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United States Hardware

The Future of Battlefield Robots 237

Alien54 writes "The Pentagon is drafting the Segway two-wheeled scooter as part of a plan to develop battlefield robots that think on their own and communicate with troops. Dean Kamen, the Segway's inventor, says he had no qualms about enlisting his brainchild into the military."
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The Future of Battlefield Robots

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  • by xirtam_work ( 560625 ) on Saturday November 29, 2003 @06:38AM (#7586559)
    Jonny Five is alive!
  • by AvantLegion ( 595806 ) on Saturday November 29, 2003 @06:39AM (#7586560) Journal
    By the time battlefield robots are feasible for use, the Segway technology will almost certainly be outdated and/or improved upon.

    I would at least hope for something a bit more speedy/agile. Seems like these things would be overpriced tin cans used for RPG round practice in the field.

  • by Maestro4k ( 707634 ) on Saturday November 29, 2003 @06:39AM (#7586561) Journal
    I find it particularly amusing that Cartoon Network just had/is having an Iron Giant marathon and this article shows up. :)
  • by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Saturday November 29, 2003 @06:40AM (#7586562)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • by KeeperS ( 728100 ) on Saturday November 29, 2003 @06:43AM (#7586574)
    "The wars of the future will not be fought on the battlefield or at sea. They will be fought in space, or possibly on top of a very tall mountain. In either case, most of the actual fighting will be done by small robots. And as you go forth today remember always your duty is clear: To build and maintain those robots. Thank you."
  • by magical22 ( 664542 ) on Saturday November 29, 2003 @06:44AM (#7586575)
    Instead of re inventing the wheel, just create a device that you can turn the machines of todays society against the enemy... who needs a segway when you can just have it pitch a pepsi into the head of someone!
  • by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Saturday November 29, 2003 @06:46AM (#7586580)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • Re:haha (Score:4, Funny)

      by heironymouscoward ( 683461 ) <heironymouscoward AT yahoo DOT com> on Saturday November 29, 2003 @06:54AM (#7586602) Journal
      No, the humans would be following the robots, carrying spare battery packs and very long cables.
    • Hmmm. Sigh, I know it was a joke, but wouldn't you think they'd put in a fuel cell into the Segwaynator? It'd last a lot longer than a dozen miles. Or use a mobile generator to juice up the bots.

      And how long exactly d'ya think a hummvee goes before it runs out of gas? A tank? Much of army logisitics involves moving giant gasoline tankers around behind all that mechanical infantry.

      A fuel-celled powered or a simple diesel-powered mobile generator charging a few hundred Segwaynators would require refueling a
  • by heironymouscoward ( 683461 ) <heironymouscoward AT yahoo DOT com> on Saturday November 29, 2003 @06:48AM (#7586585) Journal
    The scene: a dim room in the Pentagon, two generals are sharing a bottle of malt with an admiral.

    "Just imagine: a robot army that can think for itself, stand upright, speak clear English..."

    "It sounds like a dream, but with those new scooters, it could happen."

    "At last, an Army we control..."

    "... no more drugs, booze,..."

    "... or sleep, even!"

    "There's the problem of terrain..."

    "Yes, those wheels don't work well in brush."

    "Maybe we can make them larger? Like HUGE?"

    "Self-balancing tanks? Sounds interesting..."

    "... and expensive. I like it."

    "... and then we can keep the scooters for backup"

    "You mean 'OPERATION NO DISSENT'?"

    "Most of our cities are 'wheelchair friendly' already"

    "Excellent. And we can just use the tanks in the others."

    "Bottle's empty. MAJOR! MORE MALT!"
  • one problem (Score:5, Interesting)

    by mrsev ( 664367 ) <mrsev@spyma c . com> on Saturday November 29, 2003 @06:49AM (#7586590)
    How do you explain to a robot the difference between an enemy and a civilian........ In the middle east a shepard has a beard, a turban and a kalashnikov. Enemy troops has a beard, a turban and a kalashnikov. This seems to me to be another pentagon wanking fantasy. (Now for the offtopic rant part....)Then again this has never troubled the US forces. (see. Panama, Sudan, Afganistan, Iraq, Korea, Vietnam). If only they were to spend as much money and effort on peace. With this you even create new customers for you products.
    • Re:one problem (Score:2, Interesting)

      by p2sam ( 139950 )
      Replace the word "robot" with "US soldier", and your post still makes sense. I find it interesting the media keep us abreast with daily reports on troop casualties, but fail to report on civilian casualties.
    • Re:one problem (Score:4, Informative)

      by Fulkkari ( 603331 ) on Saturday November 29, 2003 @08:54AM (#7586796)
      How do you explain to a robot the difference between an enemy and a civilian

      Why should you? I didn't see any mention about it doing any shooting. They only mentioned using it for transport, like taking injured soldiers to safty. If something, maybe they have an algorithm how to take cover, but that's about it, I think. This isn't the movies, you know...

    • Re:one problem (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Glock27 ( 446276 ) on Saturday November 29, 2003 @09:11AM (#7586841)
      How do you explain to a robot the difference between an enemy and a civilian........ In the middle east a shepard has a beard, a turban and a kalashnikov. Enemy troops has a beard, a turban and a kalashnikov. This seems to me to be another pentagon wanking fantasy. (Now for the offtopic rant part....)Then again this has never troubled the US forces. (see. Panama, Sudan, Afganistan, Iraq, Korea, Vietnam). If only they were to spend as much money and effort on peace. With this you even create new customers for you products.

      ROFL. Let's put it another way, how do you tell a human soldier the difference between an enemy and a civilian, when neither wears a uniform and either might be armed? At night, using night vision equipment? (For a robot, our soldiers are a relatively easy problem, it will involve IFF procedures and probably be more foolproof than with human troops/error.)

      Here's the algorithm:
      1) Robot detects a non-US-soldier in it's field of regard (possibly 360 degrees).
      2) Robot blasts out, in the local vernacular at 120 db "ON THE GROUND NOW OR YOU DIE!"
      3) If the intruders do anything besides start laying down on the ground within two seconds, a hypervelocity 5 mm. round strikes "upside the head". (No overpenetration and collateral damage with this type of round.)
      4) Humans are called in to evaluate the situation.

      In situations involving groups of people, the robot can break out the heavy weapons, designate laser guided artillery or bombs, or just call in satellite guided air support. BTW, any of these activities could involve a "human in the loop" if there are sufficient humans and good communications.

      At any rate, I find this a highly plausible scenario that will likely happen within 20 years on the ground. (It will take a while due to power source constraints.) It is already happening today, in the air, with a "human in the loop". See Predator.

      The main key is keeping the robots stupid enough that they don't develop true initiative. ;-)

      • Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • Re:one problem (Score:2, Interesting)

        by kd5ujz ( 640580 )
        I think 2 seconds is too much. If you have ever played at an indoor paintball field that had a close range "give or hurt" rule you would understand. If you run up on someone, and are within 3-5 feet, you must yell give or hurt. If they give up, you let them go, if they do anything else then they are fair game. The problem is that when you first get acquainted with this rule, you end up getting shot a LOT when you give the command. You have to have the gun shouldered, and have a damn good shot on whoever is
        • I think 2 seconds is too much. If you have ever played at an indoor paintball field that had a close range "give or hurt" rule you would understand. If you run up on someone, and are within 3-5 feet, you must yell give or hurt. If they give up, you let them go, if they do anything else then they are fair game.

          The first point I would make is that we're risking robot life, not human life. If those challenged don't respond, and after two seconds(!) don't respond by at least being non-aggressive, then I'd say

      • Ought to weed out the hearing-impaired locals, anyway. =]
    • An enemy is anyone who doesnt have an implanted RFID tag silly!
    • by Shivetya ( 243324 ) on Saturday November 29, 2003 @11:00AM (#7587229) Homepage Journal
      Western sensibilities tell us that there is a difference between a combatant and a civilian. Yet no one has told that to the other side.

      During WW2 we didn't really care and perhaps that guilted some people. Eventually with the UN is became the default handcuffs to put on any Western power.

      The problem with separating the two is that in the long run the wars are prolonged and so is the suffering. You cannot win a war by just killing the other sides soldiers, they will just make more. To win a war you have to break their will and ability to wage it. People will flee their oppressive regimes if that same cannot protect them from the folly of their actions.

      Spending on "peace" as the previous write mentions with his only anti-US rant; forgetting more people died at the hands of other countries - usually within those same countries he listed by their own people; only gets you as far as your enemy wants you too.

      In other words, get out of your ignorant dream world. I suppose we should ignore what happens in other countries as long as it doesn't happen here? Well some of them decided to take their little spat to our shores, what are we supposed to do? Just forget about it? Worked well with the USS Cole eh?, the first Trade Center bombing, the barracks bombings in Lebanon and Saudia Arabia?

      Summary, it is stupid to spend on peace when the other guy isn't. Its even dumber to pretend that one side is the problem. We live is a violent world in which most of those loonies use the US as an excuse to pummel their own people. Frankly the West has spent too much time sitting on its hands ignoring the problem but the blood is still there. Ignoring slaughter is the same as sponsoring it.
    • Re:one problem (Score:3, Interesting)

      by swb ( 14022 )
      How do you explain to a robot the difference between an enemy and a civilian........ In the middle east a shepard has a beard, a turban and a kalashnikov. Enemy troops has a beard, a turban and a kalashnikov.

      You call anyone with a Kalishnikov an enemy and kill them all. Don't want to get killed? Leave your AK in your hut, bury it under a rock, but if you carry it, expect to get engaged as a combatant. Combatants carry weapons, non-combatants don't.

      Allowing non-combatants to carry arms only creates th
      • by ChickenAintDone ( 713461 ) on Saturday November 29, 2003 @12:42PM (#7587722)
        But how on earth will he heard his sheep without an assault rifle?
    • How do you explain to a robot the difference between an enemy and a civilian........ In the middle east a shepard has a beard, a turban and a kalashnikov. Enemy troops has a beard, a turban and a kalashnikov.

      Human infantry will have exactly the same problem- the difficulty of recognizing enemies isn't unique to robotics. (In fact, the currently active and near-future battlefield robots all use remotely-viewed cameras to detect targets, so its still a human who makes the decision)

      A battlefield robot may
    • And tough shit if he doesn't.

    • Ok I'm game how do you do that? As I recall we've been trying to do that for the last 40 years, but it seems all we end up doing is supporting terrorists/dictators/criminals who turn against us as soon as the money stops flowing. Until the world population growth gets under control, the whole tribal/religious us verses everyone else mentality is eliminated, equal rights for woman and children, and some form of real education is put into place we are forever going to have problems in the third world. Cult
  • Cyborg Warriors (Score:2, Interesting)

    So if this project (and others that the US-military is funding), turns out to be succesfull, and allows machines like segway to do most of the tasks humans can do, can we expect them to replace human soldiers? Still I wonder if it wouldn't be bether to equip such machines with more than two wheels... A high center of gravity is good for the robots cameras and sensors, but it also make it easier for enemies to spot it.
    • So if this project (and others that the US-military is funding), turns out to be succesfull, and allows machines like segway to do most of the tasks humans can do, can we expect them to replace human soldiers?

      Not in a while anyways. This project doesn't seem about replacing humans. Instead it just seems to be a project on how to make machines do maintance and such. Instead of having soldiers having heavy backpacks with supplies, this robot just carries them behind and gives them when needed. And if someo

  • Not quite showtime! I guess even Big O [paradigm-city.com] had to come from somewhere [segway.com]...
  • by Lord Kano ( 13027 ) on Saturday November 29, 2003 @06:54AM (#7586603) Homepage Journal
    Ok, we will all concede that losing fewer lives is the goal. However, there is one good part about potential losing lives. It is this, the people of your country (assuming that it is a free country) are not going to tolerate unnecessary loss of life. This keeps most leaders from provoking wars unnecessarily. If the cause is to stop Hitler, people understand that we may take heavy losses, but in the end it is worth is.

    If the cause is removing Milosovic from power, people are going to tolerate much fewer losses before they start to demand that we bring our boys home.

    Removing this from the battlefield of the future does two things, one it will allow future world leaders to bully less technically advanced countries even more than they do now and two it will increase the amount of terrorism directed at civilians. If I can't kill your people on the battlefield because there are no "people" on the battlefield, I'll do what I have to do to take the war to your "people".

    We should proceed with caution.

    LK
  • by gotpaint32 ( 728082 ) on Saturday November 29, 2003 @07:00AM (#7586611) Journal
    Dean Kamen mades some useful inventions in his time, but the segway just doesn't seem to meet his list of impressive accolades such as the stair climbing wheelchair and dialysis equipment. Now the military has plans to convert this thing into a militray robot, the idea seems a bit too odd to work. As wonderful as the segway may be for paved sidewalks of the United States, these things are far too slow and bulky to be of much use on the battlefield. Using two large wheels, even with gyroscopic assist, is a bad idea for something that should be as adaptable as a battlefield robot. We realized that wheels were a bad solution to handling varied terrain (hence tanks have treads) a long time ago, why is it suddenly fashionable again? Have the laws of physics suddenly changed? The next step in technology should involve robots with legs (similar to insects for most stable configuration). Though not nearly as efficient as wheels on flat terrain it is quite possibly the most adaptable form of locomotion.
  • by Genghis9 ( 575560 ) * on Saturday November 29, 2003 @07:06AM (#7586617)
    ...what's the point of smart robots?

  • by Anonymous Coward

    one man , 500 pounds of C4 and a car from blowing you and your checkpoints to smithereens ?

    it seems there are 2 wars being fought, the fantasy one where USA is fighting this imaginary foe (like aliens or something) which has a technological superiority beyond all measure and therefore the USA must invent the most sophisticated solutions it can find

    and then there is the reality of war which is fighting men who do not wear a uniform with RPG's and donkeys or suicide bombers that look like women or young men
  • by I am Jack's username ( 528712 ) on Saturday November 29, 2003 @07:16AM (#7586639)

    As a smart and good man said: "Peace cannot be kept by force. It can only be achieved by understanding... Problems cannot be solved at the same level of awareness that created them." It seems we'll have to amend [cgpl.org] his philosophy that "The pioneers of a warless world are the youth that refuse military service." tho.

    As for "The robots would navigate and communicate with each other autonomously, but a human would oversee the whole network.", they'll still get orders from the kind of people who volunteer to join, erm, wait, where's my asbestos suit?

    Old joke -
    Lt: Are they attacking from the east or the south?
    RSHT: Yes.
    Lt: Excuse me?
    RSHT: Sir, yes sir!

    • If I'm off-topic, then so is the parent post...

      The only problem is that the bad guys aren't nearly as interested in Peace as the rest of us.

      Look at the African warlords as the best example of what happens when power gets into the hands of a few bad guys and there's no one around to shut them up. How long would it take the US or Europe to devolve into similar madness if our strong military/police backed governments were to fall? It's not as if there aren't strong man tactics already being used in first wor
    • by b-baggins ( 610215 ) on Saturday November 29, 2003 @10:37AM (#7587116) Journal
      As an actual smart person said: Except for ending slavery, communism, facism and nazism, war has never solved anything.

      Peace happened in Germany when we killed those who wanted war; we didn't come to an understanding with them.

      Peace happened in Japan when we killed those who wanted war; we didn't come to an understanding with them.

      Peace will happen in Palestine when we kill those who want war; we cannot come to an understanding with them (hint: it ISN'T the Israelis who want war. The name of the man who wants war starts with Yassar and ends with Arafat.)

      We will have peace in Iraq when we kill those who want war; can't come to an understanding with them.

      This concept is only difficult for people who have adopted moral relativism as their world view.
      • Peace happened in Germany when we killed those who wanted war; we didn't come to an understanding with them.

        Wrongo. Germany was a democracy. War was favored by a majority of the population.

        The majority of the population was not killed. They came to an understanding while staring into machinegun barrels.

        Peace happened in Japan when we killed those who wanted war; we didn't come to an understanding with them.

        Wrongo again. The majority of the nation wanted war. They weren't killed; they came to an
        • Wrongo. Germany was a democracy. War was favored by a majority of the population.

          WRONG. The Nazi party was elected by the popular majority, sure. However, they passed an act called the enabling act which effectively disbanded the Reichstag (german parliament), gaving them absolute control of the government. They passed this act only by having a lot of armed "brown shirts" (SA) standing around and coercing the public representatives to vote in favour of it.

          Wrongo again. The majority of the nation wanted
        • Germany was NOT a democracy when they started their aggression. Have you ever heard of Kristallenacht? That was the night the MINORITY Nazi party seized power in a coup and quickly killed and imprisoned their enemies.

          The Japanese people lived under a terribly brutal military dictatorship. I lived in that country for 18 months about twenty years ago and had the opportunity to speak with a number of people who were alive during that time. The stories that strike me the most were from the man who was a nine-y
          • Germany was NOT a democracy when they started their aggression. Have you ever heard of Kristallenacht? That was the night the MINORITY Nazi party seized power in a coup and quickly killed and imprisoned their enemies.

            What a joke. A supreme joke. Your line about "do you actually study any history?" applies 5000x stronger to yourself.

            Your definition of Kristallnacht is so completely wrong that I'm laughing too hard to read the post any further. Even with the sorry state of US education, I'd expect a typ
      • Peace will come when we kill those who want war...

        By that reasoning, war could just as easily be averted by killing the parent poster. Interesting.

        As an actual smart person said: Except for ending slavery, communism, facism and nazism, war has never solved anything.

        Tragically, there isn't another smart person around to explain the concept of rhetoric. It is unfortunately true that war is sometimes made necessary. The actions by Axis powers in World War II the parent cites certainly fit the bill--a

      • Yeah, and the name of the biggest hippie peacenik is Ariel Sharon right? You either have an agenda or are a fool.

  • by Genghis9 ( 575560 ) * on Saturday November 29, 2003 @07:24AM (#7586655)
    How would they get the infrastructure in place to charge these things in a hot desert setting? Or in the mountains of Afghanistan. I mean, the terrain itself would be impossible to negotiate.

    And the problem in both those places is that the enemy is unknown. Every civilian is a potential guerilla.

    Seems like a solution, but to the wrong problem.
    • amm... that's their plan. first, create an infrastructure all across the country to charge and maintain those robots, then send them out... and realize that while building the infrastructure for the robots you've managed to reconstruct the nation :-)
    • Solar collectors, generators? What are you talking about... our whole military depends on electricity in one form or another.

      In any case by the time they decide to use this batteries will be much improved and who says they can't load them up with 5 times the number the consumer model uses? These are supposed to be autonomous so they could instead carry the weight of a passenger in batteries minus the new surveillance equipment, whatever else.

      Sounds like a question about energy and infrastructure but then
  • The future of war... (Score:5, Interesting)

    by heironymouscoward ( 683461 ) <heironymouscoward AT yahoo DOT com> on Saturday November 29, 2003 @07:28AM (#7586662) Journal
    It appears that war has segregated into several models:

    1. Bushwar/guerilla warfare, involving low-tech small arms, often young soldiers, civilians, etc. This is the most common kind of war, the one with the most casualties (think: 3m dead in Congo in the last 5 years, by one estimate), also the one we hear least about. Robots? Big joke.

    2. The Empire Strikes Back: hi-tech warfare against regimes or populations that have the wrong opinions, the wrong politics, or just happen to be in the wrong place. Robots? Not needed, it all happens by satellite-controlled smartbombs.

    3. Police operations: friendly or unfriendly ground occupation with the goal of creating some kind of stability. Robots? Not likely, this is the most delicate form of aggression.

    4. Entertainment: keep the public happy with videos of our heroes wiping out the enemy. Robots? Excellent - fewer of those body bags, and more potential for explosions.

    Sigh.

  • ... all I need to do is invent the light-sabre, and I'll be essentially invulnerable, 'cos not one of them will be able to hit me :-) Cool :-)

    Oh yeah, and become a jedi. Damn.

    Simon
  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • by Raynach ( 713366 )
    Eh, and so it begins... we have our Terminators... and they're based on Segways. And you'd think they'd be a bit more intimidating, no?
  • And if your curious what a robotic war might be like, look no further than Spiders [e-sheep.com].
  • it would be pretty funny to see these things going in circles after someone shot out a tire on them . . .
  • by blankmange ( 571591 ) on Saturday November 29, 2003 @07:47AM (#7586699)
    Dean Kamen, the Segway's inventor, says he had no qualms about enlisting his brainchild into the military
    Why should he have any qualms about it -- it simply means more $$$ for him....
  • Occupation... (Score:2, Insightful)

    by xchino ( 591175 )
    "Researchers say potential applications for the robots include performing search missions on the battlefield, transporting injured soldiers to safety, or following humans around while hauling their gear."

    Of course the "potential applications" given to the public are all politically correct, but knowing the DoD the true intended applications if for something more sinister like reducing the number of human heads needed for an occupation force.

    Right now we have our forces spread out all over the world.
  • I'd rather see... (Score:5, Interesting)

    by foniksonik ( 573572 ) on Saturday November 29, 2003 @08:35AM (#7586766) Homepage Journal
    Segway technology applied to new hi-tech wheelbarrows, shopping carts, toy wagons, wheelchairs, etc.. anything that currently carries weight, needs to remain upright and is manpowered 90% of the time. Segway's gyro-motor controls would make these tools 1000% more useful and convenient.

    I can easily see a wheelchair at the price point. Some redundant non-electric safety would need to be implemented.

    I can also see a severly dumbed down version used for shopping carts, generic wagons of all sorts... two-wheeled payload carriers. You have a device that's only purpose is to keep itself upright. The cheapest version just does that. A more expensive one would have a motor for forward motion. More expensive would have a proximity monitor and could follow you at an exact distance and have collision detectors to avoid running into things.

    • by Illserve ( 56215 )
      WHY!? What is this obsession with 2 wheeled devices that burn power to stay upright.

      A 4 wheeled version does the same thing for free!

      Or consider the genius of the wheelbarrow, a 2 wheeled device that uses a prop to stay upright when still. Brilliant!

      This is technology taken to ridiculous extremes.

      The segway is a misapplication of technology. Kamen's robotic wheelchair is genius because it adds functionality but is still just as useful as the standard electric wheelchair.

      But the segway is just dumb,
      • How fast can you carry 700 lbs of concrete in a wheelbarrow? Without tipping it over? It's harder and more exhausting work than you think... 4 wheels? Your turning radius just shrunk to well below that required to get around a normal construction site, especially if it's rated for that amount of weight. There are plenty of situations where having a very agile durable payload carrier could increase efficiency well beyond the expense, plus with economies of scale price would become moot.

        Yes those devices are
  • Doh (Score:3, Funny)

    by BlueTrin ( 683373 ) on Saturday November 29, 2003 @08:37AM (#7586770) Homepage Journal

    Soldier 1: SHOOT! SHOOT! Damn piece of crap!

    Robot: *bzzz* *System Slashdotted, rebooting in 35 seconds*

  • by carcosa30 ( 235579 ) on Saturday November 29, 2003 @08:41AM (#7586776)
    Sounds to me like functionoids based on the Segway would be much more useful for keeping down domestic unrest, in clean and uncluttered US cities, than they would in war zones rife with craters, gravel, and corpses.

    Geeks need to consider the ramifications of the technology they help to create; otherwise you're selling your own freedoms.
  • by lo_fye ( 303245 ) <derek@noSpAm.geekunity.com> on Saturday November 29, 2003 @09:05AM (#7586815) Homepage Journal
    They say it's Human Transporter, but now we see that it was just a clever ruse all along... its true name is Segway Human Terminator.
  • by Illserve ( 56215 ) on Saturday November 29, 2003 @09:06AM (#7586823)
    Who in their right mind would base a robot soldier on a platform that has to expend energy to STAND STILL. It is one of the principal advantages of a robot that it can stand around idle without burning much power (unlike people).

    So now you take away even that. Brilliant.

    What's next, soft skin that covers fragile power conduits? How about a CPU that's exposed to the elements? Oh oh, I got it, a robot soldier that can only operate in environments with temperatures between 50 and 105 degrees farenheit.

  • by SmallFurryCreature ( 593017 ) on Saturday November 29, 2003 @09:09AM (#7586835) Journal
    Phew at least they given up on the idea of using them as troop transports.

    America seems desperate to introduce all kind of high tech gadgets to make war easier. Yesterday there was a short news story about afghanistan on the BBC. A US post in a contested area was visited by reporters. At night the post comes under attack from rocket fire. The US calls in artilary on where it thinks the rockets have come from. In the morning they go out and check. What they find is missles setup with timers aimed at the post (some had not gone off). So all these highly equipped soldiers plus all the awacs stuff flying up there totally failed to spot a bunch of guys coming in, setting up a few missles and leaving again.

    The US took heavy fire (no losses this time or at least not shown) the enemy took ZERO fire. Not one round.

    Says it all really.

    US army. War is putting a lot of soldiers on the ground with guns and getting them to kill more of the enemy then the enemy kills of you. This has worked for thousand of years. You are not going to be able to chance it. You want to because you don't want another vietnam. Well now you got two vietnams. War is hell but more importantly war only works when it is hell. Only when you totally slaughter the enemy will you convince the enemy to stop fighting. Little clever robots are not going to do this.

    • War is putting a lot of soldiers on the ground with guns and getting them to kill more of the enemy then the enemy kills of you.
      The U.S. and its allies in Vietnam managed to kill more of the enemy, but the U.S. still gave up.

      Only when you totally slaughter the enemy will you convince the enemy to stop fighting.
      Maybe so, within limits. If you show that you will even kill those that surrender, the enemy has all the more reason for fighting.
  • by In-gin-eer ( 643894 ) on Saturday November 29, 2003 @09:31AM (#7586897)
    What about using Power Wheels [fisher-price.com] instead of a Segway? Hell, they can hold 130 pounds and move 5 mph. That's a machine gun and plenty of ammo.

    Plus, I imagine Fisher Price makes much sturdier equipment than most military contractors anyway.

    Phear Children.
  • What is the deal with this thing? It's one of those 'wow cool' inventions with no practical use at all.

    Once again, I refer you to maddox: http://maddox.xmission.com/c.cgi?u=segway_more_com plicated_than_it_needs_to_be [xmission.com]
  • by krenskeoz ( 466753 ) on Saturday November 29, 2003 @10:21AM (#7587046)
    The simple answer is they are very expendable and can be made very structurally strong.

    Now the longer answer: A ruggedized sedgeway (or better yet something that can place itself into a permanently low power stable position, eg 3 wheels or more.) would be able to be very rugged, armoured and would be fairly easy to repair. The same can not be said for soldiers. A armoured trash can, can afford to wait until it is attacked before returning fire safe in the fact it is not important, is highly survivable and will probably manage .5 of a second after it is attacked to lay a burst at it's attacker.

    Now given the fact that mass production sedgeways cost $5000 odd and after you equip it for military purposes probably $50000. It is still a great deal. In fact I can see 10 000 being purchased at the drop of a hat.

    Have two or three trundling along as point teams on patrol. (The bad guys can't let em get too close so they become the targets and that exposes the bad guys.) Set them as forward guards and you can keep the potential bad guys back. Make some that are very menacing (Big, black, with big stubby riot guns, maybe some big speakers, Bright strobes and nasty voices) and they could be very successful crowd controllers as well.

    Most of the time in guerilla and urban areas they they sit still (unless patrolling) and so you could have 100's of guards set and flagging themselves for attention if something unusual or out of their ROE takes place. So you get 100 guys sitting in a comfy baracks somewhere, controlling, interdicting or at least observing a large area. Rather than 5 times that number actually being out in the thick of it.

    Where they fail is in snatch sweeps where house searches are required but even there they can be used to secure rear areas of the searching troops, establish stop points and to act as covering roles or even anti sniper roles.

    Some bigger ones can even act as a pack beast for supplies or maybe even crew served weapons. (Is that 50 kilo's of Machine gun and 1500 rounds of ammo weighing you down, just chuck it on the section trashcan) Having the Command element of a platoon gifted with 4 heavy weapon cans would make most soldiers, a lot happier. The extra firepower and much lessened load will be appreciated.

    In more regular combat they are given sweep zones and much more liberal ROE. See enemy, (however defined) shoot it if close, otherwise identify them to command and assist in calling in fire.

    Obviously development costs are huge to field basic autonamous combat machines. (somewhat less for command guided or standby and command machines) but once the work is done. A nation can probably afford to buy a fairly large number as supplements to their infantry and other forces. For example even at $50000 a copy a 100 000 would cost 5 billion but allow increased flexibility in the order of 30-50 000 additional on the ground troops. With almost certainly lower ongoing costs, much more rapid return to service if damaged ( A sedeway gets a wheel blown off it can be replaced. The same happen to a man and he's not playing soldier anymore.) and seriously reduced political consequences if one is totalled compared to a man, militaries will love them even if they only act as guards and scouts.

    The key tech troubles are the power supply, the logic system, the comms system and possibly security. Loco, navigation, observation and weapon handling is effectively doable right now.
    • No, the key problem is money. Tell this to any grunt in the field, and they'll point and laugh at you. The Armed Forces can't even provide body armor that'll stop an AK-47 round to the troops; try telling them they'll have autonomous robotic trashcans and they'll giggle.

      --grendel drago
  • I seem to recall that the Geneva Convention prohibits autonomous hunter-killer robots, but we could start small with an autonomous scout-bot. I would think that something like that would be quite feasible with today's technology and would have come in quite handy in the caves of Afghanistan. It'd probably be able to patrol those areas where attacks are being launched from in Iraq, too. I think a swarm model would work great -- a bunch of commercial RC vehicles outfitted with sensors report to a bigger centr
  • Dean Kamen, the Segway's inventor, says he had no qualms about enlisting his brainchild into the military.

    Well, isnt that nice. He's certainly no Divinci is he?

    What a fantastic world it will be when nobody has any qualms about making weapons or having them used without much thought.

    Oh wait.. i think that's the Middle East. Nevermind!!

    Hrmph. I always thought Mr. DEKA was tres-intelligent and someone i'd like to work for when i complete my Ph.D., but he can kiss my ass now.. douche bag.

    ..Brent

    • Well, isnt that nice. He's certainly no Divinci is he?

      Hate to burst your bubble, but Leonardo da Vinci also invented war machines [libero.it].

      P.S. You can bite my shinny metal...
  • "They will come together not as a master-slave relationship, with the human telling the robot what to do," , said computer science professor Manuela Veloso. "The human and robot will be part of the same task."

    This guy apparently has watched Blade Runner too much, and not enough of the Matrix or Terminator. I think the master-slave relationship is the only safe one when it comes to robots. Somehow the idea of robots running around, without a human geeding it instructions, is not very appealing to me. Esp
  • Like the 12mph maximum speed and half-hour maximum battery life is going to be real useful in real-life battlefield conditions? And I can see why they're only considering them for robots -- no self-respecting soldier would be caught dead on one!
  • As a professor of mine once said, "It's strange to see this happening. I remember when war was about people. People killing people."

  • I will defend my country against these clanking monstrosities the same way I protected earth from the Daleks [daleklinks.co.uk];

    stairs.

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