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Someday, an author might write a book called The Old Robot and the Sea. And oh, the stories that Papa Mau could tell.

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Liquid Robotics, the maker of robot vehicles that explore the ocean and collect data, announced today that one of its robots (named Papa Mau) has traveled all the way from San Francisco to Australia.

The trip took a little over one year. The robot set a new world record for distance traveled by an autonomous vehicle on land or sea. Papa Mau survived gale force storms, fended off sharks, skirted the Great Barrier Reef and surfed the East Australian Current to reach its final destination at a harbor in Bundaberg, Queensland, Australia.

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The Wave Glider unmanned maritime vehicle (UMV), which uses waves to propel itself. The vehicles can travel long distances because they harvest natural energy. They use waves to generate propulsion and have solar collectors to power the electronics that collect data and then transmit it wirelessly. They can go six months without a maintenance check and can prowl the ocean for as long as two years.

The company doesn't sell the robots. Rather, it sells the data that they collect, and they're part of the trend toward Big Data companies. Subscribers can look at a web site to see the data collected. They are doing tasks such as testing the water for leaks around oil rigs or measuring the radioactivity of the ocean outside of the Fukushima nuclear reactor facility in Japan.

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The company was started in 2007. It company raised $22 million in a fourth round of funding in June from VantagePoint Capital Partners, with participation from oilfield services firm Schlumberger. The company is headed by Bill Vass, a former Sun Microsystems executive. He made headlines last year when he recruited Java programming language creator James Gosling as chief software architect.

Liquid Robotics is also announcing today it has selected five PacX Challenge finalists who will compete for a $50,000 research grant from BP and six months of free Wave Glider ocean data services. The winner will be selected based on the most interesting research idea that makes use of the data from the Wave Gliders. Vass and Gosling traveled to Sydney, Australia to announce the achievement and claim the Guinness World Record honor.

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"To say we are excited and proud of Papa Mau reaching his final destination is an understatement," said Bill Vass, CEO of Liquid Robotics. "We set off on the PacX journey to demonstrate that Wave Glider technology could not only survive the high seas and a journey of this length, but more importantly, collect and transmit ocean data in real-time from the most remote portions of the Pacific Ocean. We've demonstrated delivery of ocean data services through the most challenging ocean conditions. Mission accomplished."

A second robot, named Benjamin, is expected to arrive in Australia early next year. Two more are heading for Japan. All told, Wave Gliders have already traveled hundreds of thousands of miles.

The five research contest finalists are:

J. Michael Beman, University of California Merced, Merced, Calif. Nicole Goebel, University of California Santa Cruz, Santa Cruz, Calif. Andrew Lucas, Scripps Institution of Oceanography, La Jolla, Calif. Elise Ralph, Wise Eddy, Boston, Mass. Tracy Villareal, University of Texas, Port Aransas, Texas