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posted by Fnord666 on Thursday September 17 2020, @09:29PM   Printer-friendly
from the at-least-the-AI-can't-get-scurvy dept.

High-tech UK-US ship launched on 400th Mayflower anniversary:

With a splash of Plymouth gin, the U.S. ambassador to Britain officially launched a ship named Mayflower on Wednesday, 400 years to the day after a wooden vessel with that name sailed from an English port and changed the history of two continents.

Unlike the merchant ship that carried a group of European Puritan settlers to a new life across the Atlantic Ocean in 1620, the Mayflower christened by U.S. Ambassador Robert Wood Johnson has no crew or passengers. It will cross the sea powered by sun and wind, and steered by artificial intelligence.

Johnson said the high-tech ship, developed jointly by U.K.-based marine research organization ProMare and U.S. tech giant IBM, showed that "the pioneering spirit of the Mayflower really lives on" in the trans-Atlantic partnership.

[...] The Mayflower Autonomous Ship — its creators decided against a snappier name — is intended to be the first in a new generation of crewless high-tech vessels that can explore parts of oceans too difficult or dangerous for people to reach.

[...] The 50-foot (15-meter) trimaran will undertake six months of sea trials and short trips before setting out on its trans-Atlantic trip to measure ocean health: assessing the impact of climate change, measuring micro-plastic pollution and studying populations of whales and dolphins.

Along the way, its AI captain will have to make complex decisions in response to wind, waves, vessels and unknown surprises.

"We're quietly confident we're going to make it," Stanford-Clark said. "Ultimately, the sea will decide."

Related:
Groundbreaking Mayflower Autonomous Ship revealed to the world
Mayflower Autonomous Ship Launches
An unmanned voyage in the wake of the Mayflower


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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Thursday September 17 2020, @10:30PM (2 children)

    by Anonymous Coward on Thursday September 17 2020, @10:30PM (#1052422)

    Yes be sure you dodge that rock.

  • (Score: 2) by Phoenix666 on Thursday September 17 2020, @11:46PM (1 child)

    by Phoenix666 (552) on Thursday September 17 2020, @11:46PM (#1052480) Journal

    Man was that rock the most underwhelming stone I have ever seen made such a big deal of. It's small and sits in a dark, muddy hole in a crummy boardwalk. It made me feel sad for all the fudge shops and t-shirt sellers and other tourist trap businesses that have sprung up around that little park.

    --
    Washington DC delenda est.
    • (Score: 2) by Runaway1956 on Friday September 18 2020, @02:34AM

      by Runaway1956 (2926) Subscriber Badge on Friday September 18 2020, @02:34AM (#1052558) Journal

      It made me feel sad for . . . tourist trap businesses

      I've had an almost life long sadness for tourist traps and the businesses that surround them. There really are some awe-inspiring thingamabobs in this world, but many of the best have no touristy crap associated with them at all. The touristy stuff? Well - most of it is only awe-inspiring in that people travel hundreds and thousands of miles to see it.