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On Thu, 18 Dec 2003 22:25:54 +0000, Paul J. Adam wrote:
In message , phil hunt writes On Thu, 18 Dec 2003 05:26:01 GMT, Kevin Brooks wrote: That is way beyond even our capabilities. You are talking autonomous combat systems. Yes. The progrsamming for this isn't particularly hard, once you've written software that can identify a vehicle (or other target) in a picture. Falling off a cliff isn't a problem once you've learned how to fly like Superman. Trouble is, that prerequisite is harder than you might expect. Getting a machine to tell a T-72 from a M1A1 from a Leclerc is hard enough in good conditions You don't have to. You have to be able to tell whether it's a vehicle or not, and if it is, is it in an area likely to be occupied by own forces. : doing so in the presence of camouflage, obscurants and when the crew have run out of internal stowage (so have hung lots of external gear) and maybe stored some spare track plates on the glacis front ('cause they need the spare plates and they might as well be extra armour) gets _really_ tricky. Do you err on the side of "tank-like vehicle, kill!" or "if you're not sure don't attack"? I'd tend to err towards the former. note that it's a lot easy to spot a moving vehicle than a stationary one. Would it not be embarrasing to have a successful armoured raid broken up by your own missiles? Indeed. Maybe some form of IFF? Key problem is that going up against the US loses you your comms and observation I doubt that that is true, assuming a competent comms network. DR is patchy at best unless you've got good inertial guidance systems (non-trivial). Celestial only works on clear nights Or during daytime. - so you're limited to fighting wars after dark on cloudless nights with no flares in the sky. LORAN is a radio broadcast and therefore not survivable against a US-style opponent. If you have lots of transmitters, many of which are dummy transmitters, and many of which are only turned on for a short time, using frequency hopping, it's rather harder to destroy the network. or up high where the view is better, It's possible that a mission might require some of the flight to be at high level and some at low level. I imagine the missiles could be programmed for a mission by sticking a computer with an Ethernet cable into a slot on the missile. This has only been done for twenty years or so in the West, so hardly a great advance. I never said it was; it is merely the obvious way to do it. -- "It's easier to find people online who openly support the KKK than people who openly support the RIAA" -- comment on Wikipedia (Email: , but first subtract 275 and reverse the last two letters). |
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