like Arnie!
 

mechanixis

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Oct 16, 2009
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Sevre90210 said:
Hah, if you want to take on a Japanese wasp, you use a Japanese bee. Or a few thousand of them!


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JESUS CHRIST if that isn't five kinds of nightmare fuel.
 

Casual Shinji

Should've gone before we left.
Legacy
Jul 18, 2009
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tzimize said:
Casual Shinji said:
All this guy needs is a dog named Gromit.
Hehe. Japan. What a wierd country.
It's actually quite surprising that there hasn't been a Japanese inventor yet to create a pair of robot trousers.
 

Meestor Pickle

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Jul 29, 2010
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Sevre90210 said:
Hah, if you want to take on a Japanese wasp, you use a Japanese bee. Or a few thousand of them!


SWARM MY PRETTIES!
Why are we concerned with Japanese robots attacking us, clearly these things are the threat!
 

kouriichi

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Sep 5, 2010
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Put a monkey suit on it and have it knock on peoples windows.
Im sure it would be better as a prank device ((or military)) then an anti-bee tool.
Ive always thought an incendiary grenade would be the best method of bee/wasp removal.

That or a really hungry bear. Those things rock for removing bees.
 

roostuf

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Dec 29, 2009
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Well i like to think that many a person including mister Sekine likes to make simple projects into complicated expensive time-wasting tools that will only work once. On the other had he is probably doing this just to show off his manly brain power!
 

neoontime

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Jul 10, 2009
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Sevre90210 said:
Hah, if you want to take on a Japanese wasp, you use a Japanese bee. Or a few thousand of them!


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Ugh, that video just made me a little sick.
 

roostuf

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Dec 29, 2009
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Sevre90210 said:
Hah, if you want to take on a Japanese wasp, you use a Japanese bee. Or a few thousand of them!


SWARM MY PRETTIES!
This is where game developers should get their ideas, like come on this is nature at its best!
 

Tsaba

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Oct 6, 2009
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Sevre90210 said:
Hah, if you want to take on a Japanese wasp, you use a Japanese bee. Or a few thousand of them!


SWARM MY PRETTIES!

learned something today.... don't go to japan.
 

Syntax Error

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Sep 7, 2008
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Finding a way to make a robot climb a ladder efficiently (it's all about coordination, baby!) is probably the bigger goal of this project. Consider that bipedal robots are difficult enough to make as is. If you teach them the finer points in coordination, we're probably doomed.
 

Dublin Solo

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Feb 18, 2010
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Sevre90210 said:
Hah, if you want to take on a Japanese wasp, you use a Japanese bee. Or a few thousand of them!


SWARM MY PRETTIES!
Wow.... That's three more reasons why I don't want to set foot in Japan, ever:

1. Killer robots.
2. Killer wasps from Hell
3. Swarming killer bees from Japan