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Explosive Ordnance Disposal Training and Evaluation Unit during testing  (Source: U.S. Army)
The U.S. Army hopes to upgrade its robot fleet, so they won't require as much human interaction during operations

The United States Army plans to develop innovative new robots that can carry out basic instructions without being tele-operated by human operators.

"There is a push toward increased intelligence and autonomy," Army robotic systems project office manager Jeff Jaczkowski said in a statement.

In the next 18 months, Army officials outlined goals that indicate the robots will be able to clear dangerous zones, take pictures and replay them back to base, turn corners, and will also be able to travel with convoys as they are out on patrol.

The ability to use robots to capture images prior to infantry units arriving could prove to be a vital tool -- troops may be able to detect insurgent activity prior to arrival.

Furthermore, robots can be used as devices to remove explosive ordinance devices if troops are unable to diffuse the bombs themselves.

The use of robotics and unmanned technology in Iraq and Afghanistan is expected to increase as the new alternatives prove to be reliable during testing.

The U.S. government is shifting troops towards Afghanistan, where the robots also are expected to help clear out well sheltered caves located in rugged areas difficult for troops to secure quickly.  The realistic outline for deployment in Iraq or Afghanistan remains unknown, but the army is expected to move as fast as possible to roll out the upgraded robots.



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Cyberdine
By Zingam on 11/11/2009 1:23:45 AM , Rating: 2
They should hire Cyberdine Systems and Arnold Schwarzenegger!




RE: Cyberdine
By Acanthus on 11/11/2009 6:28:47 AM , Rating: 2
The sickening part is there is now a real Cyberdine.

And they are really developing military weapons similar to terminators.

http://www.cyberdyne.jp/english/index.html

HAL http://www.cyberdyne.jp/english/robotsuithal/index...

HSSC http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A7MQw5sCaGI

Next year: OMFG: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=owrEMGg4x3M


RE: Cyberdine
By nafhan on 11/11/2009 9:32:50 AM , Rating: 2
Why is that sickening? I'd say it would be more along the lines of "ironic" or "coincidence".


RE: Cyberdine
By Exterous on 11/11/2009 12:46:38 PM , Rating: 2
or "preordained"


By boobot on 11/10/2009 9:08:58 PM , Rating: 2
So am I.




By lightfoot on 11/11/2009 11:10:48 AM , Rating: 2
Question: Does shooting a human count as human interaction? If so, how much? It sounds like "little human interaction" to me, so long as another human is not required to give the order; that would require way too much human interaction.


By Misty Dingos on 11/11/2009 1:14:34 PM , Rating: 2
http://www.dailytech.com/Can+Robots+Commit+War+Cri...

Ultimatly a human will pay for errors in programing. Either it shoots some one it wan't intended to or it doesn't shoot some one it was intended to.


By christojojo on 11/10/2009 7:52:32 PM , Rating: 3
No conscience just follow orders sir.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/My_Lai_Massacre




Already available?
By jonmcc33 on 11/11/2009 8:08:26 AM , Rating: 3
quote:
...plans to develop innovative new robots that can carry out basic instructions...


AKA, the 30% of new enlistees that are high school drop outs.




LOL
By ryedizzel on 11/10/2009 8:55:32 PM , Rating: 2
i love the picture you chose for this article.




Reading the title...
By geekman1024 on 11/10/2009 10:27:41 PM , Rating: 2
I was thinking about a little human sitting inside the head or a human-size robot, like the one in Man In Black 2...




lots of military robots
By ketanco on 11/16/2009 2:31:39 AM , Rating: 2
There are lots of types of military robots in development, the current ones focusing mostly on transportation, exploration and recovery. visit http://www.roboticmagazine.com/military.php for more news on defense robots.




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