Our tax dollars at work
- Wolfman Walt
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Our tax dollars at work
<a href="http://news.yahoo.com/fc?tmpl=fc&cid=34 ... sporter</A>
Glad to hear my tax dollars are going into something that might actually benefit the military. Say, weren't all the Segways recalled or something? Regardless, its interesting that they believe this thing will have an effective AI to do well in battle. Atleast it can chase soccer balls? Discuss!
Glad to hear my tax dollars are going into something that might actually benefit the military. Say, weren't all the Segways recalled or something? Regardless, its interesting that they believe this thing will have an effective AI to do well in battle. Atleast it can chase soccer balls? Discuss!
Harriers for the cup.
- trythebill
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benefitting the military? try getting something bigger than 5.56.
anyway, why would this be better than developing a tracked robot to do the same things with an already existing platform? seems like battle field terrain would be pretty unforgiving to a two-wheeled segway.
anyway, why would this be better than developing a tracked robot to do the same things with an already existing platform? seems like battle field terrain would be pretty unforgiving to a two-wheeled segway.
nice, maybe we could be a robot baseball league going like that old nes game. it would beat watching baseball now.So far, the robot can chase an orange soccer ball and kick it. The next goal is to teach the robot the rules of the game and get it to communicate with human players.
- Wolfman Walt
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I was thinking the same thing about it as a terrain problem. The Segways were recalled in the first place because it sometimes would fall over. No problem since theres no human user, but on anything besides normal concrete, I imagine it hard when you consider how uneven alot of the terrain is, especially where we're fighting now. The best they can hope for is that this thing will be useful for clearing, but then how would it ever target or be able to tell a target from a hostage or civilian. Sounds like a waste of money personally.trythebill wrote: anyway, why would this be better than developing a tracked robot to do the same things with an already existing platform? seems like battle field terrain would be pretty unforgiving to a two-wheeled segway.
Harriers for the cup.
- johnnygothisgun
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- Wolfman Walt
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- InvisibleMonkey
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Haha, cool, it's like having my own fucking squire."or following humans around while hauling their gear."
Nice way of talking to the people he's trying to appeal to, calling them "geeks". Haha, why not just say "The more we have our technology among the tech world, particcularly those young acne-infested virgin geeks who live in their parents basement, it could only help us.""My personal reason for liking (this program) is we would love to get more Segways at universities. The more we have our technology among the tech world, particularly the young geeks, it could only help us."
From what I read though, and I may be mistaken, but the Pentagon is developing software for autonomous sytems; it doesn't necessarily specify if it's all being spent on the Segway. I'd have to see this thing in action, and maybe with time and alot of work, especially if they work all the bugs out, it could be useful in many situations.
- Wolfman Walt
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I don't know if this has much to do with this all, but I'll contribute it nevertheless:
I've seen some of those battle robot prototypes for urban warfare / house investigations and normal battlefields. There were two of these prototypes:
The one doing the house investigations looked like a stereotype of a robot. It went on small wheels and some goofy levers that helped it to climb stairs. It had cameras all over it, infrared scanners and sensitive noise sensors. Oh, and a gatling BB-gun (this was just for the testing, it's gonna be a real gun in the final version, of course). It went through the house and made sure it was free of enemies and booby-traps. It was followed by another, smaller robot which ensured that no one went to the rooms that had been marked as clean. There were two modes in the robot: the green mode meant it would alarm the "controller" who saw everything through those cams and scanners. The red mode meant it would shoot intruders at sight. The "controller" nearby switched those mods on and off and if needed took total control of the robot.
The second one was a CPU attached to a military Hummer vehicle, with an M60 mounted on top of it. The computer controls both the movement of the car (which was pretty simple, it was like making A Need For Speed -game, the designers described it) and the firing of the machinegun. This prototype could also be controlled both manually and by computer's AI, depending on the situation. This one looked real cool, because the Hummer could overcome most of the obstacles and if the computer calculates it's too hard to climb it decides an alternative route to the destination. And the machinegunfire was extremely accurate. The computer calculates the speed of wind, recoil and other things affecting accuracy and minimizes everything. It was über cool.
I've seen some of those battle robot prototypes for urban warfare / house investigations and normal battlefields. There were two of these prototypes:
The one doing the house investigations looked like a stereotype of a robot. It went on small wheels and some goofy levers that helped it to climb stairs. It had cameras all over it, infrared scanners and sensitive noise sensors. Oh, and a gatling BB-gun (this was just for the testing, it's gonna be a real gun in the final version, of course). It went through the house and made sure it was free of enemies and booby-traps. It was followed by another, smaller robot which ensured that no one went to the rooms that had been marked as clean. There were two modes in the robot: the green mode meant it would alarm the "controller" who saw everything through those cams and scanners. The red mode meant it would shoot intruders at sight. The "controller" nearby switched those mods on and off and if needed took total control of the robot.
The second one was a CPU attached to a military Hummer vehicle, with an M60 mounted on top of it. The computer controls both the movement of the car (which was pretty simple, it was like making A Need For Speed -game, the designers described it) and the firing of the machinegun. This prototype could also be controlled both manually and by computer's AI, depending on the situation. This one looked real cool, because the Hummer could overcome most of the obstacles and if the computer calculates it's too hard to climb it decides an alternative route to the destination. And the machinegunfire was extremely accurate. The computer calculates the speed of wind, recoil and other things affecting accuracy and minimizes everything. It was über cool.
I think it's pretty dangerous. I mean, no program is bug-free or hacker-proof, so how can you be sure this nifty little robot won't shoot you with the gun he is carrying for you?
I mean, it's a good idea if you can get it running perfectly, but nothing is perfect, especially not before major testing, and I'm sure testing war robots will cause plenty of stupid accidents and injuries.
I mean, it's a good idea if you can get it running perfectly, but nothing is perfect, especially not before major testing, and I'm sure testing war robots will cause plenty of stupid accidents and injuries.
- Mandalorian FaLLouT GoD
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maybe they pissed on stalin's grass or kicked his dog. i can see killing 20 million to find the one fucker who kicked my dog.
Blargh wrote:While the way in which the stance is made could be done with at least a pretense of civility - being far more conducive to others actually paying attention than copious swearing - it just wouldn't be Mandy otherwise.
S4ur0n27 wrote:Dexter is getting MFG'ed for the first time
Koki wrote:He must be Mandallorian FaLLouT God'ded ASAP
If that many people pissed on his grass It'd be either dead or really friggin' high! (I cannot remember whether pee is good for grass or bad for it)maybe they pissed on stalin's grass or kicked his dog. i can see killing 20 million to find the one fucker who kicked my dog.
But your're right. Killing 20 million to kill one guy is an acceptable cause. His poor dog! :lol: