
Observations and inanities by a second-shift assistant supervisor in the Puppy-Grinding division of the Evil Atheist Conspiracy® (our motto: "Sure it's cruel, but think of the jobs!"), your host, Brent Rasmussen.
R.A.H. would smile.
Yeah, ol' Robert would get a chuckle out of this news item:
Robotic suit could usher in super soldier era
Rex Jameson bikes and swims regularly, and plays tennis and skis when time allows. But the 5-foot-11, 180-pound software engineer is lucky if he presses 200 pounds — that is, until he steps into an "exoskeleton" of aluminum and electronics that multiplies his strength and endurance as many as 20 times.
* * *
Jameson — who works for robotics firm Sarcos Inc. in Salt Lake City, which is under contract with the U.S. Army — is helping assess the 150-pound suit's viability for the soldiers of tomorrow. The suit works by sensing every movement the wearer makes and almost instantly amplifying it.
The Army believes soldiers may someday wear the suits in combat, but it's focusing for now on applications such as loading cargo or repairing heavy equipment. Sarcos is developing the technology under a two-year contract worth up to $10 million, and the Army plans initial field tests next year.
Powered Armor, anyone?
Actually, we're still some ways away from what Heinlein envisioned. In particular, a power source is problematic. But the necessary electronics are now in place, to the point where the suit mentioned above doesn't require a huge amount of training to use - it's fairly intuitive:
"It feels less agile than it is," Jameson said. "Because of the way the control laws work, it's ever so slightly slower than I am. And because we are so in tune with our bodies' responses, this tiny delay initially made me tense."
Now, he's used to it.
"I can regain my balance naturally after stumbling — something I discovered completely by accident."
Learning was easy, he said.
"It takes no special training, beyond learning to relax and trust the robot," he said.
Wow.
Jim Downey
(Cross posted to Communion of Dreams.)















Intermedate step
In the Air Force, drones are already being operated in war zones from offices in the United States. This robotic suit is just one step away from the ultimate stage of warfare, remotely controlled robots which will mostly replace flesh and blood soldiers in the field. Good news for our military personnel, but I'm afraid that with no risk of bodies coming home in bags, it will make it that much easier for yahoos like Bush to launch unjustified wars such as the current fight.
Remote puppet warfare
Well, ideally if flesh and blood soldiers were replaced by remote puppets you'd decide who won the war by some sort of points system, like you do in games. Of course, war is inherently uncivilized, so what would most likely occur is just that the remotes would be sent in to kill people without fear of retaliation. Of course, depending on the interface system it could cause PTSD in soldiers who end up getting killed over and over again.
Powered Armor
no, not Ironman. Jim got it right: this is MI, man, the ones with the lazy look, the assasins.
Now if we could just have the History and Moral Philosophy to go with a powered suit! - and NO BUGS. They STILL give me the creeps!
- for anyone out there unfamiliar with the references, find a copy of Robert Heinlein's Starship Troopers. Oddly enough, I just finished a re-read of it only last week. But get ready to have some assumptions challenged as you read it. Some of the philosophy is simplistic, as befits an outfit made up of youngsters. But most of it is dead-on for what it takes to make a society just and lasting.
Back to the future
Hopefully the tests will go better than these.
I gotta get my eyes checked
I scanned that article three times, wondering why they kept capitalizing "s-words" and what "shit" had to do with the rest of the article. Then it dawned on me that it was "swords". Sheesh!
Rob Miles
--
There are only 10 types of people in the world;
those who understand binary and those who don't.
Say it with me now: I. AM.
Say it with me now:
I. AM. IRON. MAN!
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