… in the process of developing a underwater computer that attempts to recognise dolphin sounds and then respond in real time.Hmmmm….
It all sounds a bit…familiar. Tell us more:
The machine works by using hydrophones to pick up the dolphin sounds and LEDs to show the direction they came from.Oooooh, wait! It’s all coming back to me now!
When they receive a sound, the divers will then play back one of eight 'words' and see if dolphins mimic them.
The scientists, led by Dr Denise Herzing, will then catalogue all the sounds the dolphins make and, they hope, establishing the building blocks of the dolphins language.
Once this is completed, Dr Herzing and her team hope to create a language they can use to talk back to the dolphins using the machine.
It goes back much further than that...
ReplyDeleteMeanwhile, in Australia, scientists are carrying out similar work with bush Kangaroos ..
ReplyDeleteAnd in England, the Labour Party claim to have a talking horse, called "Mr Ed" as their leader ..
Well, actually .. he's more of a talking horse's-arse .. but I'm sure we know what they mean ..
Not to be outdone, the Conservative Party have a slimy slug called Cameron, as leader .. but so far no-one has worked out how to communicate with him .. or if they have, he's just plain ignoring them ..
This comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteekekekekekekek eeeeeeeeeeEEEEEEEEEEEEeeeeee
ReplyDeleteskq
So long, and thanks for all the fish.
What's that, Flipper?
ReplyDeleteI think he's trying to tell us something... the mineshaft, fallen down the abandoned mineshaft?
Oh no! Millions of dollars are being shoveled down an empty mineshaft!
We could ask them if they've seen Bin Laden....
ReplyDelete"It goes back much further than that..."
ReplyDeleteOh, I loved that film!
"So long, and thanks for all the fish."
It is rather presumptuous to assume they'd have anything they wanted to say to us, isn't it?