Hello Ramji, A group in University of Washington is working on a memory module small enough to be carried on the back of an insect (moth). The idea is that the moth should be able to fly with the memory and and store recordings of animal behavior. I think the professor who works on this is Chris Dioro in EE/CS dept and the graduate student is a colleague of mine - Jaideep Mavoori jaideep@ee.washington.edu. maybe they would have some useful links for you Regards anupama > hi mems workers, > > is anybody working on the microrobots?(particularly on > the insect model based). I would be highly obliged if > anybody could let me know where they are used these > days if any.....I would appreciate if anyone could let > me where they can be used. > > I found the paper published in JMEMS (94 > issue)interesting. is an artificial insect fabricated > that way? please do respond. > > Thanks and regards.. > > Ramji Dhakal > NY > > ===== > __________________________________________________________ > _______Ramji Dhakal > > M S Mechanical Engineering, > SUNY Binghamton, NY > > __________________________________________________ > Do you Yahoo!? > Yahoo! Tax Center - File online, calculators, forms, and > more http://tax.yahoo.com > > _______________________________________________ > MEMS-talk@memsnet.org mailing list: to unsubscribe or > change your list options, visit > http://mail.mems-exchange.org/mailman/listinfo/mems-talk > Hosted by the MEMS Exchange, providers of MEMS processing > services. Visit us at http://www.memsnet.org/ Anupama V. Govindarajan Graduate Student - EE MEMS laboratory Department of Electrical Engineering University of Washington Campus Box 352500, Seattle WA 98195 Phone: (206)-221-5340 email: anupama@ee.washington.edu