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"I was involved in a cloning project. .. to send me into outer space along with a lot of other people. Not the whole me - just a hair from my head, while I still had some. I would thus pop up in another galaxy in the distant future."
- Arthur C. Clarke

Maintenance Drone (Holon)  
  A semi-autonomous flying device used to perform repairs.  

THE TIBETAN MAINTENANCE DRONES had the sleek bodies of dragonflies. Their surfaces scattered the sunlight back in violet and emerald. Slender legs protruded from their thoraxes on trochanter and coxa sockets, ending in grasping claws. They moved with darting grace from one task to another in the temple courtyard...

The automonk that was missing an arm—one of the two that had spoken with Ha the night before—wandered the courtyard in a wobbling meditative circle. Its saffron robe was torn in several places...

Evrim came up the path carrying the missing limb and laid it on one of the votive tables. “I found it in the cleft of a banyan tree.”

The second dragonfly drone hummed over, darting around the limb in small circles...

“They are not drones,” Altantsetseg said. “Though I suppose most people still call them that, the same way for decades people called our terminals ‘phones.’ These are sophisticated hybrid systems...

The dragonfly had descended from its transport unit and landed on the damaged automonk. It was now using a scissor tool to cut away the torn saffron robes...

“The holon is an innovation of their own. And yes—as Evrim said, it has helped make them very rich. The term means a self-reliant unit with enough independence built into it to handle contingencies without asking a central control authority for instructions—but it is simultaneously subject to control from its higher authority. You can’t tell where your command ends and the response algorithm begins. It’s like an extension of the nervous system, but more than that: information in the system flows bi-directionally. It’s as if your limbs talked back—as if your limbs were little minds that innovate and improvise.

Technovelgy from The Mountain in the Sea, by Ray Naylor.
Published by Farrar, Straus and Giroux in 2022
Additional resources -

Compare to the repair robots from The Well-Oiled Machine (1950) by H.B. Fyfe, the hammers from Vulcan's Hammer (1960) by Philip K. Dick,automated apartment maintenance from Ubik (1969) by Philip K. Dick, the Powered Suit with Trauma Maintenance from The Forever War (1974) by Joe Haldeman, the service drones from The Two Faces of Tomorrow (1979) by James P. Hogan, the Christmas Bush Motile Robot from Rocheworld (1985) by Robert Forward and the maritime robots from Mare Nostrum (2022) by Bruce Sterling.

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Additional resources:
  More Ideas and Technology from The Mountain in the Sea
  More Ideas and Technology by Ray Naylor
  Tech news articles related to The Mountain in the Sea
  Tech news articles related to works by Ray Naylor

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