Dr. Kiki’s Science Hour 80: Hacking Science and Robots

From Science Hack Day: the Best Science Hack winners and their robots.

Guests: Ariel Waldman founder of Spacehack.org, Christie Dudley of Team FREDnet, Geoffrey Chu and Matt Everingham of NASA Ames Research Center, David Burchanowski of awesomenessinabox.com and Jade Wang, neuroscientist at NASA

http://twit.tv/dksh80

Also huffduffed as…

  1. Dr. Kiki’s Science Hour 80: Hacking Science and Robots

    —Huffduffed by iamdanw on June 6th, 2011

  2. Dr. Kiki’s Science Hour 80: Hacking Science and Robots

    —Huffduffed by olafursverrir on January 22nd, 2011

Possibly related…

  1. Open Science: Create, Collaborate, Communicate

    From South by Southwest Interactive 2010:

    From discovering galaxies to folding proteins: how to actively contribute to science. Science projects are harnessing open collaboration to further discovery and exploration. As a result, citizen science is witnessing a renaissance. The panel will discuss how you can get involved and challenges faced in making science open.

    • Ariel Waldman, Spacehack.org
    • Kirsten Sanford, This Week in Science
    • Jessy Cowan-Sharp , NASA
    • Natalie Villalobos, Google
    • Tantek Çelik tantek.com

    —Huffduffed by adactio 2 years ago

  2. Evadot Podcast #57 — Hacking Space with Ariel Waldman

    Learn from Ariel and her terrific site spacehack.org how to participate in Space Exploration yourself.

    http://evadot.com/2011/01/12/evadot-podcast-57-hacking-space-with-ariel-waldman/

    —Huffduffed by adactio 2 years ago

  3. Hacking Space Exploration by Ariel Waldman

    From creating remote-sensing CubeSats to analyzing aerogel: how the public is hacking into open source space exploration.

    As technology shifts from a means of passive consumption to active creation, people are collaborating on a massive scale. The endeavor of Spacehack.org is to transform that into more of a community, so that space hackers can easily connect and interact.

    Amateurs were once considered to be at the crux of scientific discovery, but over time have been put on the sidelines. Despite this, citizen science is witnessing a renaissance. Agencies such as NASA no longer have a monopoly on the global space program and more participatory projects are coming to life to harness the power of open collaboration around exploring space on a faster schedule.

    Instead of complaining about where our jetpack is, we can now demand to figure out how to take an elevator to space . And, while you still can’t own a CubeSat as easily as an iPod, you can join a SEDSAT-2 team and learn how to engineer one.

    There’s also GalaxyZoo , which opened up a data set containing a million galaxies imaged by a robotic telescope. Why projects such as these are important is because robots are actually kind of dumb. Humans are able to make classifications that well-programmed machines can’t. Currently, 200,000 humans are identifying over 250,000 galaxies.

    If tinkering with spacecrafts is more your speed, the Google Lunar X PRIZE is a competition to send robots to the moon. However, you don’t need to be a robotics engineer to participate. Team FREDNET , the first open source competitor, is open for anyone to join.

    While the concept of open source has resonated around the world and beyond, there is still much education to be done. NASA and the ESA have made large quantities of their data open, but have yet to facilitate developer communities that allow for active contribution to the code rather than just feedback on finding bugs.

    Spacehack.org , a directory of ways to participate in space exploration, was created for this reason, among others. Many of these projects are buried in old government websites or do not clearly communicate how someone can get involved. It is with great hope that it will not only encourage the creation of more participatory space projects, but also urge existing ones to embrace the social web.

    http://lanyrd.com/2010/osbridge/sxzh/

    —Huffduffed by adactio one year ago