U.S. military embraces robots with greater autonomy

PENN HILLS, Pennsylvania | Wed May 9, 2012 7:02am EDT

PENN HILLS, Pennsylvania (Reuters) – The unattended steering wheel on the 15-ton military truck jerked sharply back and forth as the vehicle’s huge tires bounced down a rain-scarred ravine through mounds of mine rubble on a rugged hillside near Pittsburgh.

Oshkosh Corp engineer Noah Zych, perched in the driver’s seat, kept his hands in his lap and away from the gyrating wheel as the vehicle reached the bottom of the slope and slammed into a puddle, coating the windshield in a blinding sheet of mud.

As the truck growled up another rise and started back down again, Zych reached up and flicked a wiper switch to brush away the slurry, then put his hands back in his lap.

“We haven’t automated those yet,” he explained, referring to the windshield wipers, as the robotic truck reached the bottom of the hill and executed a perfect hairpin turn.

Ten years of war in Afghanistan and Iraq have put a spotlight on the growing use of unmanned systems in the skies over the battlefield, from the high-flying Global Hawk to the lethal Predator aircraft and the hand-launched Raven.

But on the ground, thousands of small, remotely operated robots also have proven their value in dealing with roadside bombs, a lethal threat to U.S. troops in both wars. Of more than 6,000 robots deployed, about 750 have been destroyed in action, saving at least that many human lives, the Pentagon’s Robotics Systems Joint Program Office estimates.

Only now is robotics research nearing the stage that the military may soon be able to deploy large ground vehicles capable of performing tasks on their own with little human involvement. The results, among other things, could be more saved lives, less wear and tear on the troops, and reduced fuel consumption.

Full autonomy, engineers say, is still years away.

“The ground domain is much, much tougher than the air domain because it’s so dynamic,” said Myron Mills, who has worked on both aerial and ground robotic systems and now manages an autonomous vehicle program for Maryland-headquartered Lockheed Martin Corp.

Mills said autonomous ground systems face a series of challenges such as dust, fog and debris – as well as avoiding civilians and troops. A path may be passable one moment and littered with obstacles a half hour later due to battle damage.

“It’s just a very, very tough and chaotic environment,” Mills said. “The hardest thing to deal with has been figuring out how to make the system usable for the soldiers and be able to cope with the chaotic environment.”

Enough progress has been made that Lockheed’s Squad Mission Support System, a 5,000-pound (2,268 kg) vehicle designed to carry backpacks and other gear for overloaded foot soldiers, is now being tested in Afghanistan.

Wisconsin-based Oshkosh’s unmanned vehicle system, which would allow one person to control several heavy cargo trucks, has been assessed by U.S. Marine Corps drivers in the United States and is in the final stages of concept development.

A four-legged walking robot designed to carry loads for combat foot patrols – the Legged Squad Support System, or LS3 – is due to undergo testing and assessment with troops toward the end of the year, developers at Massachusetts-based Boston Dynamics said.

The potential payoffs could be huge. Robotic systems could “radically alter the balance” among the variables that are driving the high cost of combat vehicles, according to a report for the Pentagon last year by the nonprofit Rand Corporation.

Taking drivers out of the trucks would reduce the need for thick armor plating that increases weight, boosts the need for ever more powerful engines and ratchets up fuel consumption in places like Afghanistan, where the cost of delivering petroleum can run as high as $400 per gallon, the Rand report said.

Advances are significant enough that military officials say they are committed to continued development of robotic systems despite a budget environment that calls for reducing projected defense spending by at least $487 billion over the next decade.

“We’ve had some … very good success with unmanned systems. And robotics across the force is going to be more and more evident,” Marine Corps Lieutenant General Richard Mills told reporters recently.

CONQUERING THE HURDLES

Before robots can take on new and expanded roles, engineers must conquer the hurdles that prevent them from operating more autonomously. Rob Maline, enterprise director for the military’s Joint Ground Robotics program, calls that a “major technical challenge.”

Most of the 6,000 robots fielded so far, including 2,100 now in Afghanistan, have been small, remotely operated systems driven by someone watching a video feed from cameras on the vehicle.

To take on greater autonomy, robotic systems need more than video cameras. They need sensors that can give them an accurate view of the world, and the capacity to interpret that input so they can respond appropriately to the situation.

The perception system on Oshkosh’s unmanned cargo truck begins with a three-dimensional LIDAR, or light detection and ranging system, a technology similar to radar.

While radar uses radio waves or microwaves, the LIDAR uses lasers, which produce a more tightly focused wave that can deliver images with sharper resolution. Fused with that are short- and long-range radars. A global positioning system, coupled with detailed maps of the route, helps the system navigate and keep itself on the road.

A half a dozen video cameras, including an infrared camera for “seeing” in the dark, help it build an image of the world around it so it can drive without GPS assistance if necessary, or enable a remote operator to take over and drive the vehicle from a nearby truck if the autonomous system runs into trouble.

“Those sensors feed into the perception systems, which essentially process all that into a map which allows the vehicle to actually drive based on all that information,” Zych said.

Even with all the sensors, processing the input and dealing with it appropriately can be tough for the software algorithms, the step-by-step computer instructions that drive the system.

Laser beams can bounce back to the sensors from fog, dust, smoke and foliage, making it seem the vehicle is facing an obstacle. They can reflect off water in a puddle and bounce into space, never returning to the sensor and making it appear as if the truck is facing an infinitely deep hole.

“I think the layperson person thinks … you put a camera on a computer and a computer can understand that scene. And that’s definitely far from the truth,” said John Beck, the Oshkosh chief engineer for unmanned systems. “One of the largest challenges is really getting the vehicle or the robot to understand its environment and be able to deal with it.”

To ensure the vehicle makes the correct driving decisions, the Oshkosh team continuously refines the algorithms to improve the way the system interprets what it is seeing and responds more quickly and efficiently.

“When you’ve got a 15-ton truck, potentially with a 7-ton payload in the back, moving at 35 mph, an extra 20 milliseconds, 40 milliseconds of processing time … means you may not be able to drive that fast because you wouldn’t be able to stop in time,” Zych said.

Feedback from the Marine Corps drivers who tested the vehicle last year has helped to improve performance.

“One of the largest complaints they had was about the way it drove,” said Captain Warren Watts, the Marine Corps liaison with the project. “It had a big stop-and-go jerkiness reaction.”

The software was tweaked in response to the criticism to let the vehicle anticipate stopping and starting, enabling it to brake and accelerate more smoothly so it would “drive like Marines drive and not like a robot drives,” Watts said.

TESTING IN COMBAT

One system with significant autonomous features is already being tested in Afghanistan. The Squad Mobile Support System – a rugged, six-wheeled vehicle about the size of a golf cart – is billed by Lockheed Martin as the largest autonomous ground vehicle ever deployed with ground troops.

The SMSS, whose mission is to lighten the load of overburdened foot soldiers, is capable of carrying some 1,200 pounds (544 kg) of gear.

It can be driven, or allowed to drive by itself using points on a route map, or even programmed to follow behind a soldier at a fixed distance, regardless whether the person is walking or running – an experience Mills said can be a bit unnerving.

“It’s a little like having a 5,000 pound (2,268 kg) dog following you around wherever you go. If you speed up and start running, it speeds up and stays right with you. If you suddenly come to a halt, it suddenly comes to a halt behind you,” he said.

Like other autonomous systems, the SMSS can run into difficulties that force it to stop and call for human help. That means it needs supervision and oversight.

Mills calls it “supervised autonomy,” saying: “It doesn’t require constant attention and fiddling and correction, but there are times when you do have to intervene.”

That’s not likely to change soon, Maline said. Fully autonomous robots are still years away, and until that goal is reached, there will have to be humans in the loop.

Beck and Mills said full autonomy would likely be an evolutionary process, both for military systems as well as the automotive industry. Driverless features are likely to be added as they are shown to contribute to highway safety or efficiency, eventually progressing toward full autonomy, they said.

“We’re taking baby steps,” Beck said, pointing to features like automatic braking systems and stability control on commercial vehicles.

“I think there’s going to need to be a human in the loop for quite some time before we can basically black out the windshield and be texting as we’re going down the highway,” he said.

(Editing by Warren Strobel and Will Dunham)

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Will Saturday’s ‘supermoon’ destroy the Earth?

No, it won’t. You people really need to learn to calm down.?

Astronomers call it perigee-syzygy; the rest of us call it “supermoon.” Either way, the alignment of the sun and moon will coincide with the moon’s closest approach to Earth on Saturday (May 5), resulting in the biggest full moon of the year. But don’t worry, it won’t break Earth.

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Saturday’s supermoon will be especially super. Richard Nolle, the astrologer who coined the term “supermoon,” defined it as a full moon that occurs within 12 hours of lunar perigee, or the point in the moon’s slightly non-circular monthly orbit when it swings closest to our planet. On Saturday, the timing of the two events will be almost perfect: the moon will reach its perigee distance of 221,802 miles (356,955 kilometers) ? the closest lunar perigee of 2012, in fact ? at 11:34 p.m. Eastern Time, and it will fall in line with the sun (thereby becoming full) just one minute later.

Thus, our satellite will loom even larger than the?supermoon of March 19, 2011, when perigee and full moon fell 50 minutes apart. Nonetheless, just as last year’s supermoon passed by without triggering any of the earthquakes, volcanic eruptions and chaos that were predicted by some corners of the Internet, this year’s event will almost certainly be similarly tame. Seismologists have found no evidence to believe that supermoons heighten seismic activity ? at least not over and above the effects of run-of-the-mill moons.

Under normal conditions, the moon is close enough to Earth to make its weighty presence felt:?It causes the ebb and flow of the ocean tides.?The moon’s gravity can even cause small but measureable ebbs and flows in the continents, called “land tides” or “solid Earth tides,” too. The tides are greatest during full and new moons, when the sun and moon are aligned either on the opposite or same sides of the Earth. [Photos: Mysterious Objects Spotted on the Moon]

According to John Vidale, a seismologist at the University of Washington in Seattle and director of the Pacific Northwest Seismic Network, particularly dramatic land and ocean tides do occasionally trigger earthquakes. “Both the moon and sun do stress the Earth a tiny bit, and when we look hard we can see a very small increase in tectonic activity when they’re aligned,” Vidale told?Life’s Little Mysteries?during the furor surrounding last year’s supermoon.

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EA to invest $80 million in next-gen console game development …

While EA may not necessarily be the most loved company at the moment, we?re sure that the publisher still has its fans and the good news is that if you?ve loved the games that EA has put out in the past, you will be pleased to learn that the game publisher has announced that they will be pumping in $80 million in development of games for ?Gen4 console systems? over the next 12 months.

Apart from Nintendo?s Wii U launching later this year, other manufacturers like Sony and Microsoft have yet to officially announce their next-gen gaming consoles. Some have taken this announcement by EA as an indication that next-gen consoles could be launched within the 12 month time frame. It does seem like a bit of a stretch but one can always hope, right? No word on what sort of games EA will be launching on said Gen4 consoles, but it has been suggested that Battlefield 3 is one the games that could make it onto the Nintendo Wii U along with Mass Effect. Either way it will be interesting to see what titles EA will be producing over the next year, so be sure to stay tuned for more updates.

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Kanye West’s ‘Lost In The World’ Video Months In The Making

‘We’ve probably been tweaking and working on it for six months,’ director Ruth Hogben tells MTV News.
By Nadeska Alexis


Kanye West in his video for “Lost in the World”
Photo: Roc-A-Fella Records

Kanye West surprised and confused fans last week when, out of the blue, he dropped a video for “Lost in the World” off his fifth album, My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy. But director Ruth Hogben tells MTV News that she and ‘Ye actually shot the video together last summer.

Hogben, a fashion filmmaker, explained that she was introduced to Kanye through her SHOWStudio colleague Nick Knight, who thought that she would be a good fit to work with the eccentric rapper/producer.

The pair first began discussing their plans for the video around May 2011, and they captured all of the visuals in a two-day shoot later that summer. “I think he just wanted something that represented the song really well,” Hogben said, detailing the brainstorming session.

“He explained how he felt about the song and it was a really interesting process because he just talked to me about the song — how he felt about the lyrics, about the beat. He was really very concerned about how he felt about the track, so that’s where it started.

“It was a really strong collaborative process,” she continued. “The conversation was very organic — he says one thing, I say one thing, he sends a picture, I send a picture. So it was a creative conversation that just kept rolling. We had a two-day shoot and then we spent quite a long time working on the edit together, making sure that it was right. We’ve probably been tweaking and working on it for about six months.”

On first look, the black-and-white clip seems to play up the desperation of the Bon Iver-featured “Lost in the World,” with West and his dancers set against the dark, ominous backdrop, but Hogben describes the final product as “energetic.” She maintains that fans are supposed to come up with their individual interpretations of the clip. Even the dancers in the video were given the creative freedom to let loose. “It was actually their interpretation of the song,” Hogben explained. “Kanye didn’t say to them, ‘Dance this way.’ We wanted an interpretation of how they felt about the song.”

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Report: Photo & Video Now The Fastest Growing Mobile App Category

flurry_logoEver since Facebook’s $1 billion acquisition of Instagram, the search for the next “Instagram of [insert app category here]” has been on. One area many pundits have focused on in this context is video and according to the latest data from mobile app analytics company Flurry, that’s probably not a bad bet. Video & Photo is now the fastest growing mobile app category across the major mobile platforms. The time spent on photo and video apps per active user increased 89% to 231 minutes per month between October 2011 and March 2012 and a massive 166% since July 2011.

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Apple progressing with iPad trademark negotiations in China

Proview lawyers recently said that Apple has had a change of heart and are discussing settlements with the LED manufacturer over the use of the iPad name in China.



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Engadget Mobile Podcast 136 – 05.07.2012

We’re back, and we have opinions. Strong ones. Veer into the rim of our ga1aXy for a glimpse of what’s now and what’s next in mobile.

Hosts: Myriam Joire (tnkgrl), Brad Molen, Joseph Volpe
Guest: Mat Smith
Producer: Trent Wolbe
Music: TychoCoastal Brake (Ghostly International)

00:02:15 – Samsung Galaxy S III preview: hands-on with the next Android superphone (video)
00:11:20 – Samsung Galaxy S III vs. rival flagships: iPhone 4S, HTC One X, Lumia 900
00:15:06 – Samsung Galaxy S III software impressions (video)
00:43:15 – HTC One X for AT&T review
00:58:17 – BlackBerry 10 Dev Alpha hands-on
01:00:30 – BlackBerry 10 dev alpha unit unveiled: 4.2-inch screen, 1280 x 768 resolution
01:04:00 – RIM shows off BlackBerry 10 touch keyboard with gesture support
01:08:00 – RIM demos simple app switching in BlackBerry 10, slide to reveal
01:10:40 – Does BlackBerry 10′s camera app get by with a little help from Scalado Rewind? (Update: Yes)
01:14:50 – LG announces Optimus LTE2, coming to Korea mid-May with True HD IPS and 2GB RAM

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Engadget Mobile Podcast 136 – 05.07.2012 originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 07 May 2012 13:58:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Ariel Atom-inspired simulator touts world’s first 180-degree spherical projector screen (video)

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The Ariel Atom is arguably one of the greatest bangs for the buck in terms of sports car performance, so it’s no surprise that the automaker has paired up with Motion Simulation to design a particularly special simulator for both hardcore fans as well pro racing drivers and pilots. The TL1 has the world’s first 180-degree spherical projection unit (technically, three projector screens acting as one) to give you that advance view of the apex without display bezels getting in the way. Its seat not only adjusts to fit different breeds of cars and aircraft but, if you opt for it, tucks in a motion transducer that will properly jolt you when you hit a bump in the road. What may please extra-serious racing game fans the most is the off-the-shelf nature of the computer needed to drive the TL1 properly: as long as your graphics hardware can handle the extra-wide 5760 x 1200 resolution, any typical Windows XP or Windows 7 desktop will do. The real question is whether your wallet can handle it, as the £11,500 ($18,573) PC-less starting price will make it tempting to buy a real Atom instead.

Continue reading Ariel Atom-inspired simulator touts world’s first 180-degree spherical projector screen (video)

Ariel Atom-inspired simulator touts world’s first 180-degree spherical projector screen (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 05 May 2012 23:58:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Faced with Breivik’s unflinching account, Norway surprises world with its civility

A reporter covering Anders Behring Breivik’s trial marvels at the degree of civility Norwegians have shown him, considering the brutality of the July 2011 terror attacks and his lack of remorse.

In the first two weeks of Anders Behring Breivik’s trial, the Norwegian man reiterated his conviction that he did the right thing when he killed 77 people on July 22, 2011 ? even if it meant shooting unarmed Labor party youth members as young as 14 trapped on an island or bombing government buildings in Oslo. Those killed were??legitimate political targets,? he said.

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The attacks were ?gruesome but necessary” for preventing Labor from continuing to undermine Norwegian society with its lenient immigration policies, Mr. Breivik said. The party had betrayed the country by promoting the Islamic colonization of Norway and ipso facto the ethnic cleansing of indigenous Norwegians. He would do it all again, he said.?

International onlookers have been shocked to see how civil the whole trial is proceeding, given the scale and brutality of his crimes ? together they are?the worst national tragedy the country has experienced since World War II ??and Breivik’s lack of remorse.?

On April 16, the first day of the 10-week trial, a lineup of prosecutors, forensic psychiatrists, and the legal counsel for the victims all approached Breivik in court to shake his hand. Wearing a suit and neatly trimmed beard, he politely extended his right hand to greet them. Outside, people lined up orderly to enter Oslo District Court. There was not a single sign denouncing him, nor any banners calling for the death penalty.

On the second day of the trial, he was allowed to begin his six-day testimony of what happened in the years leading up to the attack, including his preparation for that day. At the end of the first week he recounted, in chilling detail, of how, after packing a ham and cheese sandwich that morning, he shot and killed 69 people at the Labor party youth summer camp on Ut?ya with a Glock pistol and Ruger semi-automatic rifle.

If this all sounds surreal, that?s because it is.?

It is surreal to see a well-dressed upper class man sit in a court and calmly explain how he killed Norwegians to prevent Norway?s demise. It?s incomprehensible to hear how a man, who supposedly had all the economic means and generous provisions of a cradle-to-grave welfare system, could turn into Norway?s most notorious killer in modern times. And that is part of what scares Norwegians: the thought that he is one of them.?

Despite the atrocity of his crimes and his behavior, Norwegians still want to see him get a fair trial. But that means?he has a legal right to explain himself in court, even if there is a risk that he spreads his propaganda. The trial is also key in determining Breivik’s sanity, which is at the crux of this case. The prosecution even defended his right to keep reading from his prepared speech on his first day of testimony in spite of protests from the legal counsel for the victims, who were offended by his one-hour long monologue.?

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Video: The Complete Animade Lernz (Little green footballs)

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