SlideShare a Scribd company logo
1 of 4
Download to read offline
Readying Robots For War - CBS News
The $45,000 "PackBots" robot. AP/Pentagon
In future wars, robots may drop from the sky by the hundreds from unmanned aircraft, swarming
like giant insects over battlefields in coordinated, terrifying assaults.
But that is a decades-away scenario.
For now, military planners and robot designers are simply trying to improve devices - some of which
could see action soon in Iraq - by incorporating lessons from Afghanistan, where robots saw their
first significant military action.
You'd be hard pressed to find anyone in the military who says robots will one day replace soldiers.
Yet the newest robots being developed by companies including iRobot range farther from their
"masters" than did their forebears in Afghanistan. They can navigate terrain and obstacles more
deftly, lay down a cover of smoke, test for chemical weapons and extend a "neck" that can peer
around corners.
The machines are also learning how to right themselves if they flip over as well as how to follow
their tracks back home if they lose contact with their base.
The Pentagon has no doubts robots can save lives.
"I don't have any problem writing to iRobot, saying 'I'm sorry your robot died, can we get another?"'
said Col. Bruce Jette, the Army's point man on robot deployment, who accompanied the first,
$45,000 iRobot "PackBots" into the field in Afghanistan. "That's a lot easier letter to write than to a
father or mother."
Prior to Afghanistan, the military was using robots for search-and-rescue and ordnance disposal, but
mostly viewed them as long-term research. Airborne drones had proved easier to build than effective
land robots.
But the new conflict persuaded the military to move faster. At the time, the state-of-the-art means
for clearing a cave was to tie a rope around the waist of an infantryman, who would crawl in and
toss ahead a grappling hook to probe for mines or booby traps.
The Pentagon asked iRobot, a startup that emerged out of the Massachusetts Institute of
Technology's artificial intelligence program, to rig up its latest prototypes of the 42-pound, remote-
controlled PackBot.
Able to ride on tracks like a small tank, climb stairs and work under 3 meters of water or force of up
to 400 times gravity, Packbots made their debut just six weeks later at a cave complex outside the
village of Nazaraht, near the Pakistani border.
The robots sent video back to the troops, sparing them the risk of being dispatched by booby trap or
enemy combatant.
"
Their first reaction was, 'Where have you been?"' Jette said.
Later, they offered advice, complaining that the signal wasn't penetrating the walls of deep caves. So
Tom Frost, an iRobot engineer at the scene, built a makeshift network of radio repeaters by
scavenging old Soviet trucks that littered Bagram Air Base.
And when soldiers asked Frost if PackBot could work neato robotics xv 14 review with the
computers integrated into their clothing, he downloaded the necessary code over a satellite.
The soldiers also scribbled a drawing of their idea for an extendable neck. The company was already
working on that, but made it a top priority.
Now, in the comparative comfort of its lab back home, iRobot is fine-tuning all those adjustments.
Another lesson from Afghanistan: One size does not fit all.
Sometimes, Jette said, soldiers wanted an 80-pound workhorse like a model built by Foster-Miller of
Waltham, which was also tested in Afghanistan. Sometimes, the PackBot was just the right size.
And sometimes, especially in towns, what the soldiers really wanted was a "throw bot" they could
toss over a wall or through a window.
"The question is, can you get three-quarters of the capability of those robots at one-tenth the
weight," said Robert Larsen, a program manager at Draper Labs, an MIT spin-off that is developing
a military robot that resembles the PackBot but weighs less than 5 pounds.
Draper's device, though unlikely to be ready in time for Iraq, is cheap, too. Because it's controlled by
an off-the-shelf PDA device, Larsen said, it could cost as little
http://www.smartreview.com/robot-vacuum-cleaner-comparison-reviews as a few hundred
http://www.bizrate.com/vacuums_accessories/neato-robotic-vacuum/ dollars.
The small size has
http://www.consumersearch.com/robotic-vacuum-cleaners/neato-robotics-xv-11-vacuum-cleaner its
disadvantages, however.
"When you get small, everything becomes an obstacle," Larsen said, struggling to drive the device
over a reporter's crumpled coat at a recent trade show.
The Afghan experience doesn't necessarily mean robots will see widespread action in Iraq.
There are only a handful to go around, and so far U.S. soldiers gathering in Kuwait are not training
with them, said John Spiller, a civilian who works with Jette.
"The best I can say at this point is the Army in general is aggressively looking at applying robots in
all future operations," said Jette. "I think it would be useful in an open battle."
Planners continue to put a number of robots through their paces at the Army's Military Operations in
Urban Terrain center at Fort Benning, Ga., where soldiers train to fight in a mock city.
And the kind of urban warfare - peering around corners, clearing buildings - that would likely
happen in Iraq is precisely what robots have been designed for.
Robots will someday master many of the complex, individual tasks required in combat, experts insist.
Then, something even more powerful will follow: robots that work together.
It's a prospective weapon whose effectiveness would derive at least partly from the sheer terror it
could impose on an enemy.
"When you see one robot coming down, it's interesting and even if it has a weapon on it, maybe it's a
little scary and you give it a little respect," said Arniss Mangolds, vice president of Foster-Miller's
robot division. "But if you're standing somewhere and see 10 robots coming at you, it's scary."
Jette says robots will never fully replace soldiers.
"None of them," he says, "are as powerful as the 2.5-pound gray blob inside your head."
© 2003 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast,
rewritten, or redistributed.
http://www.cbsnews.com/news/readying-robots-for-war/

More Related Content

Viewers also liked

Datahug - Sales Velocity-2014 - A Smarter Way to Accelerate Sales
Datahug - Sales Velocity-2014 - A Smarter Way to Accelerate SalesDatahug - Sales Velocity-2014 - A Smarter Way to Accelerate Sales
Datahug - Sales Velocity-2014 - A Smarter Way to Accelerate SalesSelligy
 
Workshop 2016 Genebank IT - Xamarin and Crossplatform
Workshop 2016 Genebank IT - Xamarin and CrossplatformWorkshop 2016 Genebank IT - Xamarin and Crossplatform
Workshop 2016 Genebank IT - Xamarin and CrossplatformEdwin Rojas
 
Volunteer Thank You From Denver Walk with a Doc
Volunteer Thank You From Denver Walk with a DocVolunteer Thank You From Denver Walk with a Doc
Volunteer Thank You From Denver Walk with a DocWalk with a Doc-Colorado
 
5 pillars to team's agility
5 pillars to team's agility5 pillars to team's agility
5 pillars to team's agilitytomekdab
 
This is What Happens When You Automate Stories for the AP
This is What Happens When You Automate Stories for the APThis is What Happens When You Automate Stories for the AP
This is What Happens When You Automate Stories for the APAutomated Insights
 
La diète 3 semaines
La diète 3 semainesLa diète 3 semaines
La diète 3 semaineshannagrauser1
 
Solar motor
Solar motorSolar motor
Solar motornilesh72
 

Viewers also liked (11)

Resume
ResumeResume
Resume
 
Datahug - Sales Velocity-2014 - A Smarter Way to Accelerate Sales
Datahug - Sales Velocity-2014 - A Smarter Way to Accelerate SalesDatahug - Sales Velocity-2014 - A Smarter Way to Accelerate Sales
Datahug - Sales Velocity-2014 - A Smarter Way to Accelerate Sales
 
Workshop 2016 Genebank IT - Xamarin and Crossplatform
Workshop 2016 Genebank IT - Xamarin and CrossplatformWorkshop 2016 Genebank IT - Xamarin and Crossplatform
Workshop 2016 Genebank IT - Xamarin and Crossplatform
 
Volunteer Thank You From Denver Walk with a Doc
Volunteer Thank You From Denver Walk with a DocVolunteer Thank You From Denver Walk with a Doc
Volunteer Thank You From Denver Walk with a Doc
 
5 pillars to team's agility
5 pillars to team's agility5 pillars to team's agility
5 pillars to team's agility
 
Pairs of anglles & transversal
Pairs of anglles & transversalPairs of anglles & transversal
Pairs of anglles & transversal
 
This is What Happens When You Automate Stories for the AP
This is What Happens When You Automate Stories for the APThis is What Happens When You Automate Stories for the AP
This is What Happens When You Automate Stories for the AP
 
La diète 3 semaines
La diète 3 semainesLa diète 3 semaines
La diète 3 semaines
 
Grün de Vera,Rosa Mabel- Diapositiva 1
Grün de Vera,Rosa Mabel- Diapositiva 1Grün de Vera,Rosa Mabel- Diapositiva 1
Grün de Vera,Rosa Mabel- Diapositiva 1
 
Solar motor
Solar motorSolar motor
Solar motor
 
Kewangan
Kewangan Kewangan
Kewangan
 

Similar to Readying Robots For War - CBS News

Intro to robotics
Intro to roboticsIntro to robotics
Intro to roboticshlauster
 
A History of Robots
A History of RobotsA History of Robots
A History of RobotsYr05
 
A history of robots
A history of robotsA history of robots
A history of robotsYr05
 
Robot PowerPoint
Robot PowerPointRobot PowerPoint
Robot PowerPointbradschultz
 
Next generation of robotics ppt
Next generation of robotics pptNext generation of robotics ppt
Next generation of robotics pptkrithikamca
 
Sasank robotics
Sasank roboticsSasank robotics
Sasank roboticssasankthej
 
Military robots.samiun
Military robots.samiunMilitary robots.samiun
Military robots.samiunsamiun san
 
At DARPA challenge, rescue robots show future of disaster relief
At DARPA challenge, rescue robots show future of disaster reliefAt DARPA challenge, rescue robots show future of disaster relief
At DARPA challenge, rescue robots show future of disaster reliefnewslosangeles
 
Roboticsprojectppt 130116183708-phpapp02
Roboticsprojectppt 130116183708-phpapp02Roboticsprojectppt 130116183708-phpapp02
Roboticsprojectppt 130116183708-phpapp02Dongin Kisi
 
Advancement in robotics
Advancement in roboticsAdvancement in robotics
Advancement in roboticsSophia
 
Group-3-Robotics.pptx
Group-3-Robotics.pptxGroup-3-Robotics.pptx
Group-3-Robotics.pptxDavidAlesna1
 

Similar to Readying Robots For War - CBS News (20)

Ls3 Engine Project
Ls3 Engine ProjectLs3 Engine Project
Ls3 Engine Project
 
Intro to robotics
Intro to roboticsIntro to robotics
Intro to robotics
 
A History of Robots
A History of RobotsA History of Robots
A History of Robots
 
A history of robots
A history of robotsA history of robots
A history of robots
 
robotics
roboticsrobotics
robotics
 
Robotics
RoboticsRobotics
Robotics
 
Robotics
RoboticsRobotics
Robotics
 
Robot PowerPoint
Robot PowerPointRobot PowerPoint
Robot PowerPoint
 
ROBOTICSS PRESENTATION.pdf
ROBOTICSS PRESENTATION.pdfROBOTICSS PRESENTATION.pdf
ROBOTICSS PRESENTATION.pdf
 
Next generation of robotics ppt
Next generation of robotics pptNext generation of robotics ppt
Next generation of robotics ppt
 
Robotics
RoboticsRobotics
Robotics
 
Sasank robotics
Sasank roboticsSasank robotics
Sasank robotics
 
Military robots.samiun
Military robots.samiunMilitary robots.samiun
Military robots.samiun
 
At DARPA challenge, rescue robots show future of disaster relief
At DARPA challenge, rescue robots show future of disaster reliefAt DARPA challenge, rescue robots show future of disaster relief
At DARPA challenge, rescue robots show future of disaster relief
 
ROBOTS
ROBOTSROBOTS
ROBOTS
 
Robotics ppt
Robotics pptRobotics ppt
Robotics ppt
 
Robotics
Robotics Robotics
Robotics
 
Roboticsprojectppt 130116183708-phpapp02
Roboticsprojectppt 130116183708-phpapp02Roboticsprojectppt 130116183708-phpapp02
Roboticsprojectppt 130116183708-phpapp02
 
Advancement in robotics
Advancement in roboticsAdvancement in robotics
Advancement in robotics
 
Group-3-Robotics.pptx
Group-3-Robotics.pptxGroup-3-Robotics.pptx
Group-3-Robotics.pptx
 

Readying Robots For War - CBS News

  • 1. Readying Robots For War - CBS News The $45,000 "PackBots" robot. AP/Pentagon In future wars, robots may drop from the sky by the hundreds from unmanned aircraft, swarming like giant insects over battlefields in coordinated, terrifying assaults. But that is a decades-away scenario. For now, military planners and robot designers are simply trying to improve devices - some of which could see action soon in Iraq - by incorporating lessons from Afghanistan, where robots saw their first significant military action. You'd be hard pressed to find anyone in the military who says robots will one day replace soldiers. Yet the newest robots being developed by companies including iRobot range farther from their "masters" than did their forebears in Afghanistan. They can navigate terrain and obstacles more deftly, lay down a cover of smoke, test for chemical weapons and extend a "neck" that can peer around corners. The machines are also learning how to right themselves if they flip over as well as how to follow their tracks back home if they lose contact with their base. The Pentagon has no doubts robots can save lives. "I don't have any problem writing to iRobot, saying 'I'm sorry your robot died, can we get another?"' said Col. Bruce Jette, the Army's point man on robot deployment, who accompanied the first, $45,000 iRobot "PackBots" into the field in Afghanistan. "That's a lot easier letter to write than to a father or mother." Prior to Afghanistan, the military was using robots for search-and-rescue and ordnance disposal, but mostly viewed them as long-term research. Airborne drones had proved easier to build than effective land robots. But the new conflict persuaded the military to move faster. At the time, the state-of-the-art means for clearing a cave was to tie a rope around the waist of an infantryman, who would crawl in and toss ahead a grappling hook to probe for mines or booby traps.
  • 2. The Pentagon asked iRobot, a startup that emerged out of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology's artificial intelligence program, to rig up its latest prototypes of the 42-pound, remote- controlled PackBot. Able to ride on tracks like a small tank, climb stairs and work under 3 meters of water or force of up to 400 times gravity, Packbots made their debut just six weeks later at a cave complex outside the village of Nazaraht, near the Pakistani border. The robots sent video back to the troops, sparing them the risk of being dispatched by booby trap or enemy combatant. " Their first reaction was, 'Where have you been?"' Jette said. Later, they offered advice, complaining that the signal wasn't penetrating the walls of deep caves. So Tom Frost, an iRobot engineer at the scene, built a makeshift network of radio repeaters by scavenging old Soviet trucks that littered Bagram Air Base. And when soldiers asked Frost if PackBot could work neato robotics xv 14 review with the computers integrated into their clothing, he downloaded the necessary code over a satellite. The soldiers also scribbled a drawing of their idea for an extendable neck. The company was already working on that, but made it a top priority. Now, in the comparative comfort of its lab back home, iRobot is fine-tuning all those adjustments. Another lesson from Afghanistan: One size does not fit all. Sometimes, Jette said, soldiers wanted an 80-pound workhorse like a model built by Foster-Miller of Waltham, which was also tested in Afghanistan. Sometimes, the PackBot was just the right size. And sometimes, especially in towns, what the soldiers really wanted was a "throw bot" they could toss over a wall or through a window.
  • 3. "The question is, can you get three-quarters of the capability of those robots at one-tenth the weight," said Robert Larsen, a program manager at Draper Labs, an MIT spin-off that is developing a military robot that resembles the PackBot but weighs less than 5 pounds. Draper's device, though unlikely to be ready in time for Iraq, is cheap, too. Because it's controlled by an off-the-shelf PDA device, Larsen said, it could cost as little http://www.smartreview.com/robot-vacuum-cleaner-comparison-reviews as a few hundred http://www.bizrate.com/vacuums_accessories/neato-robotic-vacuum/ dollars. The small size has http://www.consumersearch.com/robotic-vacuum-cleaners/neato-robotics-xv-11-vacuum-cleaner its disadvantages, however. "When you get small, everything becomes an obstacle," Larsen said, struggling to drive the device over a reporter's crumpled coat at a recent trade show. The Afghan experience doesn't necessarily mean robots will see widespread action in Iraq. There are only a handful to go around, and so far U.S. soldiers gathering in Kuwait are not training with them, said John Spiller, a civilian who works with Jette. "The best I can say at this point is the Army in general is aggressively looking at applying robots in all future operations," said Jette. "I think it would be useful in an open battle." Planners continue to put a number of robots through their paces at the Army's Military Operations in Urban Terrain center at Fort Benning, Ga., where soldiers train to fight in a mock city. And the kind of urban warfare - peering around corners, clearing buildings - that would likely happen in Iraq is precisely what robots have been designed for. Robots will someday master many of the complex, individual tasks required in combat, experts insist. Then, something even more powerful will follow: robots that work together. It's a prospective weapon whose effectiveness would derive at least partly from the sheer terror it could impose on an enemy. "When you see one robot coming down, it's interesting and even if it has a weapon on it, maybe it's a little scary and you give it a little respect," said Arniss Mangolds, vice president of Foster-Miller's robot division. "But if you're standing somewhere and see 10 robots coming at you, it's scary."
  • 4. Jette says robots will never fully replace soldiers. "None of them," he says, "are as powerful as the 2.5-pound gray blob inside your head." © 2003 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. http://www.cbsnews.com/news/readying-robots-for-war/