US Navy Developing App-Summoned Robotic Helicopter
Zothecula writes "We may be closer to the day when United States Marines will, within a matter of minutes, use a handheld app to summon robotic helicopters to deliver battlefield supplies. On Tuesday, the Office of Naval Research (ONR) announced its five-year, US$98 million Autonomous Aerial Cargo Utility System (AACUS) program, with the specific aim of developing 'sensors and control technologies for robotic vertical take-off and landing aircraft.'" Last month we covered NATO's robotic helicopter, the K-MAX.
Robots, making war easier for the public to swallow. It's less icky to wage war when you can send robots instead of people. But of course, these will only be used to "deliver battlefield supplies." Wink.
Iran has announced that they are most pleased with this plan and eagerly anticipate the arrival of supplies provided by the U.S. military.
Seriously, where is my pizza delivered by the slice from helo-drones?
pizza delivered by the slice probably isn't feasible with various delivery costs, but presumably it would be with drones. So why not already? Being able to order pizza by the slice economically via drones might be what saves American from getting too fat. Or not, but it couldn't hurt right?
US Navy developing remote controlled robotic helicopter.
Let's not start pretending that an "app" is a real thing, distinct from technologies which already existed.
The technology of endless wars, one after another. How about a handheld app to deliver medical or other emergency supplies to accidents, natural disasters, etc.?
Ask an American to rattle off a chronology of American history and the time unit will be wars. War after war. Ask them to describe American culture and you'll get a blank stare.
Seriously, if the final project budget ends up being be anywhere near the stated budget, this is an awesome endeavor which we should be touting as a major advancein technological warfare.
But we all know it'll end up costing $100 billion rather than $100 million...
Oliver's law of assumed responsibility: If you're seen fixing it, you will be blamed for breaking it.
Killer App.
Budgeted for approx $100 million. With delays and overruns, will cost the taxpayer $1 billion and take 8 years. Meanwhile, my son has already coded this as a summer high-school coop. Of course, he doesn't work for one the monsterously huge and incredibly overpaid major defense contractors.... so his product is probably already superior to what they'll eventually field in 2020.
$98 Million...I could swear I've seen a video of some DIY hacker building one for like $30. Maybe a REALLY BIG one would cost around $2,000. What, on earth, could they be spending this much cash on?!
R&D is great and all, but this seems pretty ridiculous--even if it is the US Govt.'s status quo.
"Get to da choppa!"
[End Of Line]
Need a robotic helicopter to deliver supplies to you? There's an app for that!
How long until they'll come with machine cannons or AGMs so ground troops can call in air support?
Of course, weapons release will require suitable human authorization... until we have AIs that can do a better/faster/cheaper job.
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Cheap remote-sensing bots have already been used in the Arab spring, as told here.
To be honest I get surprised by the big reaction to something like soldier's urinating on the corpses of dead enemies. They are trained to be worked into a killing frenzy and to hate the enemy. The corpse does not know it is being urinated on and coiuld not care less and it is not surprising soldiers would vent their rage in this harmless way. So it's not "nice". It's a lot nicer than killing the enemy in the first place. To me this seems one of those bizarre double standards that with which the whole idea of war is riddled. Dulce et decorem est pro patria mori .... or not.
Cuz he got his ass beat n' he ran -> http://it.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=2603836&cid=38588550
This article is symbolic of how the public mindlessly extrapolates today's current popular technology uses to other applications. Think twentieth century "we have planes and cars, soon 'they' will make flying cars!"
A helicopter is a very large, very expensive transport mechanism which can carry payloads even more valuable than itself. Handheld devices' apps are cheap, portable, and used primarily because they are convenient. Does it really sound practical to anybody to control cargo helicopters with a convenient iDroid app, or would you rather have it controlled by a team of experienced, accountable pilots and leave your phone to control your angriest birds?
I stopped caring when people make stupid predictions about future applications of present technology, but it stuns me to see so clearly how unimaginative contributors on Slashdot can be. "Hey man, what if they had a gun that could shoot a laser through the earth and kill anyone in China even in their super communist bunkers from a webapp that reflects moonlight off the Hubble telescope bio-warefare technology nano-explosions!!" That's what your appcopter idea sounds like to me.
Stop.
1986 - The movie Aliens features a scene where an android remotely pilots a drop ship to deliver supplies and evac a group of beleaguered Marines.
2012 - The United States Navy allocates funds to research a system where you can remotely call for a robotic helicopter to deliver supplies to beleaguered Marines via your Android phone.
New ~$300 Parrot AR Drone (which is already well on its way to being able to successfully "control technologies for robotic vertical take-off and landing aircraft"): $300.
Cost of a "Navy" badge, some long range sensors, military durability, scripts to automate the process: $97,999,700.
*golf clap*