Over the last few decades, progress in networking and sharing telescope resources has come a long way from dialup modems sharing tiny CCD images across home telephone lines up to the current large-scale telescope networks used for education such as SkyNet, Las Cumbres Observatory and NextAstronomy. It is now the time in the development of these networks that economical large-scale sharing of resources is available to users from amateurs, youth up to graduate students and beyond and from simple colour images to long-term research projects like exoplanet monitoring.
This talk will provide a unique perspective of how to tap into the immense potential of robotic telescope access and sharing in the resources for education, outreach and research that it brings.
This talk will provide a brief overview of the history of robotic telescopes, the current landscape, the range of tools and networks available as well as possibilities and inevitabilities for the future of robotic telescopes, student research and education.