Drone Landscapes
Very cool stuff here from the always fascinating BLDGBLOG on the beginning of a possible: “drone landscape”
To speculate a bit here, if TenCate’s GeoDetect is basically a 2D computer or sensor network, then, given further processing power and mechanically augmented with servomotors, a future version of this system could perhaps not only engage in locally autonomous decision-making—a kind of 2D supercomputer disguised as a landscape—but could also physically rearrange itself to protect against impending disasters (such as levee failure or an avalanche).
We might thus find that sentient artificial landforms built from networks of computational geotextiles and mobilized from within by servomotors could literally redesign landscapes in place, on their own, at will. This would, presumably, be for practical purposes (flood mitigation or landslide control), but could also be purely for aesthetics. Imagine a new park of crawling landforms—slow ripples moving through the grass, forming constantly refreshed hills and valleys, the soil pulsing in waves.
The military applications of such technologies are already laid bare in Martin Libicki’s The Mesh and the Net, in which he speculates about assemblages of autonomous sensors and mechanisms operating on the battlefield.