Archive for the ‘military’ category: Page 264
Sep 7, 2016
China Overtakes US in Scientific Articles, Robots, Supercomputers
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: energy, military, robotics/AI, supercomputing
http://www.unz.com/akarlin/sinotriumph/
Nothing illustrates China’s meteoric rise as some well chosen numbers.
By the end of the 1990s, China had come to dominate the mainstays of geopolitical power in the 20th century – coal and steel production. As a consequence, it leapt to the top of the Compositive Index of National Capability, which uses military expenditure, military personnel, energy consumption, iron and steel production, urban population, and total population as a proxy of national power. Still, one could legitimately argue that all of these factors are hardly relevant today. While Germany’s fourfold preponderance in steel production over Russia may have been a critical number in 1914, China’s eightfold advantage in steel production over the US by 2014 is all but meaningless in any relevant comparison of national power. The world has moved on.
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Sep 7, 2016
China’s Quantum Satellite Experiments: Strategic And Military Implications – Analysis
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: cybercrime/malcode, government, military, quantum physics, satellites
Additional insights on QSS planned efforts; and (as with any government program) there is more to this program than these insights.
While China’s quantum science satellite (QSS) project is part of the Strategic Priority Programme on Space Science, the country’s first space exploration programme intended purely for scientific research, its experiments have significant military implications.
By Michael Raska
Sep 3, 2016
US soldiers could soon travel like stormtroopers on new ‘hoverbike’
Posted by Dan Kummer in category: military
Engineers showed laboratory research into the ‘hoverbike,’ a rectangular shaped quadcopter that has since been named the Joint Tactical Aerial Resupply Vehicle, or JTARV.
‘Anywhere on the battlefield, Soldiers can potentially get resupplied in less than 30 minutes,’ said Army researcher Tim Vong.
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Sep 1, 2016
Russia will deploy a division of troops about 50 miles from the US
Posted by Karen Hurst in category: military
Hmmm; I believe that I predicted that Russia would do a military build up near the artic sea and use the Siberian land give away as part of their justification. Also, I projected that Russia main goal is to take over the oil in the artic sea bed and 2 weeks ago Russia became aggressive and began claiming large sections of the artic sea infringing on both Canada and the US. Well, they seem to be following the outline that I shared several months ago. We should keep an eye on this situation.
At a recent event, Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu said that a division of troops would be stationed in Chukotka, Russia’s far-east region, just slightly more than 50 miles from Alaska.
“There are plans to form a coastal defense division in 2018 on the Chukotka operational direction,” said Shoigu.
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Aug 27, 2016
Revealed: Pentagon’s Plan to Defeat Russian and Chinese Radar With A.I
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: military, robotics/AI
Hmmmm.
The Pentagon’s Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) is working on a new generation of electronic warfare systems that are based on artificial intelligence (A.I.). If the program were to prove a success, the new A.I.-driven systems would provide the United States military a way to counter evermore-capable Russian and Chinese radars.
“One of our programs at DARPA is taking a whole new approach to this problem, this is an effort we refer to as cognitive electronic warfare,” DARPA director, Dr. Arati Prabhakar, told the House Armed Services Committee’s Subcommittee on Emerging Threats and Capabilities on February 24. “We’re using artificial intelligence to learn in real-time what the adversaries’ radar is doing and then on-the-fly create a new jamming profile. That whole process of sensing, learning and adapting is going on continually.”
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Aug 27, 2016
The US Air Force Wants to Plasma Bomb The Ionosphere To Improve Radio Signals
Posted by Karen Hurst in category: military
US Air Force wishes to artificially increase plasma density in the ionosphere so that we can have better radio reception.
Aug 27, 2016
SpaceX’s biggest rival is developing “space trucks” to ferry cargo in an orbital economy
Posted by Klaus Baldauf in categories: business, economics, Elon Musk, military, space travel
The big kahuna of American rocket companies is the United Launch Alliance, a joint venture of Boeing and Lockheed Martin that until this year held a monopoly on the lucrative business of launching rockets for the US Air Force.
But that monopoly is no more. The company faces a new era of competition as Elon Musk’s maturing SpaceX aims to fly more space missions in one year than ULA does, and as Jeff Bezos’ Blue Origin breaks ground on a new factory for orbital rockets.
ULA, for its part, isn’t sitting still. “I came here to transform the company, position it in this new competitive marketplace with all these different players,” says Tony Bruno, who took the CEO job at ULA in August 2014 after a three-decade career in Lockheed’s missile-defense business. In his first full year in charge, ULA returned more than $400 million in operating profits to its two owners, but the company must prepare for when its final no-bid launch contract expires in 2019.
Aug 27, 2016
‘Terminators’ will be built by our enemies, says top US military chief
Posted by Dan Kummer in categories: military, robotics/AI
What he says is mostly true. Russia and China will build robot soldiers. Russia is actually ahead of the US in robotic tank type vehicles. But, i doubt these countries will hesitate to raise an army of robot combat soldiers when that becomes practical, probably around 2025’ish, which would force the US to field their own.
The future of war will involve autonomous robots instead of humans, according to Air Force General and Vice Chair of the Joint of Chiefs of Staff Paul Selva, who warned enemies could build “Terminator”-like machines to fight in battlefields.
Aug 26, 2016
DARPA Wants Long-Lasting Super-Precise Portable Atomic Clocks
Posted by Karen Hurst in category: military
DARPA’s quest to perfect the portable clock for GPS, and other military assets. Time release perfected is a nice added feature.
Time for an upgrade.