Best Of 2016: Rise Of The Robots

Best Of 2016: Rise Of The Robots
Best Of 2016: Rise Of The Robots

How does war change when your weapons can think? Do you trust a computer to decide when and whom to kill? Questions once asked only in science fiction are now becoming matters for policymakers. All four armed services are experimenting with artificial intelligence in every domain: land, sea, air, outer space, cyberspace, and the all-pervasive…

Swarm 2: The Navy’s Robotic Hive Mind

Swarm 2: The Navy’s Robotic Hive Mind
Swarm 2: The Navy’s Robotic Hive Mind

Robot boats are getting smarter fast. Two years ago, on the James River, the Office of Naval Research dropped jaws with a “swarm” of 13 unmanned craft that could detect threats and react to them without human intervention. This fall, on the Chesapeake Bay, ONR tested ro-boats with dramatically upgraded software. The Navy called this…

Artificial Intelligence Drone Defeats Fighter Pilot: The Future?

Artificial Intelligence Drone Defeats Fighter Pilot: The Future?
Artificial Intelligence Drone Defeats Fighter Pilot: The Future?

In an intriguing paper certain to catch the eye of senior Pentagon officials, a company claims that an artificial intelligence program it designed allowed drones to repeatedly and convincingly “defeat” a human pilot in simulations in a test done with the Air Force Research Lab (AFRL). A highly experienced former Air Force battle manager, Gene Lee, tried repeatedly…

Robot Boats, Smart Guns & Super B-52s: Carter’s Strategic Capabilities Office

Robot Boats, Smart Guns & Super B-52s: Carter’s Strategic Capabilities Office
Robot Boats, Smart Guns & Super B-52s: Carter’s Strategic Capabilities Office

WASHINGTON: Arsenal plane. It’s a great name, no? And the Hyper Velocity Projectile. Whoa. Fast flying swarming micro drones. Neat! There’s much more being developed, but it’s classified. Where is all this coming from? The Strategic Capabilities Office, or SCO for short. Defense Secretary Ash Carter talked up the new office in his 2017 budget preview speech…

Robot Wars: Centaurs, Skynet, & Swarms

WASHINGTON: I haven’t seen the new Star Wars movie yet — no spoilers in the comments section, please — but its vision of high-tech warfare is already looking quaint. Always at heart a fairy tale in space, the series puts humans in the cockpit and on the front lines, with droids as adorable sidekicks. Meanwhile,…

Small Drones Are Growing On The Air Force

Small Drones Are Growing On The Air Force
Small Drones Are Growing On The Air Force

AFA CONFERENCE: Time was, the Air Force wanted nothing to do with drones that weren’t built to be shot down. Now, after flying big, armed drones more than 2.4 million hours, the service has decided it wants to buy little ones in swarms – and fly them that way, too. Buying Small Unmanned Aerial Systems…

Small Drones Are A Big Danger; Think Flying IEDs: CNAS

Small Drones Are A Big Danger; Think Flying IEDs: CNAS
Small Drones Are A Big Danger; Think Flying IEDs: CNAS

WASHINGTON: Sometimes small is beautiful. Sometimes small is lethal. While China and Russia are researching stealthy and armed drones, the drunk intelligence analyst who landed a Chinese-made mini-drone on the White House lawn in last month may be the more worrying sign of things to come. Afghan and Iraqi guerrillas kludged together murderous roadside bombs…

Learning From Termites: Navy, Marines Seek New Breed Of Drones

Learning From Termites: Navy, Marines Seek New Breed Of Drones
Learning From Termites: Navy, Marines Seek New Breed Of Drones

NATIONAL HARBOR: Navy Secretary Ray Mabus may want to move drones to the top of his priorities, but what kind of unmanned systems do the Navy and Marine Corps want to buy? Don’t think Predator or even the Navy’s new 131-foot-wingspan Triton. Imagine a swarm of buzzing, scuttling or swimming robots that are smaller but smarter. While a…

Naval Drones ‘Swarm,’ But Who Pulls The Trigger?

Naval Drones ‘Swarm,’ But Who Pulls The Trigger?
Naval Drones ‘Swarm,’ But Who Pulls The Trigger?

The Navy’s research arm is justifiably proud of its recent experiment with “swarming” drone boats, whose results (with video) were officially released today. But the very thing that’s most impressive about the swarmboats — their ability to act autonomously with minimal human guidance — raises crucial questions about when we can trust a robot to pull…

Too Many Screens: Why Drones Are So Hard To Fly, So Easy To Crash

LAS VEGAS: The US military depends on drones. But amidst the justifiable excitement over the rise of the robots, it’s easy to overlook that today’s unmanned systems are not truly autonomous but rather require a lot of human guidance by remote control — and bad design often makes the human’s job needlessly awkward, to the…