ESA, NASA test interplanetary internet by remote controlling a Lego robot from the ISS
NASA (and the ESA) have long been working on a multi-planet internet
that can link up spaceships, probes and rovers, but they've at last
brought the experimentation from the
broad scale to smaller dimensions. Lego bricks, to be exact.
International Space Station expedition lead Sunita Williams recently
steered a Lego Mindstorms robot at an ESA facility in Darmstadt while
she orbited overhead, proving that future space explorers could directly
control a vehicle on a planetary surface while staying out of harm's
way. As in the past, the key to the latest dry run was a
Disruption-Tolerant Networking (DTN) system; the focus was more on
reliably getting packets through to the brick-based vehicle than on pure
speed. As tame as that Earth-bound test drive might sound relative to
an in-the-field use on a less familiar world, it demonstrates that the
DTN approach can work when it really counts. We just wouldn't hold our
breath for any Martian RC car races.
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