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Harvard Gets $10M to Create RoboBee Swarms

The world of insect cyborgs is abuzz over news about the latest addition to the ever-expanding robo phylum. In news that may soon send even the most cuddly winged creatures to the unemployment line, Harvard researchers have received a $10 million grant from the National Science Foundation to spawn an army of robot bees, reports Network World. The RoboBee project is slated to span 5 years, and, according to the Harvard RoboBee Web site, could not only provide insight about how to mimic the collective behavior and intelligence of a typical bee community, but also lead to further advances in the electrical engineering and construction of micro flying devices. If all goes according to plan, the robotic bees will be able to fly on their own, and work cooperatively with each other to coordinate hive business, just like the real thing. The similarities, though, stop at the stinger; scientists confirm that the robots, unlike their organic counterparts, will not have stingers.

Most importantly, perhaps, is the bees' potential social and environmental impact. Researchers expect the machine bees to pollinate plants autonomously, a feature that could lead to more efficient agricultural practices. They may also be able to provide assistance in coordinated emergency rescue efforts, using mobile sensor and environmental monitoring networks to help search for and locate, for instance, workers who are in danger.

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Celebrities, Web

Harvard Students Live-Stalk Harry Potter's Hermione

When they're not busy playing croquet, stroking their egos, or hemorrhaging their endowment, Harvard students apparently find the time to squeeze in some quality stalking, as well. Their latest target? Hermione.

Actress Emma Watson, who plays the teenage heroine in the 'Harry Potter' film series, is a freshman at Brown University. When visiting Cambridge, Massachusetts for a recent football game, she was "quite shaken" by the hoards of Harvard hecklers -- so shaken, in fact, that she had to be escorted by an entire security team, the New York Post reports. The entire spectacle, though, was the direct result of a stalking campaign initiated by the Harvard Voice, a student magazine.

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Computers

Harvard Hacked, Student Data Made Public

Harvard Hacked, Student Data ReleasedWhen applying to a prestigious establishment like Harvard, chances are you worry about a lot of things. You worry whether your essay used enough semicolons, whether that test score was high enough, and whether the recommendation from your favorite teacher didn't get lost in the mail. Chances are, though, you didn't spend much time worrying about someone hacking into Harvard's application database and stealing your private info, but that's exactly what happened to 10,000 of last year's applicants to Harvard's Graduate School of Arts and Sciences.

All in all, 6,600 records were stolen, including students' full names, mailing addresses, dates of birth, and Social Security numbers -- basically, everything an identity thief would ever need to pretend to be you. Even more frightening is that all that information is currently and freely downloadable via BitTorrent clients, a peer-to-peer distribution system that has no central servers. This means there's no real way to stop the spreading of this information by deleting it in one place, since files are hosted in bits and pieces across a vast network of computers.

The hack was supposedly done to show that the school's server administrator was inexperienced and unable to prevent such an infiltration. Okay, thanks, but since when did victimizing 6,000 innocent people by releasing their Social Security numbers into the wild -- to prove a point on staffing -- become even remotely considerable? Seems like these hackers have watched Live Free or Die Hard a few too many times.

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