Crazy Rasberry ants head for NASA

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Discussion Overview

The discussion centers around the phenomenon of Crazy Rasberry ants, particularly their impact on electronic systems and their unusual behavior. Participants share personal experiences and observations related to ant infestations in various contexts, including computers and vehicles.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory, Conceptual clarification, Debate/contested

Main Points Raised

  • Some participants note the destructive nature of Crazy Rasberry ants on electronic devices, with reports of short-circuited computers at a chemical plant and NASA facilities.
  • Others share personal anecdotes about ant infestations in cars and keyboards, highlighting the challenges of removal and the aftermath of such infestations.
  • There is speculation about the ants' attraction to electronics, with one participant suggesting that heat might be a contributing factor.
  • One participant mentions the ants' ability to use dead bodies of their kind as bridges to navigate treated surfaces, indicating their adaptive behavior.
  • Some express a humorous or light-hearted attitude towards the situation, referring to the ants as "tiny overlords."

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants generally agree on the problematic nature of these ants and their unusual behavior, but there is no consensus on the reasons behind their attraction to electronics or the best methods for dealing with them.

Contextual Notes

Some claims about the ants' behavior and effects on electronics are based on anecdotal evidence, and there are unresolved questions regarding the underlying causes of their attraction to electronic devices.

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http://www.computerworld.com/action/article.do?command=viewArticleBasic&articleId=9086098

The ants have been dubbed Crazy Rasberry ants after Tom Rasberry, owner of Budget Pest Control in Pearland, Texas. He first tackled this particular type of ant back in 2002. Since then, the problem has only escalated.

Rasberry told Computerworld that the ants have caused a lot of trouble for one Texas chemical company in particular. Not wanting to name the company, he said the ants shorted out three different computers that were running a pipeline that brought chemicals into the plant. The ants took down two computers last year and one in 2006, affecting flow in the pipeline each time.

"I think they go into everything and they don't follow any kind of structured line," said Rasberry. "If you open a computer, you would find a cluster of ants on the motherboard and all over. You'd get 3,000 or 4,000 ants inside and they create arcs. They'll wipe out any computer."

The Johnson Space Center called in Rasberry a month or two ago in an attempt to keep the ants out of their facilities. Too late. Raspberry said he's found three colonies at the NASA site, but all have been small enough to control.

'With the computer systems they have in there, it could devastate the facility," said Rasberry. "If these ants got into the facility in the numbers they have in other locations, well, it would be awful. I've been in this business for 32 years and this is unlike anything I've ever seen. Anything. When you bring in entomologists from all over the United States and they're in shock and awe, that shows you what it's like."
 
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That is wild. I've run into situations where regular little ants completely infest the wiring harness of cars, and they're a PITA to get rid of. If you do manage to kill all of them, their dead bodies are still littered throughout the harnesses. Then the fun is going back to see what they ate into.

I can't stand ants.
 
ive experienced this before my keyboard was infested with ants
 
I read about these ants before. They're supposedly attracted to electonics! How odd!
 
lisab said:
I read about these ants before. They're supposedly attracted to electonics! How odd!

I don't know for a fact, but I'm willing to bet it's due to the heat.
 
Computantion?
 
Creative little critters aren't they.

And when you do kill these ants, the survivors turn it to their advantage: They pile up the dead, sometimes using them as a bridge to cross safely over surfaces treated with pesticide.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20080514/ap_on_re_us/texas_ants
 
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I, for one, welcome our tiny overlords.
 
Edwardo_Elric said:
ive experienced this before my keyboard was infested with ants

Bad Edwardo! That's why your computer teacher always told you not to eat while on the computer. But yeah, that's prolly why they were there.
 
  • #10
One day an ant is going to throw a bone into the air.
 

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