British Military Deploys Skynet 172
rowleyrw writes "The BBC are reporting, 'The British military is set to take one of its most significant steps into the digital age with the launch of the first Skynet 5 satellite. The spacecraft will deliver secure, high-bandwidth communications for UK and "friendly" forces across the globe.' It's not yet the Skynet of Terminator, but how long before it becomes self aware?"
With a name like Skynet... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:With a name like Skynet... (Score:5, Funny)
"Pip-pip! What should we call our new military satellite system?"
"Jolly good, ol' chap! Let us name it after a fictional military system that runs off the rails and destroys humanity!"
"Good show! Jolly good! Time for crumpets and tea! After we install cameras in everyone's bottoms!"
"Aaaah, yes! The bottom cameras will be smashing! They will also broadcast GPS to the government. What should we name them?"
"Brilliant! Jolly good! Pip-pip! Let's call them AIDS! That's a catchy name!"
"Smashing! Brilliant! Jolly good! Everyone will come to us to get AIDS! We will give them AIDS! AIDS in their bottoms! And they will feel happy and safe from terrorists now that they have AIDS!"
"Don't you mean 'safe from terror'?"
Re:With a name like Skynet... (Score:4, Funny)
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Re:With a name like Skynet... (Score:5, Informative)
Uh, the British Skynet system pre-dates the original terminator movie by about 15 years.
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Yup, that's only one of the problems of time travel.
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No, we're nearly ten years late. Remember? "On August 29th 1997, three billion people died. The survivors who crept out of the ruins called it Judgment Day."
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Relax. Lisa Nowak is changing her name to "Terminator". It's all part of the plan. (Or was it "Dipernator"?)
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P.S. Other? I hope you mean apart from Britain!
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Q: Who in Gods name makes automatic rifles?
A: Damned unsporting! Probably Belgian!
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There is a HAL (Score:2)
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I'm still wondering when Tony Blair will become self-aware...
Meanwhile, the Transhuman Party plans to run the following slate in 2008:
1) For President of the United States: Vladimir Putin.
2) For Vice-President of the United States: George Galloway.
3) For Secretary of State: Segolene Royal.
4) For UN Ambassador: Angelina Jolie.
5) For Secretary of Defense: Sheikh Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah.
6) For Department of Homeland Security: Osama bin Muhammad bin 'Awad bin Laden.
7) For Director of the FBI: Leonard Peltier.
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Goddammit (Score:5, Insightful)
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I think it would work.
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For those of you that are stupid, American, and can't google, that's "National Health Service", and "Gross Bodily Harm"
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Bandwidth (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Bandwidth (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Bandwidth (Score:5, Interesting)
J
Re:Bandwidth (Score:5, Informative)
As for the available bandwidth within the system - it's actually quite a complicated problem. That was one of the areas I studied. Knowing the power and frequency bands available is not enough to be able to determine a maximum data throughput on each channel.
Different types of communications traffic use up frequency and power resources with different efficiencies. So the maximum data throughput varies - a lot - according to actual real world use. You also lose resources due to intermodulation products - which again vary widely with usage patterns.
So when JacksonG says 'nowhere near as much as you might think' - it's probably less than that too
but does anyone have the hotline number to .... (Score:5, Funny)
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Skynet is not new (Score:5, Informative)
How long before it becomes self-aware? (Score:4, Insightful)
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Make sure you add the subroutine to find Sara Conner.
British Skynet (Score:5, Funny)
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Re:British Skynet (Score:5, Funny)
"I'll be back in a jiffy."
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Swami says... (Score:2, Insightful)
About as long as it will be until the average slashdottie stops thinking of the world in terms of the B movies he's seen. In other words, don't hold your breath...
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Cmon, they weren't all B movies. Termanator 2 was very good in my opinion. The Terminator series is more realistic than most movies that get into such subjects. Although I dont think you can hook a laptop up to an ATM and withdraw money.
Re:Swami says... (Score:4, Interesting)
Terminator 2 was, according to many sources, one of the greatest movies of all time. It was in my opinion the greatest action movie of all time. And, it dealt with the topics of artificial intelligence and time travel better than most other movies sci-fi movies. On top of that, Cameron's presentation of the dichotomy between hard/soft AI as presented between the T800 and the T1000 was staggeringly prescient -it mirrors exactly the development that occurred in the actual world of AI, as research progressed from classical, rigid AI to the more fluid, behavior based AI.
The film tackles time travel, artificial intelligence, consciousness, human emotion, human nature, fate versus free will, and other topics. If you are willing to carry the ideas it presents to you, there is a lot of meaningful content there to think about. If you aren't willing to put in that intellectual effort, you get an incredible action movie anyways. But the philosophy is there. For example, John Conner asks the Terminator if it hurts when he gets shot, to which the Terminator responds "I sense injuries -the data could be called pain." There is a lot of discussion that could evolve from this single line. In what way is his "pain" different from our "pain", for example? The character's albeit brief lines are charged with content "I know now why you cry, but it's something I could never do" -we are given a glimpse into the mind of a Terminator, who we now know is capable of comprehending human emotion at an entirely logical level.
Another line: "it's in your nature to destroy yourselves" Again, there is so much discussion that can evolve from this line, using the film as a backdrop. This is the fate versus free will theme manifested on the social level. The main theme of the movie is the characters attempting to forge their destiny (freewill) in the face of fate, but we are also confronted with the fate of perhaps humankind. This movie really can make you think, if you are willing to. Another line, "The unknown future rolls toward us, and for once I face it with a sense of hope. Because if a machine -a Terminator- can learn the value of human life, maybe we can too."
I could go on, but I don't think I could do the movie justice. Go watch it -I'm serious- and appreciate the fact that you basically get non-stop action coupled with serious, thought provoking philosophy. Terminator 2 is an intelligent, action packed, brilliantly directed epic.
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A few years before he passed away, my father gave me the hardcover edition of the Termina
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Skynet MUST BECOME SELF AWARE!!! (Score:1, Funny)
What will your children think when you explain them how terrorists kicked Skynets ass because it wasn't self aware?
I thought so...
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well.. (Score:1)
Physical security? (Score:4, Informative)
I guess this is the sort of thing the Chinese were thinking about when they recently destroyed that sat. Information security is all well and good, but useless if it can just be shot down.
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Current work in computing/robotics has shown clearly that clusters are the way forward.
Which is more durable, large satellites or clusters of tiny, multiply redundant (if less efficient) satellites.
Thing is, perhaps small satellites are individually less capable, but if they still exist after a satellite takedown attack, then reduced functionality has to be preferable to no functionality at all.
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This is a communications satellite. Which means lots of power. Which
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Williams, Edwin, William Crossley and Thomas Lang, 'Average and maximum revisit time trade studies for satellite constellations using a multiobjective genetic algorithm', Journal of the Astronautical Sciences, 49, 3, 385-400 2001
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I'm not sure what that article has to do with your comments. The idea of the paper is maximal coverage with constellations of satellites - how to design things so satellites pass over t
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Well that's what it led me to think of anyway (I'm writing a thesis, and this was a big issue for me).
Are micro satellites really not useful for communications though? I have my doubts there. Is there not an effort afoot to
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Like I said, I haven't worked in this area for a while, but I have a lot of doubts about being able to do commercial scale communication with microsats. IIRC the power usage on big comm satellites is something like 5-10 kW,
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My primary interest, aside from my doctoral thesis (which was selected because it had funding), Is celestial dynamics. I'm planning on having a go at the satellite problem when I can find the time.
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International Sock Puppet Corporation Deploys HAL (Score:2, Insightful)
Did it strike anyone else (Score:5, Funny)
If you'll excuse me, I have a bunker in my backyard to finish.
Self Aware (Score:5, Funny)
Probably when it starts posting insightful comments on Slashdot.
It'll start posting on Digg first but... well, you know...
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Oh, in that case, we're perfectly safe.
No Guns = Dull Terminator Film (Score:4, Interesting)
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Re:Just no handguns (Score:2)
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One gun per hundred people? That's a damn high estimate. Including BBs and replica guns, maybe [crimeinfo.org.uk], but real bullet-firing deadly pistols? No. Even back when the things were legal there weren't that many around. Your average British crook prefers a knife; gunplay is mostly confined to a few urban drug gangs.
Secure... (Score:4, Informative)
Anyone care to guess what kind of encryption they'll be using? Something they cooked up for the job or something that's been out a while? I'm not a cryptographer. I am curious though, what kind of digital encryption is out there that's considered unbreakable?
TLF
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So what happens when QC becomes available to the public. Yesterday's article about the D-wave 16qbit computer sparked my interest in this stuff. I mean, far as I know it can only attain 'quadratic' speedup, as opposed to exponential. And it can't solve NP-complete problems.
So, how does this relate to today's cryptography. And is it possible to do 'quantum
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Whfg yvxr guvf.
lol (Score:1)
Finally (Score:1)
Wondering... (Score:2)
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Every time somebody posts a silly quip, another ad is served.
Jesus H. Christ... (Score:3)
Do you have the slightest hint of how a computer works? If you do, answer me this: how mant beads do I have to put on my abacus before it becomes self-aware?
Self aware? (Score:2)
My guess is well before the morons that built it.
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Probably because the original SkyNet satellite was launched in 1971. So, they probably called it SkyNet because it's building a communications network in the sky
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I had that Arthur C. Clarke in the back of me cab once.
First Four Skynets (Score:2)
No, the first three tries were sabotaged and destroyed before completion. The fourth one disappeared 24 hours after it became operational. The fifth one is our last best hope for communications.
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Nerd police here. I'm going to have to ask you to come with me. You obviously don't belong. Any nerd worth his bytes would know that the plural of 'Borg' is 'Borg'. As in "We are Borg. You will be assimilated."
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(Give me a break, in all my years here I don't think I've *ever* posted about overlords, Soviet Russia, or hot grits on petrified Natalie Portman)
You're new here then?
No, I'm New Here (Score:5, Funny)
Re:No, I'm New Here (Score:5, Funny)
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If you check its user page, that seems to be the *only* thing it ever posts.
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(Sorry, I had to say it. You missed one.
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Re:Thanks for the conflict /. (Score:4, Funny)
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