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"Cybernetic Sharks, steered by remote control"

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Blogger bumblepanda said...

There is actually a horror flick called Deep Blue Sea that has a premise almost identical to this... in the film they give the sharks brains that have human intelligence, and (of course) the sharks turn on their creators. Sounds like DARPA could stand to learn a bit from LL COOL J, the films lone survivor.

3:07 PM

Blogger Warren said...

Jelle Atema should not be working on sharks, he should be working on dolphins (aren't they suppose to be smarter anyway?):

Terrorist: "Lets attack the USA from the Pacific."
USA: "Send out the cyberdolphins. We got some terrorists in sector 7G"
Terrorist: "Ohh look at the friendly american dolphin [reaches down to pet it]...ahh my hand!

Somebody phone those guys from "The Fast and the Furious", I sense a block-buster script in the making.

But, with a human-driven brain, sharks would probably be smart enough to disguise themselves as dolphins. Problem solved!

7:26 AM

Blogger Allison Muri said...

A fine idea; alas, William Gibson beat you to it in "Johnny Mnemonic," which features a rather heroic, and apparently sentient, cybernetic dolphin wired to the Net.

7:58 AM

Blogger Meshon said...

That dolphin in "Johnny Mnemonic" was an ex-military operative if I remember correctly. It had become a junkie, probably from post-traumatic stress disorder. In a side note, Gibson has these epidermal drug patches in some of his stories that work a lot like nicotine patches. I think the first reference to them came out in '85 or '86... which was the same time the first patent for this delivery system had been applied for. Gibson's brain must be floating way out ahead, on the bleeding edge.

11:55 AM

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