shrimp

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  • Paul Starosta via Getty Images

    Shrimp-inspired robot claw could punch through rock

    by 
    Jon Fingas
    Jon Fingas
    03.17.2019

    Shrimp may be small, but some of them can pack quite a wallop. One of the pistol shrimp's claws, for instance, delivers such an explosive amount of force that it creates a shockwave of superhot plasma that can take out prey or create impromptu shelters. It only makes sense, then, that scientists hope to harness that power. A team has developed a robot claw that mimics the pistol shrimp's basic behavior to generate plasma and, potentially a valuable tool for underwater science and industry.

  • DARPA

    DARPA's insect-sized SHRIMP robots could aid disaster relief

    by 
    Katrina Filippidis
    Katrina Filippidis
    07.19.2018

    DARPA's efforts to propel military technology forward often manifest in a diverse fashion, spanning everything from drone submarine development to a biostasis program that aims to buy more time to rescue soldiers on the battlefield. The SHRIMP program, short for SHort-Range Independent Microrobotic Platforms, is another potentially life-saving initiative that is being designed to navigate through hazardous natural disaster zones.

  • Japanese carrier 'cooks' shrimp in three seconds to sell you on LTE

    by 
    Daniel Cooper
    Daniel Cooper
    12.01.2014

    NTT DoCoMo's LTE is so fast that ordinary life can seem slow by comparison. That's why the company's latest bizarre advert is showing you how to make a dinner of battered shrimp in under three seconds. All you'll need is an air cannon, some flour, batter and an open flame, as well as the mechanism to spray all three into the air. Then, just firing the creatures through each one will produce some tasty-looking, if microbiologically-unsound fare. Something, something, buy some LTE?

  • The Sea Monkey experience of avatars

    by 
    Tateru Nino
    Tateru Nino
    01.18.2010

    So, as you may recall last week Linden Lab responded about what appeared to be Second Life advertisements that capitalized on the recently-released James Cameron film, Avatar. Linden Lab implied (though didn't actually state plainly) that the advertisements were not intended to cause confusion between Second Life and Avatar. Since about Christmas (just after previews showing the blue-skinned Na'vi began to become available to the general public) IMVU started running some blue-skinned ads of its own. It was when we saw the blue-avatared IMVU advertisement that sprung up during the same period that we inevitably started thinking about Sea Monkeys. There's more similarities going on here than just the visible, so let's rummage around and see if we can't find one of the old advertisements in our files.