Bird vs. robot

From New Scientist:
This could just be the first of many battles to come between natural flying predators, and man-made flyers inspired by nature.Robotic dragonfly toys made by WowWee Robotics are being snatched by birds of prey. One boy had his grabbed by a Red-tailed hawk not long after unwrapping one on Christmas day. You can read his account of the event. Engadget reports that WowWee has been contacted by 45 people about the same issue in the past two months.
Nature versus Robot - Link
Posted by Gareth Branwyn |
Feb 22, 2008 04:00 PM
Robotics |
Permalink
| Comments (7)
| Email This |
| Digg this!
Recent Entries
- More awesome inflatable subway bag animals
- TCHO chocolate, part two
- Make at The Last HOPE
- Excercise bike Arduino
- Make Projects - Volume 07
- Delft ceramic style cross-stitch mantle clock
- Video software keeps an eye on the sky
- Free sample pages from Dover Publications
- AVR demo platform rocks the color VGA +audio
- Send GPS data to your computer without a microcontroller
Comments
Oldest comments listed first.
| Posted by: It's true! on February 22, 2008 at 5:19 PM |
I've had it almost happen to me, more than once. The first time was shortly after getting my Wowee Dragonfly. I was taking it for one of my shaky, porpoising flights. The thopter went up into a stall, and fell out of the air. Half a moment later, a brown bird swept right through the space where my toy was. The bird-of-prey swooped off empty-clawed, and my dragonfly was saved by bad flying.
| Posted by: Souliere on February 22, 2008 at 7:40 PM |
I was flying a dual line flexifoil kite once, it's about 2x6 feet in size. I was holding it steady in the air about 100 feet up as I was talking to someone and a large bird (probably a crow) tried to land on it.
| Posted by: JasonR on February 22, 2008 at 7:46 PM |
The bird in the New Scientist picture is an osprey, or fish hawk. Pretty unlikely that it would be interested in aerial prey. Nice photochop though.
| Posted by: WilliamR on February 24, 2008 at 2:35 AM |
I used to fly 2 meter RC gliders and had a hawk attack one day. It ripped a chunk out of one wingtip but it was an easy repair.
| Posted by: TimO on February 24, 2008 at 8:17 AM |
Also an R/C flyer....
We get hawks and vultures flying over our flying fields all the time in Florida. Not at all uncommon to have them soar with us or attack if they get territorial.
As far back as the 1970s the guy in California who made the R/C seagulls for the movie "Johnathan Livingston Seagull" reported prey birds coming for them.
Not at all new, kids...
| Posted by: rob cruickshank on February 24, 2008 at 10:30 AM |
I'm watched an eagle drop in behind an RC glider just like a fighter plane, then peel off when it decided it wasn't anything to be bothered with.I've had a hawk circle my foil kite, and had another kite mobbed by starlings, who must have thought it was a predator.
The birds were here first. It's their sky.
| Posted by: david on April 11, 2008 at 9:55 PM |
The very first google result is the osprey sans r/c vehicle from the National Geographic web site. Nice photoshop. Wonder if New Scientist paid NatGeo for their image rights? Losers.
Leave a comment
Subscribe to MAKE Magazine!
Subscribe today, save 42% and get web access to MAKE free. MAKE Digital Edition is available only to subscribers.
$34.95 / 1 year
(4 Quarterly Issues)
Features and more @ MAKE!
Get MAKE 14 - Subscribe or on newsstands!
Add MAKE to iGoogle - GoogleGoogle.
Add MAKE to your RSS reader - Real simple.
Add MAKE on Twitter.
Add MAKE on FriendFeed & the MAKE room.

Why advertise on MAKE?
Read what folks are saying about us!
Click here to advertise on MAKE!
Phillip Torrone
Senior Editor
Tel: 707-827-7311
Gareth Branwyn
Robot Maker
Kip Kay
Video Maker
Jonah Brucker-Cohen
Artist / Researcher
Natalie Zee Drieu
Senior Editor
CRAFT
Becky Stern
Culture jammer
Collin Cunningham
Sound Maker
Marc de Vinck
CNC Maker

