RallyPoint — The Computerized Combat Glove 82
MIT's Technology Review is reporting that a new input device, designed for soldiers, may soon be making an appearance. The "RallyPoint," a glove designed to allow soldiers to easily interact with wearable systems via sensors, could allow soldiers a feature-rich input device without having to put down their weapon. "Some U.S. soldiers in Iraq are already equipped with wearable computer systems. But the lack of efficient input devices restricts their use to safer environments, such as the interior of a Humvee or a base station, where the soldier can set down his weapon and use the keyboard or mouse tethered to his body. Now RallyPoint, a startup based in Cambridge, MA, has developed a sensor-embedded glove that allows the soldier to easily view and navigate digital maps, activate radio communications, and send commands without having to take his hand off his weapon."
Yeah, right (Score:2, Funny)
I'm through being nice. (Score:2)
What about having Tony Stark design the interface.
Power Glove (Score:4, Funny)
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Gloves, in the desert. (Score:3, Insightful)
Sweat and grime will destroy them faster than they can make them.
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Did you seriously think no one at RallyPoint had considered the kind of environment it would be used in? Did they simply forget the last four major battles the US has been involved in? All involved heat, sweat, and things we don't even want to think of.
Be sure to contact RallyPoint to pickup your pay check for a hard day's work.
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At least, it did not succeed with attempts to sell data- or powergloves [wikipedia.org] to gamers.
Given the general failure (businesswise) of more sophisticated input devices beyond keyboard and mouse there is enough room to be suspicious about the useability of this "new" approach.
CC.
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when is it too much ? (Score:3, Insightful)
What happened to the days when you told a soldier where to be and who to shoot ? Technology is great and everything, but when your packing this solder down with all this extra equipment. Not to mention forcing him to learn these new complicated systems, at what point does it cease effectiveness. Give him a good weapon, that is light, and that wont fail. Give him a good flap jacket, then give him a good dependable communication device. One that prompts him based on his location, and mission. ie if you turn left instead of right it tells you without the need for some expensive device.
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How about a flak jacket [cbsnews.com]?
Re:when is it too much ? (Score:5, Insightful)
Seriously? The complexities of warfare changed. People no long show up in parallel lines and keep shooting at one another until one side mostly kills the other. The other side rarely shows up an the appointed place any more.
Modern warfare involves people who don't announce their location, forces comprised of several (hopefully) cooperating forces, and a need to try to coordinate more facets. Calling in air strikes, keeping track of your own friendlies, your own location, and other things which change in the battlefield is a lot of stuff. Most conflicts nowadays are asymmetric -- you got big groups of well organized people fighting smaller groups who pop up and then disappear. With coalitions of militaries, fratricide can happen all too easy (and does).
When the people field testing it tell you, in all likelihood. People are trying to give them more information to be more effective at doing their job. How successful and given piece of kit is hard to predict. If it truly proves to be a burden during exercises, it likely gets scrapped.
Well, weapons, they got. Flak jackets, they got (unless you meant something made out of pancakes.
Basically, the more of an advantage you can give your guys, the more you keep them alive and able to continue doing what they do. If you can improve your situational awareness, you get better odds of doing that.
Cheers
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i.e. killing iraqi civillians.
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/middle-east/us-troops-investigated-over-iraqi-massacres-470920.html [independent.co.uk] etc
Re:when is it too much ? (Score:5, Informative)
Swords were simpler than muskets.
Muskets were simpler than bolt action rifles.
Bolt action rifles were simpler than automatic weapons and so on...
If you want a real world scenario I think the best would be the designated radio man in German Panzers on the onset of WWII. Radios were complicated and you actually had to train a fellow very well to not understand and maintain the equipment but the language used was also very complicated to learn and understand. Other nations like France and Russia felt this was unneeded and had their tanks communicate line of sight with flags and flares.
However as history has shown us the German tanks (at least in the early parts of the war) bested both French and Russian tanks due to their superior coordination and fire control even though the early German tanks were often fielded smaller guns and thinner armor.
Seeing this success US, Russia, and the British quickly adapted radios for all their armored vehicles and were able to beat the Germans at their own game of blitzkreig.
The point is that if you do specialize in technologies that enhance communication and coordination that you will beat opponents that lack that technology even though they may have superior firepower and numbers.
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Muskets were simpler than bolt action rifles.
Bolt action rifles were simpler than automatic weapons and so on...
Not to nitpick, but you've got a lot of those backwards.
Swords take a lot of training. Bludgeoning weapons or spears would have been a better example. The common footman didn't get a sword, those were usually reserved for the professionals.
Muskets were popular because with some training you could grab a schmuck out of a field, run him through some drills and when p
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Yes, maybe the longbow or pike would be a better example, but I was more on the lines that you have less of a problem with misfires with a musket (rain, spring problems, or general dirtiness) than a plain old sword which still can kill people with minimal training on a rainy day.
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The first guns were terrible things, unreliable, dangerous, etc, but when one blew up and killed the operator you could train up someone else very quickly.
The same is true of swords, using a sword, or for that matter any melee weapon is actually quite complicated unless you happen to be 7 feet tall, 200 kilos of pure muscle and using it to bludgeon people to death, and eve
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William
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Swords were simpler than muskets.
Muskets were simpler than bolt action rifles.
Bolt action rifles were simpler than automatic weapons and so on...
Yes, but killing someone with a musket is easier than killing them with a sword
Killing someone with a rifle...
Concomitant to killing your enemy easier, each new weapon also increased the odds of your own survival.
Ease of use is only secondary on the battlefield. Winning is everything, along with survival.
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However as history has shown us the German tanks (at least in the early parts of the war) bested both French and Russian tanks due to their superior coordination and fire control even though the early German tanks were often fielded smaller guns and thinner armor.
Seeing this success US, Russia, and the British quickly adapted radios for all their armored vehicles and were able to beat the Germans at their own game of blitzkreig.
At this point in time, I think the American procurement process is so fucked up that we're losing the ability to innovate effectively. The French had some very able minds but the weapons they came up with were hopeless, about as bad as the Italians. I can't remember whether the battleship submarine was a French or Italian design, it had multi-gun turrets like a frickin' cruiser. There were plenty of flawed aircraft concepts on all sides such as the "destroyer aircraft." This concept would be for a twin-eng
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then give him a good dependable communication device. One that prompts him based on his location, and mission. ie if you turn left instead of right it tells you without the need for some expensive device.
It is a communication device. Wireless radio did a lot for comminications of foot troops, but it can be limited for an individual solider by a need for stealth, irrelevant chatter, and bad location guesses. Think if it as a twitter interface which will automatically insert GPS data. I could see messages like:
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Communications enhances abilities, and more importantly tactics. Squad 1 is under fire, Squad B is closer but on the wrong side of several walls. Squad D while much farther away however only needs to walk around
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I've never been in the military but I would guess that when a system stops being effective a soldier stops using that system or modifies it so that it is effective.
You're right, but it's also true that new things are nearly always greeted with skepticism by the rank and file, you have to pound them over the head to get them to use something very new unless they can see that the old ways aren't working. A great deal of military training is repetition. If you train for a situation enough, then when a similar situation actually occurs you are less likely to panic and more likely to take the appropriate action (or at least the action you have been told is appropriate.)
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I'm sorry (Score:2)
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This could be fun... point your finger for a few seconds of lead on target, then flip a bird and watch the RPGs go flying?
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1. they're not in a Humvee or other enclosed space while doing this
and
2. Their weapons do not have bayonets on them.
I can imagine enemy troops could get mighty confused by this though... guy has his gun trained on them, and then suddenly starts waving it all over the place swearing at his HUD because he couldn't get the current location to fix properly on his GPS tracking syst
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New key signals (Score:3, Funny)
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Behold... (Score:2)
translation (Score:2)
Translation: "Nobody other than the military had money to waste on this."
Really, there are too many demands on gloves and hands already to burden them with this. Sew this into jackets, arm bands, wrist bands, whatever, but not into gloves.
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Green zone shelled during sand storm (Score:1)
Works Great (Score:5, Interesting)
Obligatory (Score:1)
interesting (Score:1)
Does it (Score:2)
It will probably make more money... (Score:1, Offtopic)
Sweet... (Score:1)
Anyway.. what happened to the kick their ass.. (Score:2, Funny)
As a 100 level paladin I must say that these new super-devices are all moot. You have your sword or m16/m4, you should act like a soldier either to die and or to resurrect. Anyway, I think from the safety of my mom basement that we should drop all weapons and use lightswo
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Sure... (Score:5, Interesting)
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Fixed that for you.
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Lack of data is survivable. Lack of attention isn't.
This is just plain wrong. The proper data tells you where to focus your attention. Without that data you have to spread your attention over a much larger set of inputs thus taking it off of the critical point. Being able to always focus your attention on the exact right point is by far the most survivable. This holds true for the reduced mobility the extra equipment causes. Good intelligence more than makes up for being a little bit slower because all your movements are focused on being in the correct loc
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As a side note, I've never
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Are you kidding me?! In a firefight, you "focus" your attention on as much as you can take in at once. All the intelligence in the world doesn't matter if you can't see the people shooting at you from 30, 50, 100 meters away.
You see, your fighting the last war. With proper intelligence you'll know exactly where the people are before they start shooting at you. Lots of tools are being developed to supply detailed tactical information on the battlefield. The problem is that information has to go directly to the grunts to be useful. It's extremely time critical. If it takes more than minutes, in some cases seconds, to get to them it's less than useless. You're trying to tell me that being able to glance at a convenient monitor t
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Yes, that's _exactly_ my point. No, I'm not retired, and yes, I understand your position... I'm currently in a department that has produced friendly-target IR recognition capability vests, mortar proximity warning devices to be attached to LBVs, and a device that can give soldiers the general direction of a sniper based on only the audio signature of rounds fired, all within the last four or five years. I know that the
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Okay, I'll bite. (Score:2, Interesting)
Imagine a glove like this that would talk to your car via bluetooth so you could manipulate anything on the dashboard, from radio to GPS nav system without taking eyes off the road and hands off the wheel.
Imagine a worker in a manufacturing plant controlling robots and assembly lines from a computer h
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Seems to work perfectly, and is likely way cheaper than wearing some 'data glove'
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so wait.... (Score:2)
police playing solitair (Score:2)
well, now they can keep their hands on a wheel *and* play solitair too.
The Power Glove (Score:1)
Squeezing finger combinations and gesturing simply isn't intuitive enough to be an effective interface to a computer. And even if you were to somehow master the clunky interface, I think cell phones have taught us that while it is possible to multi-task, the decrease in quality makes it no longer worth it. In a combat setting, this idea is just silly.
Whoops... (Score:1)
*scratch balls*
(AIR-STRIKE SUMMONED)
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Predator Had It Right... (Score:1)
Oh well....