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by costigan 1511 days ago
The canonical references (e.g., http://www.ai.mit.edu/courses/6.834J-f01/Williams-remote-age...) are pretty good. If you are interested in diving very deeply into the topic, I think you'd be better off going through the work that Brian Williams has been doing since he worked on Remote Agent (https://people.csail.mit.edu/williams/Web%20site/papers.shtm...). While this more recent work reflects his individual perspective and not the ideas of his remote agent collaborators, it is a rich and detailed body of work that can be studied. Brian's collaborators at NASA Ames mostly left Ames and went on to work on a wide variety of other interesting projects. At JPL, some of the ideas in Remote Agent went into a large project called the Mission Data System. I only know about this from a distance, but my impression is that this was a rethinking of how to build spacecraft flight software from the ground up to have the flexibility that Remote Agent sought while also sticking close to JPL's software development and testing methodology. It's described here: https://mds.jpl.nasa.gov/public/
1 comments

That's quite a bit of homework, but that's the sort of thing I was looking for :)

The first link is the one I keep coming back to, and I keep finding interesting idea. But it didn't occur to me to follow the people involved.

Thanks for the references!