NewsWorld
PredictionsDigestsScorecardTimelinesArticles
NewsWorld
HomePredictionsDigestsScorecardTimelinesArticlesWorldTechnologyPoliticsBusiness
AI-powered predictive news aggregation© 2026 NewsWorld. All rights reserved.
For live open‑source updates on the Middle East conflict, visit the IranXIsrael War Room.

A real‑time OSINT dashboard curated for the current Middle East war.

Open War Room

Trending
IranIranianMilitaryStrikesIsraeliPricesCrisisRegionalGulfOperationsLaunchConflictMarketsStatesHormuzDisruptionEscalationKhameneiTimelineTargetsStraitDigestPowerProxy
IranIranianMilitaryStrikesIsraeliPricesCrisisRegionalGulfOperationsLaunchConflictMarketsStatesHormuzDisruptionEscalationKhameneiTimelineTargetsStraitDigestPowerProxy
All Articles
19th century silent film that first captured a robot attack
Hacker News
Published about 7 hours ago

19th century silent film that first captured a robot attack

Hacker News · Mar 2, 2026 · Collected from RSS

Summary

Article URL: https://www.npr.org/2026/02/28/nx-s1-5730373/georges-melies-robot-film-1897-library-of-congress-gugusse-automate Comments URL: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47218541 Points: 13 # Comments: 4

Full Article

A screenshot from George Méliès's Gugusse et l'Automate. The pioneering French filmmaker's 1897 short, which likely features the first known depiction of a robot on film, was thought lost until it was found among a box of old reels that had belonged to a family in Michigan and restored by the Library of Congress. The Frisbee Collection/Library of Congress hide caption toggle caption The Frisbee Collection/Library of Congress The Library of Congress has found and restored a long-lost silent film by Georges Méliès. The famed 19th century French filmmaker is best known for his groundbreaking 1902 science fiction adventure masterpiece Le Voyage dans la Lune (A Trip to the Moon). The 45-second-long, one-reel short Gugusse et l'Automate – Gugusse and the Automaton – was made nearly 130 years ago. But the subject matter still feels timely. The film, which can be viewed on the Library of Congress' website, depicts a child-sized robot clown who grows to the size of an adult and then attacks a human clown with a stick. The human then decimates the machine with a hammer. In an Instagram post, Library of Congress moving image curator Jason Evans Groth said the film represents, "probably the first instance of a robot ever captured in a moving image." (The word "robot" didn't appear until 1921, when Czech dramatist Karel Čapek coined it in his science fiction play R.U.R..) "Today, many of us are worried about AI and robots," said archivist and filmmaker Rick Prelinger, in an email to NPR. "Well, people were thinking about robots in 1897. Very little is new." A long journey Groth said the film arrived in a box last September from a donor in Michigan, Bill McFarland. "Bill's great grandfather, William Frisbee, was a person who loved technology," Groth said. "And in the late 19th century, must have bought a projector and a bunch of films and decided to drive them around in his buggy to share them with folks in Pennsylvania, Ohio, New York." McFarland didn't know what was on the 10 rusty reels he dropped off at the Library of Congress' National Audio-Visual Conservation Center in Culpeper, Va. A Library article about the discovery describes the battered, pre-World War I artifacts as having been, "shuttled around from basements to barns to garages," and that they, "could no longer be safely run through a projector," owing to their delicate condition. "The nitrate film stock had crumbled to bits on some; other strips were stuck together," the article said. It was a lab technician in Michigan who suggested McFarland contact the Library of Congress. "The moment we set our eyes on this box of film, we knew it was something special," said George Willeman, who heads up the Library's nitrate film vault, in the article. Willeman's team carefully inspected the trove of footage, which also contained another well-known Méliès film, Nouvelles Luttes extravagantes (The Fat and Lean Wrestling Match) and parts of The Burning Stable, an early Thomas Edison work. With the help of an external expert, they identified the reel as having been created by Méliès because it features a star painted on a pedestal in the center of the screen – the logo for Méliès Star Film Company. A pioneering filmmaker Méliès was one of the great pioneers of cinema. The scene in which a rocket lands playfully in the eye of Méliès' anthropomorphic moon in Le Voyage dans la Lune is one of the most famous moments in cinematic history. And he helped to popularize such special effects as multiple exposures and time-lapse photography. This moment from George Méliès' Le Voyage dans la Lune (A Trip to the Moon) is considered to be one of the most famous in cinematic history. George Méliès/Public Domain hide caption toggle caption George Méliès/Public Domain Presumed lost until the Library of Congress's discovery, Gugusse et L'Automate loomed large in the imaginations of science fiction and early cinema buffs for more than a century. In their 1977 book Things to Come: An Illustrated History of the Science Fiction Film, authors Douglas Menville and R. Reginald described Gugusse as possibly being, "the first true SF [science fiction] film." "While it may seem that no more discoveries remain to be made, that's not the case," said Prelinger of the work's reappearance. "Here's a genuine discovery from the early days of film that no one anticipated."


Share this story

Read Original at Hacker News

Related Articles

Hacker Newsabout 3 hours ago
Show HN: Gapless.js – gapless web audio playback

Hey HN, I just released v4 of my gapless playback library that I first built in 2017 for https://relisten.net. We stream concert recordings, where gapless playback is paramount. It's built from scratch, backed by a rigid state machine (the sole dependency is xstate) and is already running in production over at Relisten. The way it works is by preloading future tracks as raw buffers and scheduling them via the web audio API. It seamlessly transitions between HTML5 and web audio. We've used this technique for the last 9 years and it works fairly well. Occasionally it will blip slightly from HTML5->web audio, but there's not much to be done to avoid that (just when to do it - lotta nuance here). Once you get on web audio, everything should be clean. Unfortunately web audio support still lacks on mobile, in which case you can just disable web audio and it'll fallback to full HTML5 playback (sans gapless). But if you drive a largely desktop experience, this is fine. On mobile, most people use our native app. You can view a demo of the project at https://gapless.saewitz.com - just click on "Scarlet Begonias", seek halfway in the track (as it won't preload until >15s) and wait for "decoding" on "Fire on the Mountain" to switch to "ready". Then tap "skip to -2s and hear the buttery smooth segue. Comments URL: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47222271 Points: 10 # Comments: 4

Hacker Newsabout 3 hours ago
"That Shape Had None" – A Horror of Substrate Independence (Short Fiction)

Article URL: https://starlightconvenience.net/#that-shape-had-none Comments URL: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47222226 Points: 18 # Comments: 2

Hacker Newsabout 3 hours ago
Bars close and hundreds lose jobs as US firm buys Brewdog in £33M deal

Article URL: https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c05v0p1d0peo Comments URL: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47221994 Points: 74 # Comments: 46

Hacker Newsabout 5 hours ago
Show HN: Govbase – Follow a bill from source text to news bias to social posts

Govbase tracks every bill, executive order, and federal regulation from official sources (Congress.gov, Federal Register, White House). An AI pipeline breaks each one down into plain-language summaries and shows who it impacts by demographic group. It also ties each policy directly to bias-rated news coverage and politician social posts on X, Bluesky, and Truth Social. You can follow a single bill from the official text to how media frames it to what your representatives are saying about it. Free on web, iOS, and Android. https://govbase.com I'd love feedback from the community, especially on the data pipeline or what policy areas/features you feel are missing. Comments URL: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47220809 Points: 16 # Comments: 3

Hacker Newsabout 5 hours ago
Reflex (YC W23) Is Hiring Software Engineers – Python

Article URL: https://www.ycombinator.com/companies/reflex/jobs Comments URL: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47220666 Points: 0 # Comments: 0

Hacker Newsabout 5 hours ago
Launch HN: OctaPulse (YC W26) – Robotics and computer vision for fish farming

Hi HN! My name is Rohan and, together with Paul, I’m the co-founder of OctaPulse (https://www.tryoctapulse.com/). We’re building a robotics layer for seafood production, starting with automated fish inspection. We are currently deployed at our first production site with the largest trout producer in North America. You might be wondering how the heck we got into this with no background in aquaculture or the ocean industry. We are both from coastal communities. I am from Goa, India and Paul is from Malta and Puerto Rico. Seafood is deeply tied to both our cultures and communities. We saw firsthand the damage being done to our oceans and how wild fish stocks are being fished to near extinction. We also learned that fish is the main protein source for almost 55% of the world's population. Despite it not being huge consumption in America it is massive globally. And then we found out that America imports 90% of its seafood. What? That felt absurd. That was the initial motivation for starting this company. Paul and I met at an entrepreneurship happy hour at CMU. We met to talk about ocean tech. It went on for three hours. I was drawn to building in the ocean because it is one of the hardest engineering domains out there. Paul had been researching aquaculture for months and kept finding the same thing: a $350B global industry with less data visibility than a warehouse. After that conversation we knew we wanted to work on this together. Hatcheries, the early stage on-land part of production, are full of labor intensive workflows that are perfect candidates for automation. Farmers need to measure their stock for feeding, breeding, and harvest decisions but fish are underwater and get stressed when handled. Most farms still sample manually. They net a few dozen fish, anesthetize them, place them on a table to measure one by one, and extrapolate to populations of hundreds of thousands. It takes about 5 minutes per fish and the data is sparse. When we saw this process we were ba