We can only assume DARPAs cyborg moths will be deployed relatively close to their targets, but we have no real word yet on their potential range. If the military does find the need to release the moths from the rear of operations under the cover of darkness, they would do well to pay attention to research coming out of the United Kingdom on how moths are able to migrate at night.
Does light have anything to do with this phenomenon at all? Or does phototaxis another reaction they have for another use?
As someone who has broken the same pinky toe three times and fractured my fifth metatarsal once, I can immediately see the appeal of a rug that lights up when you step on it. (I will conveniently neglect to mention that all my breaks happened during the middle of the day.) Invented by two engineering students at London South Bank University, the rug uses electroluminescence to glow under the weight of a footfall.
I don't really think this is a good idea, because carpets catch a lot of things (i.e dirt, bugs, food) and sometimes the vacuum doesn't pick all of it up. They should design one which accommodates wood or just introduce a cleanlier type of carpet.
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