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War(ship) Driving For 802.11b Controlled Destroyers 343

Jason Straight writes "There's a story at pcworld, that describes how navy warships will be equipped with 802.11b networking to allow the captain to control the ship from anywhere on the ship. " The point of the article also gets into the issue of cutting manpower for the ships - going from 300 people on each to destroyer to 90, and makes the point that the only way to do is through automation.
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War(ship) Driving For 802.11b Controlled Destroyers

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  • Great... (Score:4, Funny)

    by PaybackCS ( 611691 ) <payback&pdxlan,com> on Wednesday January 29, 2003 @02:06AM (#5180202) Homepage
    Terrorist take over the United States Navy, w/o Wires!
    • No need for suicide missions any more. . . I can just see the incident report:
      A little white dinghy pulled up along side the ship. There were three people in the boat. Two of them stood up and screamed something about "Allah Akbar", the third appeared to be hunched over a laptop.

      The next thing we knew, the bow gun was firing at the bridge. (I didn't think it could do that... It must have been just a software limitation).
      The hard part, of course, is going to be figuring out the encryption codes (thank god for quantum computing).
      • I can understand using wireless as a backup system, in case the wire lines get cut by structural damage (read: a hit). Using them as a primary communication system, on the other hand, seems like just asking for trouble.
    • Re:Great... (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Jeremiah Cornelius ( 137 ) on Wednesday January 29, 2003 @05:33AM (#5180532) Homepage Journal
      Bad guys don't need to crack the VPN they'd run this thing over, to do harm.

      Just broadcast a stronger, interfering signal on the same spread spectrum. They could probably use a home cordless phone (some of which seems to pretty much kill 802.11b in many residences) and a pringles can.

      • Re:Great... (Score:5, Interesting)

        by Naikrovek ( 667 ) <jjohnson@p[ ]com ['sg.' in gap]> on Wednesday January 29, 2003 @06:39AM (#5180665)
        just rig a microwave oven to run without the door and point it at the ship. all standard 802.11b communications will be scrambled.

        the standard 100mW WiFi transmitter is nothing against an 1100W microwave oven with the door open.
        • Re:Great... (Score:3, Funny)

          by Weaps ( 642924 )
          CIC officer: "Sir, there is a microwave operating at 250 degrees range 700 meters" Captain: "Very well, lock on target and fire" Harm missile: "WWHHHOOOOOOSSSHHHHHH!.......*KABOOM*" CIC officer: "Target destroyed, all enemy personnel neutralized." Captain: "Outstanding, carry on."
    • "Hello, this is your captain speaking, I am currently sitting on my couch watching reruns of 'friends' and controlling the entire operations of this ship with my palm pilot. Have a nice day!"
  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday January 29, 2003 @02:06AM (#5180203)
    "And in other news, the USS Bigship crashed into the USS Otherbigship because someone forgot to turn ESSID broadcasts off."
  • by wackybrit ( 321117 ) on Wednesday January 29, 2003 @02:07AM (#5180211) Homepage Journal
    Whoever makes 802.11b repeaters will have their stock shooting up in the next few days then. With their excessive steelwork and armory, a warship is an extremely BAD place to run on 802.11b as the signals will bounce around everywhere (being at the high frequency they are).

    Funnily enough, a lot of people predicted the coming of 'war boating' just three months ago here on Slashdot. [slashdot.org]
    • by chamenos ( 541447 ) on Wednesday January 29, 2003 @02:14AM (#5180232)
      not only that....given the military's track record of online security, the wireless network might not be properly secured, and enemy personnel could easily eavesdrop or worse, take complete control of the ship. i hope the military brass knows what they're doing.
      • "i hope the military brass knows what they're doing"

        Thankfully, the military brass doesn't make the technical decisions - there ARE people in technical positions who definitely know what they're doing, and will ensure things like that don't happen. I have faith in our military =)

        -Berj
        • Like the bozo at the Naval Undersea Warfare Center Detachment, Norfolk that got into an argument with one of our fire control techs about 10 years ago when I worked for a contractor there? The idiot swore up and down with all seriousness that electronic air filters worked by means of anti-matter, and this was from a friggin' electrical engineer. Or the other guy at NUWCDETNOR that, in the course of troubleshooting a problem with one of the fire control consoles on board one of the submarines, went through five $30,000 CRTs before one of the on-board techs stopped him? He just kept replacing tubes as they popped with no apparent thought as to what he was doing.
      • i hope the military brass knows what they're doing.
        ...of which they clearly have an impressive track record. NOT.
      • by The Fink ( 300855 ) <slashdot@diffidence.org> on Wednesday January 29, 2003 @03:13AM (#5180404) Homepage
        My $10 says the military brass don't have a clue what they're doing. Particularly given the military's track record of online security...

        It's called Buzzword Bingo, and everyone's playing. That will be the main reason for this; it sounds cool, it sounds like a neat concept, and we'll be the only players, right? We don't need to worry about The Enemy building a 15dBi omni, and at least listening in, and at most actually taking over? Surely not. Never. They'd not do that. Nobody has that capability.

        Lo and behold, what was designed and implemented as a battlespace advantage quickly becomes your biggest battlespace disadvantage.

        Given the military's strong chain of command - and the near heresy of so much as thinking questioning thoughts, the techs implementing this won't dare mention what a Bad Idea it is.

        But hey, it's not as if I have any experience in large defence projects. Oh, no. Definitely not.

        :-)

        • by SCHecklerX ( 229973 ) <greg@gksnetworks.com> on Wednesday January 29, 2003 @08:34AM (#5180933) Homepage
          I don't know. To date, all other forms of military communications are pretty well secured. For example, the firing officer for a air defense artiliery missle command center can tell who is friendly and who is not because our aircraft transmit a signal that says 'Don't shoot me! I'm a good guy!' If an enemy could spoof that, I am sure they would have by now.

          That is one example. Another is the basic infantry soldier. As part of basic training, they are taught the differences in security of radio (least secure), direct land line (More secure), and person to person (most secure).

          The challenge/response authentication used by the military for voice communication, to my knowledge, has never been broken by an enemy either.

      • by mesocyclone ( 80188 ) on Wednesday January 29, 2003 @10:03AM (#5181362) Homepage Journal
        Having worked (a few decades ago) on Navy command and control computers (NTDS), I can say that at least then, they were beyond careful about computer security. We were contracted to do a system that would monitor and play back all of the CIC data inputs and outputs in order to monitor the performance of people during exercises or combat, and in order to record exactly the sensor and effector data.

        We were not even allowed to run code in the computer! They were so paranoid that the only way we could build the device was to put probes on all I/O lines (parallel I/O in those days), and literally decode the entire action from watching the primitive I/O.

        The military is a lot more careful about combat systems than they are about publicly accessible systems on the .mil network!

    • by inKubus ( 199753 ) on Wednesday January 29, 2003 @02:18AM (#5180246) Homepage Journal
      Interestingly enough, I have a friend who designs and implements repeater systems on big ships (aircraft carriers). He once described to me the difficulty of making a simple walkie talkie radio work all around the ship. The excessive steelwork and armory are the least of his worries. Making it all work with less than 1mw is the big issue.

      Remember, "stealth" is important, and when a carrier group goes dark to be more invisible, the last thing we want is the enemy sniffing out a little walkie talkie somewhere.

      Take that little walkie talkie times a thousand repeaters and you are looking at quite a bit of radiation. They literally have to make sure that only one is operating at a given time on a given frequency. In a ship with 5000 occupants, this is quite difficult.

      Then again, this is just a little destroyer the article is talking about. I imagine 802.11b is probably alright still, but they will probably use something like bluetooth--lower power--and then putting a tranciever in every room. Still, interesting to think about..
    • Excessive steel until you're being shot at...
    • by srmalloy ( 263556 ) on Wednesday January 29, 2003 @09:13AM (#5181072) Homepage
      Whoever makes 802.11b repeaters will have their stock shooting up in the next few days then. With their excessive steelwork and armory, a warship is an extremely BAD place to run on 802.11b as the signals will bounce around everywhere (being at the high frequency they are).

      Not to mention that each compartment on a warship is a reasonable approximation to a Faraday cage, and many of the C3I spaces are Faraday cages.

      One of the things that any electronic warfare specialist or tactical action officer learns is that your radar signals can be detected several times as far out as you can detect a return bounced off a target; EMCON (EMissions CONtrol) is a major concern for warships in a combat environment. If the crew complement of a warship is reduced, and the crew needs to use the wireless network to run the ship, then that's an electronic emission that can't be turned off. How far away from the ship can the wireless signal be detected? To be used to localize a target, you don't need to be able to connect via the network signal; you just have to be able to detect it and tell what direction it's coming from.
  • by WatertonMan ( 550706 ) on Wednesday January 29, 2003 @02:08AM (#5180214)
    Isn't that a little dangerous? It would seem, even with encryption, to leave things open to electronic countermeasures. Yeah you'll have folks on the bridge in case it starts to happen. But in battle those few minutes of confusion may give an enemy the advantage - especially in these days of asymmetrical combat. (i.e. terrorism)

    So you have some terrorist who jams things or sends confusing orders to the ship. The crew is trying to figure out what is going on when WHAM the strike takes place.

    If weapon systems are under control of such a remote control pad then it is even scarier.

    • by f97tosc ( 578893 ) on Wednesday January 29, 2003 @05:09AM (#5180488)
      Dear Admiral, our scientists have just developed a new communication device they call the 'radio'. It is said that with these new tools our ships can communicate faster and more efficiently with each other. However, I recommend against starting to use these new tools. It would seem, even with encryption, to leave things open to electronic countermeasures. Or imagine this scenario: some terrorist who jams things or sends confusing orders to the ship. The crew is trying to figure out what is going on when WHAM the strike takes place. No clearly, new technologies such as these should be avoided at all costs, and we should keep using flags and pigeons which are all but impossible to interrupt and intercept.

      Tor
      • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday January 29, 2003 @06:43AM (#5180679)

        and we should keep using flags and pigeons which are all but impossible to interrupt and intercept

        This (humourous) rebuff to the people who are worried about wireless control of warships is misplaced. The danger is partially social as well as technological. You know when a pigeon has been intercepted - you don't get the pigeon or because you see it is a physical medium like the post you are familliar with the possibility of interception and thus treat the message with appropriate scepticism.

        With 'hi tech' the user is usually a 'poor knowledge' user and will accept the results blindly. How many times have you questioned the results of a pencil and paper calculation vs. an electronic calculator even though a slip of the finger can make the calculator result useless but accepted blindly? A communication blackout on a wireless network on board a ship may just be accepted as 'normal' because, after all, the Windows PC at home screws up sometimes. Humans (mostly) nowadays blindly accept the results (and failings) of computers and don't understand the failure modes. This is the biggest risk.

  • by saskboy ( 600063 ) on Wednesday January 29, 2003 @02:11AM (#5180224) Homepage Journal
    "... allow the captain to control the ship from anywhere on the ship."

    Great, just what the crew wanted: Their captain giving orders while he's in the head.
    • by echucker ( 570962 ) on Wednesday January 29, 2003 @06:36AM (#5180660) Homepage
      The parent actually raises a good point. Can the captain stay informed enough in any given position on the ship to make command and control decisions effectively? I doubt it.
      • by hcdejong ( 561314 ) <hobbes@xm s n e t . nl> on Wednesday January 29, 2003 @07:37AM (#5180771)

        I don't think this really is about letting the captain command from anywhere. It was mentioned in the article, but most of the article talks about automating the monitoring of the ship's systems: using a computer to listen to a bunch of sensors, rather than having a crewman 'sense' manually by patrolling the systems and checking readouts. This is entirely different from controlling the main functions (weapons and propulsion) of the ship.

        These days, a captain would spend most of his time (at least when the ship is in action/at war) in the Combat Information Center. There, he's surrounded by 5-30 specialists, who each have a console with 2x21" screens and two radio channels (one in each ear). These people supply all the information the Captain needs to deploy his ship.

        There's no way you can do this with a laptop, as some posters have suggested.

    • by 512k ( 125874 ) on Wednesday January 29, 2003 @07:23AM (#5180746)
      for whatever reason, the boss had a telephone extension installed in his office bathroom (he owned the building)..one of the things you learned there very quickly was, when you were paged to extension 13, you did NOT pick up the phone.
    • Navy Stuff (Score:5, Informative)

      by PSaltyDS ( 467134 ) on Wednesday January 29, 2003 @09:31AM (#5181148) Journal
      [Retired Navy with 20 years as a Data Systems Tech.] That line in the article about the captain having "control" of the ship from anywhere was poorly written and reflected the writer's imagination, not the Navy's intent for this kind of technology.
      To begin with, the captain ALREADY has "contol" of his ship wherever he is, even while in the shower. At the same time, the captain of a ship NEVER has "control" of his ship even when on the bridge. The point is what you mean by control. The ship is always under the captain's command, but he does not execute those commands himself. The captain never takes the helm, takes over damage control efforts, or actually uses any weapons systems himself. He gives the commands to see that those things are done, and is responsible for the training and performance of the people who do it. The article makes an unnecesary jump from wireless networked remote mechanical sensors and controls, to operational command and control.
      As an example, the article mentions tying in the Integrated Condition Assessment System (ICAS), which is a system I know something about. This system is used to track the material condition and readiness of the ship, and to track damage control and engineering plant information. Wireless remote sensors might be a big improvement to that system, but is not going to result in steering the ship from Damage Control Central or the Chief Engineer's stateroom.
      A good point is made about automation being a required step towards smaller crews on Navy ships, but that is not the only requirement by far. For example, a ship has a certain number of exposed square feet of steel and aluminum that require a certain number of man-hours per month to maintain. Sticking with damage control items - every water tight door, emergency light, and fire extinguisher/hose/nozzle on the ship gets weekly inspections and monthly maintenance. Automated "rust sensors" won't change those efforts a bit.
      When a ship is in port overseas, usualy one third of the crew is "on duty" at time. The other two thirds can go ashore and see the sights. That leaves only 30 out of 90 onboard to man a dozen or so Quarterdeck and security watches through six four-hour watch periods. When half of a crew of 350 is on Christmas leave, you can still get enough people together to bring onboard the truck loads of milk, bread, printer paper, and spare parts that just arrived on the pier.
      The scary thing in this is the possibility that the Navy will reduce the crew size without finding ways to reduce or outsource all these low-tech mundane tasks too. But I have reason to believe they are considering this issue, so I think the most likely change would be a reduction from 350 to 250, with high-tech wiz-bang stuff providing half the reduction, and marine contracting of some low-tech paint roller action providing the rest.
    • Our ex-president was giving orders while getting head. Which is worse?
  • Dumb and Dumber (Score:5, Interesting)

    by swinginSwingler ( 161566 ) <marc_swinglerNO@SPAMhotmail.com> on Wednesday January 29, 2003 @02:12AM (#5180229)
    This is flat out one of the worst ideas I've ever seen. Worse than those Navy crusiers running on NT 4.0 (when the systems crashed the ships went dead in the water IIRC)
    • Re:Dumb and Dumber (Score:5, Interesting)

      by swinginSwingler ( 161566 ) <marc_swinglerNO@SPAMhotmail.com> on Wednesday January 29, 2003 @02:16AM (#5180239)
      Bad form to reply to my own post but check this out:



      Navy ships dead in the water [gcn.com]

      • Re:Dumb and Dumber (Score:4, Insightful)

        by sql*kitten ( 1359 ) on Wednesday January 29, 2003 @06:20AM (#5180631)
        Bad form to reply to my own post but check this out:

        The application crashed on a divide-by-zero, if I remember correctly. The underlying OS was nothing to do with it. Or would you rather the OS trapped that error and just substituted in a random number? With the source to the Linux kernel, I'm sure you could do that ;-)
        • Proper operation (Score:5, Informative)

          by Andy Dodd ( 701 ) <atd7@c[ ]ell.edu ['orn' in gap]> on Wednesday January 29, 2003 @08:46AM (#5180976) Homepage
          I believe that proper operation in this case is to trap the error and kill the application in question.

          But in that SmartShip debacle, the OS trapped the error and killed itself instead of the errant application... Starting a chain reaction that caused EVERY MACHINE on the control network to crash. Not just one small routine, but the ENTIRE NETWORK.

          It's all about damage compartmentalization. Something the Navy knows quite a lot about in the mechanical world...
          • by sql*kitten ( 1359 ) on Wednesday January 29, 2003 @09:14AM (#5181081)
            But in that SmartShip debacle, the OS trapped the error and killed itself instead of the errant application... Starting a chain reaction that caused EVERY MACHINE on the control network to crash. Not just one small routine, but the ENTIRE NETWORK.

            Thing is, I've worked with a bunch of OSs, including NT4 and guess what: if you set up a few hundred NT servers and workstations in a domain, and one bluescreens, it doesn't take all the others with it!

            So this wasn't NT's fault, it was the Navy's.
    • Re:Dumb and Dumber (Score:5, Informative)

      by swissmonkey ( 535779 ) on Wednesday January 29, 2003 @02:25AM (#5180269) Homepage
      Taken from http://www.gcn.com/archives/gcn/1998/july13/cov2.h tm that you provided in your other post :

      The ship had to be towed into the Naval base at Norfolk, Va., because a database overflow caused its propulsion system to fail, according to Anthony DiGiorgio, a civilian engineer with the Atlantic Fleet Technical Support Center in Norfolk.


      So obviously it had nothing to do with NT4, it was due to a database problem, that's completely independant of the OS underneath.
      They could have run their ship with QNX or whatever else, had there been an overflow in the database software, the result would have been the same.
      • Except that 'traditional' Navy computers, including their OSes have been designed to fail gracefully, unlike Windows NT where it's "OnError Goto Hell".

        Things like distributed processing (where a program can run on any of the dozens of processors in a ship's network, and be shifted around if a processor fails) and multiple network links aren't unusual.

        The database overflow fried the LAN, and crashed a number of 'remote terminals'. All things that should be protected by the OS.

  • Isn't the point... (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Fuzquat ( 534556 ) on Wednesday January 29, 2003 @02:17AM (#5180240)
    There is a good reason why warships have more people then are strictly necessacry to run them on board.

    Simply, if a whole bunch of people get killed on the ship, then there are still enough left to run it. This is not insignifigant, after all who wants to have an undermanned ship after 1/4-1/2 the crew dies?

    • Simply, if a whole bunch of people get killed on the ship, then there are still enough left to run it. This is not insignifigant, after all who wants to have an undermanned ship after 1/4-1/2 the crew dies?

      Or when the smurf attack occurs in the middle of the lightning storm, during the "battle" (if you can still use the term in modern naval warfare, where there usually aren't even any enemy ships involved). When you are on a boat, there are so many things that can go wrong, all at the same time usually, I'm not sure you want to have to count on your laptop and your wireless setup to survive.

    • by f97tosc ( 578893 ) on Wednesday January 29, 2003 @05:03AM (#5180479)
      There is a good reason why warships have more people then are strictly necessacry to run them on board. Simply, if a whole bunch of people get killed on the ship, then there are still enough left to run it. This is not insignifigant, after all who wants to have an undermanned ship after 1/4-1/2 the crew dies?

      The point is that they are reducing the people that are "strictly necessary". They can then reduce the manpower, and still have a reserve.

      Do you know why warships are expensive? No, the main part is actually not building them. Over the life-time of the ship, the far biggest cost is salaries to the people on board. The navy has realized this and it is very wise to reduce the number of sailors and increase automation.

      Furthermore, in these days the public is very sensitive about casualties (rightly so); it is thus good to reduce the numnber of people exposed to risk.

      Tor
  • Warboating (Score:5, Funny)

    by Zayin ( 91850 ) on Wednesday January 29, 2003 @02:24AM (#5180262)
    In other news, the export of Pringles, laptops and speedboats to the Persian Gulf region has increased dramatically.
  • by petsounds ( 593538 ) on Wednesday January 29, 2003 @02:24AM (#5180263)
    "It sounded like a great idea until the terrorists released a virus called WOPR that exploited a vulnerability in MS Captain and launched a thermonuclear war..."
  • by MrLint ( 519792 ) on Wednesday January 29, 2003 @02:25AM (#5180268) Journal
    Now we know what happened to the SS minnow
  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday January 29, 2003 @02:27AM (#5180277)
    What kind of chalk marks would indicate this kind of access point?
  • by Dr. Photo ( 640363 ) on Wednesday January 29, 2003 @02:27AM (#5180280) Journal
    "What'll it be tonight, sir? Minesweeper, or battleship?"
  • fire-fighters (Score:4, Interesting)

    by mamba-mamba ( 445365 ) on Wednesday January 29, 2003 @02:31AM (#5180292)
    I used to work for Supershuttle, a van service that transports people to and from the airport. In my case, I was taking people to and from the San Francisco airport. One place we serviced was Treasure Island, then a Naval Base. I always asked the sailors what they did for the Navy. Almost every single one was a shipboard firefighter.

    After a while, I came to the conclusion that there are probably a lot of shipboard fires during naval combat.

    So, my point is, is it such a good idea to reduce the complement from 300 to 90?

    But what do I know. I'm just a shuttle driver. Or I was just a shuttle driver, anyway.

    MM
    --
    • Re:fire-fighters (Score:5, Insightful)

      by corbettw ( 214229 ) on Wednesday January 29, 2003 @02:50AM (#5180347) Journal
      Speaking as a sailor (served from '88 to '96, and now from '01 to present..didn't want to miss this war), I can tell you that *everyone* on board a warship is a firefighter. There are some guys who specialize in it, but they just lead the fire teams. Everyone, from the newest seaman recruit up to the Old Man hisself, is expected to lend a hand in putting out any fires. Think of it: you've got nowhere to run to, and the idea of sitting in the ocean until you're rescued isn't very appetizing (except to the sharks...).

      Reducing a ship's compliment by over 2/3 is a Bad Idea. When one of these ships gets hit with something the size of the bomb that hit the USS Cole, or the missiles that hit the USS Stark, I guarantee she will go down like a two dollar whore. The Stark is an especially good example, because when the missiles struck, one hit near her primary magazine. One lone individual kept the powder cool with a fire hose until he was found hours later. Considering his job was one of the ones likely to be eliminated by this "advance" in technology, the ship would almost definitely have gone down if she had been outfitted with it instead of a well trained crew.
      • It it possible that a new generation of ships might have measures that a) reduce the risk of fire, and b) make it easier to fight the fire?

        For instance, if the ship's smaller (fewer bunks, fewer supplies required, more fuel efficient so smaller fuel tanks, more space-efficient and lighter electronics, etc. etc.), wouldn't that inherently make it easier to fight fires? More armor around the magazine and the fuel tanks?

        On another topic, why do you say that you "didn't want to miss this war?" Whilst, if the need really arose, I would do my duty to defend my country, and I do understand that fighting wars is something you've trained for years to do, I can't understand why you'd be anxious to fight a war (which is the only interpretation I can place on your comment). Lots of people are likely to die, indirectly through your actions, if a war happens. Some of them will be Iraqi civilians. Most of them will be Iraqi conscripts who probably don't want to die defending Saddam's leadership. Some will be fellow Americans, the odd Pom and maybe a few Aussies. It's possible some could be your friends and acquaintances. There's a small but real chance one could be you. WTF would you *want* to be in a war?

  • gimp (Score:5, Funny)

    by Seehund ( 86897 ) on Wednesday January 29, 2003 @02:31AM (#5180296) Homepage Journal
    Oooh, this [studenthem.gu.se] was an obvious one...
  • by Quaoar ( 614366 ) on Wednesday January 29, 2003 @02:34AM (#5180304)
    Destroyer captains were notably irritated after being presented with their newly mandated hats that included an embedded Airport base station.

    An anonymous officer complained "I've got 10 pounds of circuitry on my head now...first the anti-homosexuality halo, now this!"
  • by n1ywb ( 555767 ) on Wednesday January 29, 2003 @02:37AM (#5180316) Homepage Journal
    I'm not sure how many people have noticed, but most railroads are now running radio-controllable locomotives.

    I'm a bit of a rail buff and I from time to time I like to go down to the yard and watch them assemble trains. Nowadays the engineers have a large remote control, in the form of a strap-on breastpack. From this control they can pretty much operate all of the primary functions of the train (IE throttle, brake, horn, bell, etc.) This makes it possible for the engineer to build the train essentialy unaided. He can drive the locomotive up to a switch, jump off, drive the whole train past the switch, throw the switch, then back the train all the way down untill the locomotive clears the switch, throw it back and jump back on the locomotive. In the past this operation would have either required two people, one to drive the loco and one to throw the switch, or else the engineer would have to walk the length of the train twice (not really a viable proposition when you've got a mile-long train on a busy line.)

    Is it dangerous? Working on the railroad is always dangerous. But in reality it's probably safer than otherwise. Fewer people to keep track of. It's a pretty neat system.

    Now IMHO it's fucking retarded that they are planning to use 802.11 for this. BTW the article link is 404 so don't bitch at me for not reading it.
  • by sane? ( 179855 ) on Wednesday January 29, 2003 @02:43AM (#5180329)
    If you want to read about, here is another story at http://www.gcn.com/21_11/news/18698-1.html [gcn.com]. Most probably it'll have the same details.

    Not exactly sure what the us navy is up to, but I can guess. The big items of military equipment are getting too expensive to buy, even for the us. The only alternative is to make extensive use of COTS hardware and software to push down the prices. The aim is to modify cheap stuff to deliver what you need, with the idea that at least that way you can have a lot of them, even if they might have some compromises.

    NT & 802.11b are just two examples of this, I'm sure if people do a little digging they will find more - in particular the computer hardware.

    After all, a destroyer is just a platform for missiles and a radar. And a target, of course. Never say that to the navy though, they are kind of sensitive to that type of thing.

    The question of /. readers is, how could they be supported in doing this better ? As usual, they get a load of contractors in who sell them the advice that Microsoft is a sure bet. What would an open source warship look like? Even better, how could you retro fit an existing hull to provide a cheap platform that be some use?

    One thing is for sure, other countries have picked up on the same idea.

    • What would an open source warship look like?
      String. Gaffatape.
    • open standards (Score:5, Insightful)

      by g4dget ( 579145 ) on Wednesday January 29, 2003 @06:11AM (#5180609)
      The main problem with NT isn't that it's commercial or that it sucks technically, the main problem is that it's through-and-through proprietary--it's a single-vendor solution.

      The military could and should go with software that is based on open standards: UNIX/POSIX, X11, etc. And in their implementations and deployments, they should then stick as much as possible to those open standards. They can then buy software and hardware from many different vendors and have a choice among multiple implementations, including some open source ones.

      • The main problem with NT isn't that it's commercial or that it sucks technically, the main problem is that it's through-and-through proprietary--it's a single-vendor solution.

        A good part of the problem is that Microsoft likes people to "upgrade" quite frequently. By the time any of their software made it through testing they'd probably refuse to support it anyway.
  • There is usually another guy besides the captain in charge of defending the ship when it comes under attack, ie some kind of gunnery control officer or such. Much better to have him and the captain close together instead of roaming the decks.

    The Navy is very authoritarian, and this model doesn't work well in modern warfare. Often the captain leaves orders and goes somewhere. Then the situation can change suddenly and the responding officer not only has to decide what to do, sometimes he has to decide if it's ok to violate the captain's orders to respond to the unforeseen. And he might have just minutes or seconds to respond. That's bad enough. With this high-tech, the captain may have the remote control, but he won't have all the information available as quickly as on the bridge. It would be like channel-surfing while looking at the TV Guide instead of at the TV. The subordinate on the bridge will have to factor in all the uncertainty about where is the captain, what does he know, is he sober and awake, ... Too confusing.

    War takes plenty of brains, but peace takes even more.

  • Yeah, right (Score:5, Informative)

    by ejaytee ( 186527 ) on Wednesday January 29, 2003 @02:57AM (#5180366)
    I happen to write software for a few Navy platforms, and this article is not quite on target.

    For starters, the idea is to reduce emissions and radar signatures, not enhance it. Since a $200 parabolic antenna can pick up WiFi at 20 miles, and get enough of a signal to make use of it, 802.11b has a problem here. Of course, on a subsurface plaform this is not an issue.

    Second, huge sections of Navy ships are RF quarantined, with no emissions allowed. Sometimes it's for security, sometimes it's because they don't want RF signals popping up around weapons with very sensitive electronics. Even the captain has to follow these rules. I said the first paragraph wasn't an issue for submarines, but this paragraph is, in a big way.

    Third, 802.11b enabling the captain to "run the ship" from anywhere presupposes that the captain can "run the ship" whenever he or she has a network connection and... what, a PDA or PC? Again, nope. The captain has a staff, external communications, and a ton of sensor data. About the best the captain can do with a PDA is to see what's for dinner and check email.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday January 29, 2003 @02:58AM (#5180370)
    Pringle's cans are now covered by ITAR export restrictions.
  • Capability Threshold (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Quenyar ( 560924 ) on Wednesday January 29, 2003 @03:00AM (#5180373) Homepage

    My first objection to this concept was to wonder what would happen to all this automation when it gets things shot through it. But then I recalled that modern ships are not designed to withstand attack and still be effective. With so many kinds of modern weapons, if you're hit, game over.

    Our existing naval ships were designed like this so much that they could beat off an attacking air squadron, but could not get a shot off at four men attacking the ship from a rowboat.

    Modern ships are a curious mix of outmoded ideas, window dressing, high technology and ludicrous "cost cutting" measures. It is a wonder they function in their missions at all. Replacing the expensive human element with more weird hardware by the lowest bidder will not make them perform their missions any better. We all know how hard it is to get complex distributed systems to work 24/7 - and that is when they're sitting in some purpose built office block. The only thing comparable to naval service for those systems would be a +7 earthquake. Anyone like to take bets on being able to print out a document on the 7th floor East printer 20 minutes after a nice big earthquake?

    But this is not about making capable, survivable, robust ships. It is about trying to fight better and cheaper wars. It's a numbers game. If you "need" 25 ships to accomplish your mission objectives worldwide and you can only get them to work 50% of the time, then you need to buy 50 of the things. How much money do you save by eliminating sailors vs. how much do twice as many ships cost?

    By turning over the world to bookkeepers we've done away with style, service, elegance, and quality. Maybe, if we turn war over to them they will succeed in making it so efficient that it also ceases to exist.

    The relevant naval saying here is: "Ships don't fight, men do." ...even if they don't use Windows.

  • Microsoft [theregister.co.uk] has been attached to the navy's destroyer program.

    However, I distinctly remember that the navy used to be proud of their lack of automation. This allowed warships to survive severe amounts of damage without perishing. If a radio operator is severely wounded, you can replace them. If your transmitter board is damaged, you can throw in a new one. If a jolt takes out the hard drive on your software radio, you're screwed. Perhaps the US hasn't been in a real war for so long they forgot how to design for damage?

    I'm not saying I want a war, or that I dislike the idea of warship automation, but the original stated intention of the Navy seemed somehow admirable in a way that installing 802.11b wireless helm control just doesn't. Increased automation does tend to increase the fragility of a device, and the amount of problems that might occurr. What happens when the captain walks out of range of a transmitter? What happens if the laptop is stolen, or comandeered? What is stopping someone from dropping little 802.11b jamlets onboard?

    And what OS, praytell, will this system support? Will the Navy solicit imput from BMW?

    -c

    • by rela ( 531062 ) on Wednesday January 29, 2003 @03:24AM (#5180429) Journal
      Perhaps the US hasn't been in a real war for so long they forgot how to design for damage?

      Perhaps. Certainly we haven't been in a real war for so long that we've forgotten that war sucks.

    • If your transmitter board is damaged, you can throw in a new one. If a jolt takes out the hard drive on your software radio, you're screwed. Perhaps the US hasn't been in a real war for so long they forgot how to design for damage?

      What stops you from throwing in one of the spare harddrives ?

      Seriously, your "problem" is a problem of too little redundancy, not a problem of modern technology.

  • 802.11b (Score:5, Insightful)

    by kabars_edge ( 644328 ) on Wednesday January 29, 2003 @03:18AM (#5180412)
    First of all, as a Marine that has spent time aboard ships, this seems absolutely ridiculous. They Navy hates automation beyond email. Second of all, this is just asking to get hacked. 802.11b can be received for kilometers. Being on the ocean, one big reflective antenna, you could probably extend this distance to miles with a decent antenna, obviously with great latency, but it would work. I couldn't access the story, but I really hope the Navy rethinks this technological advance.
    • First of all, as a Marine that has spent time aboard ships, this seems absolutely ridiculous. They Navy hates automation beyond email. Second of all, this is just asking to get hacked. 802.11b can be received for kilometers.

      Another possibility is jamming, it's even been known for warship radars and satcomms to jam their own systems.

      Being on the ocean, one big reflective antenna, you could probably extend this distance to miles with a decent antenna, obviously with great latency, but it would work.

      Latency isn't an issue if the aim is to guide a missile. Is this fancy radio network still going to work when the ship has a big hole in the side and is most likely on fire too...
  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday January 29, 2003 @03:26AM (#5180433)
    Okay, lets see:

    -world's most insecure networking technology...check!
    -world's most insecure, unstable, practically-end-of-life'd operating system....check!
    (remember, WINNT is the OS of choice in the navy, despite that whole dead-at-sea-had-to-be-towed-in incident)

    I think we've hit upon the Destroyer equivalent of "screen door on a submarine". Only way this could get any better is if they use ColdFusion for the web interface with a MS-SQL backend(and, of course, Exchange for email.)

    Still, that's going to make for some fun dialog boxes:
    "Searching for newly installed hardware- Found, AEGIS Ballistic Missile Defense System. Please insert vendor CDROM"

    Better hope you don't have an IRaQ conflict!

    Wait wait, I'm on a role.

    PocketPC:"oooh yeah baby, oooo[pop click click DING!]
    Captain: "#$@!%$"
    [wham! Clink clink clink clink...]
    "CAPTAIN IN THE GALLEY!"
    Captain: "SEARGENT! HOW MANY TIMES DO I HAVE TO TELL YOU, MICROWAVE OVEN USE IS STRICTLY PROHIBITED WHILE I"M TRYING TO DOWNLOAD PO...uh...TECHNICAL SPECS!"
    Seargent: "SIR, SORRY SIR, I WILL FINISH MY POPCORN IN THE AFT GALLEY!"

    Oh, but there's more.

    "Anyone up for a fireworks display?"
    "Oh, the USs Potshot back in port?"
    "Yeah, grab the pringles can."
  • Official comment (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Chris Canfield ( 548473 ) <slashdot@@@chriscanfield...net> on Wednesday January 29, 2003 @03:30AM (#5180441) Homepage
    Everyone here seems to be opposed to this idea, but I would like to ask the navy officers of Slashdot what the benifit of having wireless access would be? Since nobody has mentioned any positives yet, why has this been implemented at all? Is it the convienience? Are destroyers buried under a deluge of wires? How does this improve your survivability / effectiveness?

    What are you all looking forward to when you finally have 802.11b?

    -C

    • Since nobody has mentioned any positives yet, why has this been implemented at all? Is it the convienience? Are destroyers buried under a deluge of wires? How does this improve your survivability / effectiveness?

      Mineral insulated cable will work until it melts. A radio repeater will be useless when the first component fails, including things like backup batteries.
  • Redundancy (Score:5, Insightful)

    by tomgarcher ( 604260 ) on Wednesday January 29, 2003 @05:00AM (#5180471)
    The British Royal Navy has resisted automation for years. They purposefully take many more crew members than they need so that when they lose half of them in battle the ship can still function.
    • The British Royal Navy has resisted automation for years. They purposefully take many more crew members than they need so that when they lose half of them in battle the ship can still function.

      In contrast the US Navy has always prefered to take twice as many ships as it needs.

      Seriously - this is what you do if you have a sack load of money, but want to fight with a smaller number of more highly trained personel, and minimise casualties. You never use more people when you could just spend more money on hardware.
    • They purposefully take many more crew members than they need so that when they lose half of them in battle the ship can still function.

      A lot of people have been pointing this out, but it seems to me to be largely irrelevant in this day and age - any kind of combat an armed surface ship is going to encounter is going to either do so little actual physical damage as to be irrelevant, or it's going to straight-up sink it (look at the Sheffield, the oversize crew was just that many more people to die). Basically, here just don't seem to be that many weapons systems left these days that have the capability to do severe damage to a ship, killing half the crew, and leave her in any shape that the surviving half is going to want to try and stay aboard - it's either a skiff full of C4 attacking you in harbor, or an Exocet missile blowing you clean in half, there's no middle ground anymore.
  • by trims ( 10010 ) on Wednesday January 29, 2003 @05:58AM (#5180576) Homepage

    First off, there is no need for the captain to be "instantly reachable". It's not like he's the only one which can make command decisions on a ship. It's been a while, but IIRC the title of the person who is in control of the ship is the Officer of the Deck. Should neither the captain nor Executive officer be on the bridge, one officer is designated the OOD and has effective command of the ship. Now, in a crisis, the XO and Captain almost always attempt to return to the bridge to reassert command, but the OOD can make all decisions (including breaking previous captain's orders, should the OOD deem it necessary) until relieved. So, it is silly to design a system to allow the captain to controll the ship from anywhere. Someone in the chain of command is already doing that from the place most suitable to do so, the bridge (or CIC, as appropriate).

    Second, virtually all ships have a voice intercom systems set up throughout, which can relay orders back to the bridge far faster and more efficiently than some silly handheld WAP thingy. They're hardwired, so no emissions. They are invariably redundant, and far more likely to survive damage than a WAP system.

    Finally, reduced manpower is a great goal, but generally is highly driven by putting in machinery which requires fewer operators. Communications systems are not really any manpower saver. And, as noted by others, you need twice as many people on a ship as it takes to operate all machinery: remember you have to run the ship 24x7, so you need at least two shifts (there's a little overlap, but 2x is a good rule of thumb), and you better have some extras for damage control and casualty replacement. So, you'll get manpower savings by automatic ammunition loading systems, better fire-supression, more efficient engines, better EW weapon systems, but not by adding WAP points.

    Dumb idea.

    -Erik

    • Finally, reduced manpower is a great goal, but generally is highly driven by putting in machinery which requires fewer operators. Communications systems are not really any manpower saver. And, as noted by others, you need twice as many people on a ship as it takes to operate all machinery: remember you have to run the ship 24x7, so you need at least two shifts (there's a little overlap, but 2x is a good rule of thumb), and you better have some extras for damage control and casualty replacement.

      You also need people to look after these shifts, cooks, doctors, command officers, etc.

      So, you'll get manpower savings by automatic ammunition loading systems, better fire-supression, more efficient engines, better EW weapon systems,

      You still need people on board who can fix these systems and to be able to handle the situation of automatics not working when they are needed.
    • by praksys ( 246544 ) on Wednesday January 29, 2003 @07:49AM (#5180800)
      It looks like they had two seperate goals here. One goal was to enable the ship to be commanded from any point. The obvious advantage to this is that it no longer matters if the bridge gets destroyed. You can re-establish your command center anywhere you like. The second was to reduce manpower by introducing more automated systems, which means that merely being able to issue orders by voice from any place on the ship is no longer enough. You need to be able to control automated systems from anywhere on the ship. Of course this doesn't explain why they went for wireless access points, rather than a whole bunch of wired access points.

      The article explains the need for wireless here:

      So instead of laying hundreds of feet of cabling by cutting through a steel ship and adding weight to the vessel, the radio link makes possible much faster and less-disruptive deployment of the sensors.

      If you take a closer look at the article you will also see just how better communications combined with a new set of sensors (etc) is expected to reduce manpower needs:

      The wireless LANs will change the way crew members perform their jobs. "Today, they have to do rounds, every 45 minutes or two hours, for example," says Benga Erinle, director of government operations for 3ETI. "They're checking equipment, machinery, and filling out and signing paper logs." The TSM system is intended to do all this automatically. "It goes beyond simply gathering information," Erinle says. "We also use programs for diagnostics and prognostics, based on the data. If a critical system is going to fail, we'll pick that up and alert the chief engineer that this is pending." The TSM system also will change the Navy's long-standing practice of time-based maintenance--of replacing or tearing down machinery after so many hours or days of use.

      In other words, on top of all the people who actually man the weapons and run the ship, you need a whole bunch of people who are just doing maintenance. This new system should reduce the number of those people.

      All makes sense to me.
      • by Micro$will ( 592938 ) on Wednesday January 29, 2003 @09:00AM (#5181029) Homepage Journal
        On my ship, we usually had enough people for 3 shifts, 4 hours on, 8 hours off. The reason for written logs is to:

        Keep people awake and busy

        Keep records of equipment performance

        Force people to walk around and keep an eye on things

        Provide written proof that the first three things are being done It would cost thousands of dollars per compartment to monitor everything that could go wrong.

        During normal working hours we did maintenance. That includes fixing whatever broke and preventive. There aren't any extra people on board that just fix stuff. Whoever is qualified to operate the equipment usually maintains it too.

        Also, if someone sees that a critical system is going to fail, the EOOW (Engineering Officer Of the Watch) is the person to notify. The ChEng will know soon enough when he hears the ECC alarm, the lights go out, and he senses that soothing feeling of the ship bobbing helplessly along in the middle of the sea.

        MM3 CheezyDee (U.S.S. Mauna Kea)

  • So if they have the capability to make the ship automatic, why not do it with a wired network? Why are they using wirelessin a METAL ship?

  • Great (Score:3, Funny)

    by TerryAtWork ( 598364 ) <research@aceretail.com> on Wednesday January 29, 2003 @06:12AM (#5180610)
    Soon we'll see this message on the hacker IRC channels

    'Wh00h D00d! 1 5c0red 4 84TT7E5H19 !"

  • As a sailor... (Score:3, Insightful)

    by erroneus ( 253617 ) on Wednesday January 29, 2003 @06:14AM (#5180617) Homepage
    ...this kinda bothers me. For one thing, those 90 people had better be trained and had better be sufficient to bring the ship home in case of systems failure, or WORSE, in case of some enemy decides to jam the 802.11b signal preventing them from operating the ship.

    You can bet that if the thought occured to me, it had occured to someone else already as well.

    Cutting manpower on ships is not a "bad" idea, but one that should be explored with extreme caution. It's important that there be a certain level of redundancy and cross-training among the ship's crew. By making each man more significant for the ship's operation, each man becomes less expendable. It would take less to cripple a ship or even prevent it from going to sea at all.

    I'm not sure they're thinking this thing through well enough.
  • by Anonymous Coward
    these are PROTOTYPE systesm... they are not outfitting the Nimitz with it and saying "here ya go!" it's going to take at least 2 years of trials before it's even considered for use and must undergo battle simulation.

    Automating the ship to reduce manpower is a great idea for peace time, but in a heavy war you want 4 guys to every station... how do you get the engines running while you are still floating but have a 20 foot gaping hole in the center of the ship from an excocet missle that ripped out 99% of the computer communications systems? you use muscle power... the surviving crew does it all manually.

  • by hcdejong ( 561314 ) <hobbes@xm s n e t . nl> on Wednesday January 29, 2003 @06:26AM (#5180639)

    All your ship are belong to us!

  • A computer with a bullet in it is a doorstop, but a map with a bullet in it is still a map.
  • It's a factor to be considered - you can shield physical wires and whatnot quite well, and harden your electronics, but those pesky radio waves are awfully hard to manage once they've left the transmitter. Does anyone know how this might be dealt with, asside from accepting the fact of periodic connectivity loss? I'd assume that critical systems would be physically wired, but one can't be sure - I saw some pretty stupid design in my military days...

    For non-critical systems (i.e. anything that gets turned off/left alone in combat), though, I agree that this has the potential to cut workloads quite a bit.

  • Of course, one of the first uses of *wired* communication was the engine room telegraph (which indicates the engine speed required from the bridge). Speaking tubes and telephones are no good because you can't hear anything in a noisy engine room, so the engine room telegraph has survived for a very long time indeed.
  • Anyone ever see STIII: The Search for Spock? The automates broke down under the load on the ship when fighting Kruge and the could not fight.

    This automation would be fine but man it better be rock solid...I would hate for some script kiddie to hack into a destroyers system and use a destroyer to create all kinds of havoc. In any case, the automation systems would take less space then 200 some odd crew and the 90 that are left would have nice sized cabins.
  • Various replies. (Score:5, Insightful)

    by AlecC ( 512609 ) <aleccawley@gmail.com> on Wednesday January 29, 2003 @08:16AM (#5180867)
    This is a reply to various points that have been raised in separate thereads.

    Firstly, the journo has obviouisly gone way over the top when talking about the captain controlling the ship from anywhere. Further down the article, it makes it clear that this is basically about health and condition monitoring. A warship is stuffed full of gizmos. If the shis is to function, all those gizmos must be working. People long ago found that it is much better to monitor gizmo status and fix it when it is only ill than wait until it dies - and possibly breaks something else. A warship wants everthing to be better than 90% peak performance, not somewhere unknown between perfect and broken. So lots of gizmos have monitoring points, and lots of men walk around checking them and monitoring trends. This is a classic case for computer optimisation.

    So why not do it with a wired network? Because even within one compartment, there are likely to be a lot of gizmos and a lot of wire. And you can't just wire something up in a ship like you can in an office with raised flooring or cable ducts - you have to design in each cable. So a wireless soluution is much easier.

    801.11b inside a metal ship? Sure - probably a base station inside each compartment, with the power tweaked to suit that compartment. Run one wire to each compartment and you can instrument every gizmo in there. Normal 802.11 pumps out whatever is the legally permitted power; you don't *have* to do that. (Actually, since you are inside a steel comparment, couldn'tr you over-power if you needed to).

    Emissions: three points: detection, reading, jamming. Only one of these makes sense, detection. The article says that the transmissions will be DES encrypted. You aren't going to break that on a battlefield. Jamming: as I said, a metal ship. You are not going to blast enough jamming power through that metal to harm the signals - see also next point. And they are only monitoring signals anyway, not Command and Control.

    Detection. Well, possiby. This is probably why they are doing the experiment. Somebody said that you can detect 802.11b at kilometres with a disk. Sure - for an basestation which is doing its best to spread its coverage as wide as it can. But a modern nave ship in battle conditions is *sealed tight*. They don't want fallout to come in, they don't want RF from all the other machinery inside the ship to leak out. Surely aeven a cheap radar could see a ship at the same sort of range that, even with a disk, one could detect the 802.11 leakage from a badly sealed door in what is otherwise a faraday cage. I would place a bet at reasonable odds that thay can seal the ship. But I wouldn't like to be certain about it - and neither would they, which is why they are trying it out on one ship. Good engineering practice - try a safe experiment before committing to it.

    Crosstalk to other devices. Sure. So you can't use it in one or two specially sensistive compartments. You still win in the other hundreed or so. Again, experiment will tell you if it works.

    Probably easier to fix battle damage, too. If compartment gets damage but is not obliterated, dozens of cables may be damaged in a wired installation. Run in a mobile base station, and you "repair" all the connections in one go.
  • Think different (Score:3, Interesting)

    by paiute ( 550198 ) on Wednesday January 29, 2003 @08:27AM (#5180906)
    Why try to use a EM signal to communicate to all parts of what is essentially a collection of iron shacks? Why not take advantage of the fact that you are on one continuouse hunk of steel and communicate throughout the ship using some high-frequency sonics that are transmitted through the metal?

  • by Jason Straight ( 58248 ) on Wednesday January 29, 2003 @09:17AM (#5181086) Homepage
    I can imagine just the signal alone being a security issue. The reason subs don't use active sonar all the time is because it gives away their position. It sure will make it easy for enemy forces to find our battleships, when all they have to do is listen for 802.11b, 2.4GHz transmissions.
  • Repel Boarders? (Score:3, Insightful)

    by nightsweat ( 604367 ) on Wednesday January 29, 2003 @10:42AM (#5181686)
    So if the ship goes from 300 to 90, won't that make it easier for a large boarding party to take the ship?

    There's an awful lot of deck to defend if your enemy can get in close.

  • by KC7GR ( 473279 ) on Wednesday January 29, 2003 @10:49AM (#5181742) Homepage Journal
    Once the system's in place, and before it gets approved for "battlefield" conditions, the Navy should do a "Crack our Battleship's Network!" event as a security test.

    If the opportunity to crack into a battleship's control systems isn't enough to draw people in for the challenge, offer a couple of prizes. Second-place winner gets to, say, fire a surface-to-surface missile into a Yugo. First-place winner gets to use another Yugo as an artillery projectile.

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