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Flying Robot Ambulance Finally Takes Its First Flight (popsci.com)

What weighs 2,400 pounds, flies 100 miles per hour, and doesn't haven't a pilot? An anonymous reader writes: This week Popular Science remembers a 2007 article which discovered "an amazing machine of the future, almost like a flying car, that seemed plausible but just out of reach" -- and reports that it's now finally performed "a full, autonomous flight on a preplanned route." Designed to provide unmanned emergency evacuations, it's been described as "a hovercar-like aircraft" flown with a built-in AI-controlled flight system.

Tuesday's route was two minutes long, and "According to Urban Aeronautics, the vehicle's Flight Control System made the decision to land too early." But what's significant is there's no human pilot. "Decisions by the flight controls are checked by the craft's flight management system, like a pilot overseen by a captain...all informed by an array of sensors, including 'two laser altimeters, a radar altimeter, inertial sensors, and an electro-optic payload camera.'"

The test brings the giant unmanned vehicle one step closer to its ultimate goal of becoming "a robot that can fly inside cities, weaving between buildings and hovering above any dangers on the ground below."

2 of 43 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Great possibilities by ColdWetDog · · Score: 2

    Could this be adapted to retrieve persons of interest and return to a predetermined location? Any way we can include kill/no kill AI?

    Thanks,

    Your Government

    "Hello Mr. Terrorist! Would you please step into this unmanned, barely controlled little flying box?"

    "Thank you for your cooperation."

    "Allah Akbur!"

    I suppose this could work....

    --
    Faster! Faster! Faster would be better!
  2. Re:nope. by michael_cain · · Score: 3, Insightful

    It's a military device. The EMTs (combat medics in the US Army) are already deployed with the combat troops, so the planned use is probably evacuation of the wounded after the medics have done what they can.