"Because the hummingbird’s tongue is so efficient, the researchers think...perhaps liquid-sipping robots could benefit"
A great day for science indeed. We stand on the precipice of a revolution in liquid-sipping robot technology; our children will scarcely believe the languid speed of their parents' liquid-sipping robots.
Yeah, that whole paragraph really read like someone went "oh crap, we need to say something about the implications and practical implications of this research, otherwise what's the point of it all?!" and then forced something out of the researchers.
Now excuse me while I go and kick my darned slow liquid-sipping robots out of frustration.
Funny comment, made me laugh. But it's not just the major discoveries that make science valuable. It is also the accumulation of many small discoveries that shape our knowledge/understanding of the world.
Thank god there are new intersting things left to discover.
I was just working today with a coagulation test machine (Coag-A-Mate: http://www.gmi-inc.com/BioMerieux-Coag-A-Mate-2210.html) that can draw samples and reagents from an array of loaded vials. A "liquid-sipping robot" would actually be a VERY accurate description.
Things like this remind me how little we still now about our own world. How their are still places on earth that can still be incredibly remote and unexplored. That for all we've accomplished, their is literally a world of unexplored and undiscovered wonders around us.
I do not remember the last time when I saw something as beautiful as this one. It's amazing to know that it actually traps water with it's tongue instead of sipping it.
A great day for science indeed. We stand on the precipice of a revolution in liquid-sipping robot technology; our children will scarcely believe the languid speed of their parents' liquid-sipping robots.