Smithsonian Gets Military UAVs 148
NetworkWorld is reporting that a new exhibit at the Smithsonian's National Air and Space Museum is featuring some of the military's more prominent UAVs (unmanned aerial vehicles). In addition to the vehicles themselves, a large number of supporting technologies are also on display. "Unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) are used by all four military branches for missions ranging from reconnaissance and surveillance to attack and each branch is represented in this exhibit: Predator, DarkStar, X-45A (Air Force); Shadow 200 (Army); Dragon Eye (Marine Corps); and Pioneer (Navy)."
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Re:Slashdot on a military roll (Score:5, Insightful)
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I think a lot of people like seeing the technology and how it could make life better/more interesting/whatever when used outside of a military context.
Agreed. I also think for us Slashdot types (IT and engineering folk), there's an "awww that's cool" factor. Where else but the military are they going to build a vehicle capable of Mach 3 that supposedly can reach 50 miles+ of altitude, evades surface to air attacks by simply speeding up, and can travel coast to coast in under 60 minutes (with a running head start, of course).
Sure it is (Score:2)
Re:Slashdot on a military roll (Score:4, Insightful)
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Re:Slashdot on a military roll (Score:5, Insightful)
Pacifism is fine in Moms basement. It equals "surrender" everywhere else, because it is only effective against people who aren't serious in the first place.
"Violence, naked force, has settled more issues in history than has any other factor, and the contrary opinion is wishful thinking at its worst. Breeds that forget this basic truth have always paid for it with their lives and freedoms."
Robert Anson Heinlein
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Ad hominem much?
Now try attacking his statement.
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Ayup. And I'm probably not alone in being a nerd who is a veteran. (Volunteered and served back when being in the military wasn't "cool" like now. Ten years in the US Submarine Service.)
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That reminds me, Gandhi had a contemporary who advocated India joining up with Nazi Germany in WWII to defeat the British. He had quite a sizable following.
Goodness only knows what would have happened had Gandhi not been successful.
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Examples please? "Existed"
Armor. infantry, and artillery OTOH worked superbly against Hitler. Pacifists didn't burn down the Third Reich around his ears, nor did they kill the millions of Wehrmacht and SS personnel who were the obstacles to victory.
That took massive battles, not the whimpering of a few ineffectual pacifists.
"But I don't want to disturb your war
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So would Beijing, and they would have done it before he got famous.
Re:Slashdot on a military roll (Score:5, Funny)
Peace Activist Has To Admit Barrett
Barrett .50 BMG Sniper Rifles (Score:2)
As with most things, The Onion has already tapped this comedy vein: Peace Activist Has To Admit Barrett .50 Caliber Sniper Rifle Is Pretty Cool
As I just had the opportunity to fire a few .50 BMG rounds through a Barrett Model 95 this past Friday, I can attest that it is indeed immensely cool! There is very little recoil, but an impressive shock wave smacks you after each shot. I challenge any man to fire this gun and not walk away smiling.
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You forgot Rock & Roll.
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Re:Slashdot on a military roll (Score:4, Insightful)
This is one of the things the general public doesn't understand about nerds/geeks/whatever you call people who are defined by enthusiasms for difficult to understand things. Geeks differentiate between the utility of things as objects of study, and their intended utility, as any computer security researcher would tell you.
So just because you are fascinated by things that go boom doesn't mean you want to see them used on people. In fact, it's only idiots who like to play with explosives. The geek aspect of the game is doing things that would be stupid for other people, but not for you because you know exactly what is safe and what is not.
As far as geek militarism/pacifism goes, it seems to follow a pendulum like with everyone else, with the geeks being a bit ahead of the curve. You wouldn't be a geek exactly if your way of looking at things made you fit in.
Geeks are just smarter than the average populace. They aren't necessarily wiser. The very basis of wisdom is accepting that you might be wrong. Some people are so good at arguing and so used to being more right than their neighbor that they never have to confront their own fallibility. So geeks can represent both the best and worst humanity has to offer, the most enlightened viewpoints and the most stubbornly insular.
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Social Security took up 20.2% of the 2007 federal budget. Defense took up 19%. By your logic, most geeks would be turned on by granny porn.
Not that there's anything wrong with that...
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I'm just refuting the notion that geeks are necessarily militari
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Yes, but you missed the boat on why.
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Haha that reminds of a song!
Star Trek'n
Captain James T. Kirk
"We come in peace, shoot to kill, shoot to kill, shoot to kill, We come in peace, shoot to kill, Scotty beam me up!"
If you mean nerd as in a WOW/ART/Music/Myspace Nerd, then yes I might agree with you. They are typically a notch or two on the evolutionary sca
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Anyway in a ST world France wouldn't exist anyway since if you weren't willing to do service in the military you pretty much were bred out of the human race since "Civilians" were only allowed to have 1 child per couple.
France as a country wouldn't have lasted for two generations at the most before there weren't enough people around anymore to be called French.
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Got a reference for that one? As I recall, in the book you needed military service in order to gain your franchise (the ability to vote). Everyone had to serve for a limited period in som fashion (e.g. public service), but only military service conferred the vote.
So if you wanted a say in
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10/21 The rest of the world, in a "surprise" strike, nukes the US back to the stone age, and then, for a good measure, again, back to the primordial slime age. All US citizens abroad, all their spouses, children and anyone who says a word of sympathy towards them are then hunted down, tried, and duly executed.
Following which the world takes a few decades to get over the latest of the failed hegemonic empires to stink up the planet Earth, after it has joined the ranks of the like of Rome and Ghingis Khan in
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After which they'll start nuking each other just to make sure that nobody gets any funny ideas.
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That would pretty much be in line with the idiotic premise of "the more nukes you have - the more right you are" that the GP was proposing. It can only lead to everyone nuking everyone else.
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What is most insane is the view that the US is somehow the "most" evil, when in fact right now in every country elitists strive to control the populace through fear, oppression, and outright murder.
Name a country and I wi
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Of course. That is why my bet on the humanity outgrowing its own idiocy is still 10:1 against.
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I love your odds on humanity outgrowing it's own idiocy, I wish I was around to cash in because they seem pretty good.
I think what's really insane is that there are people like GP in America who have a very thin grasp of reality, how thin America's "power" really is and how it relies on such blinded views to continue.
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Well if the US longevity is anything like Rome's you are going to have to put up with us for another 1000 years or so.
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Maybe, maybe not. Rome had a lot of other things going for it (such as very slow communications) and by today's standards a minuscule population density.
The point was however that all, even the longest lasting, empires crumble eventually. And in the case of the USA the cracks are all over the place already, or you haven't been watching news lately.
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I write a tongue in cheek post just to be silly and you respond with an Al Qaeda "The Great Satan must die" thread.
I do find it funny when I get responses from belligerent supreme-penis envyists with their big big wet dreams that some how their little 3rd world country will become more than a tourist trap for Europeans who come to see the ancient archtecture, which the current populous's ancestors had nothing to do with building because they
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LOL.
And here I thought that I was responding to a closet US-ian supremacist, who out of poorly disguised rage and frustration that the UN and the rest of the world dares to be disobedient and not submissive enough was "tongue-in-cheek" proposing a "solution": nuke em all! (Ha, Ha, Hee, Hee, Ho, Ho, A knee-slapper!).
I simply responded in the same vein, to demonstrate what all of these comedic wargasm "war-hawks" always forget to mention: the step 2 of their wet dream, titled "Most of the time, instead of f
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I agree that the Roman and Mongol empires ultimately came to an end, but I don't see how they "stink up the earth". Although both of these empires were brutal and expansionist at times, they both had admirable qualities and made significant contributions.
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That depends on your answer to this question: would the same "admirable qualities" be acquired in time by the conquered peoples on their own, without the empire first murdering scores of them and enslaving the rest? And no, the supposedly more rapid time frame is not important, as bloody and fast "progress" is definitely worse then the slow and peaceful variety.
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I agree that peaceful progress is far better than progress brought about by subjugation, but I disagree with your assertion that the time frame is
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All that remains for you to do then is to explain how getting literacy at the expense of half of your village murdered horribly, but in a period of 5 years is far superior to you developing literacy over the period of say, two generations, but without all the rape, pillaging and disemboweling for fun.
I always wandered how the "speed of progress" or "speed of growth" o
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Problem: the "enemy" population covers the remaining ~90% of the globe and has been preparing for fallout for decades. You only have so many nukes, so much territory and so many submarines (many/most of which can be hunted down and destroyed with enough non-nuclear, cheap hunter-killer subs right before the main nuke strike on the US). Even with full-on retaliation, majority of the Earth still wins: true most die but those who survive are free from the US Empire and perhaps they learn not to let another emp
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Again, in the hypothetical scenario of the GP post it was the US nuking everyone who it did not like. I simply pointed out that others would be likely to respond in kind. "Goodness" did not enter into it.
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10/19 Nuclear winter: day 1
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At best a terrorist might be able to hit NY or LA with a stolen nuke. Hardly a catostrophic loss.
Even a country like France might be able to threaten to take out a large number of major cities in the US, but the retaliation would be utter anihilation of the country and its people. So I don't see that happening.
The US though hurt would still be quite strong relative to nearly any other country in the world.
It would have to take the combine efforts
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It was my understanding that the military geek was more a specific sub-type (in Japan they are called gunji otaku [wikipedia.org]) rather than a contradiction in terms.
Re:Slashdot on a military roll (Score:4, Insightful)
Don't get me started about government efficiency.
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It's interesting - normally the Slashdot Mantra is that competition is a Good Thing by definition. Why not here? Now four may be a bit excessive - but you need at least two, probably three, because USN/USMC have different requirements than the Army/USAF. USN/USMC UAV's must operate off of carriers and LHxs and thus must be corrosion resistant and smaller. OTOH, the Army and USAF have different requir
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It is true that all nerds believe "violence is the last refuge of the incompetent," however not all subscribe to the Asimovian interpretation that it means the use of violence is a sign of incompetence -- a good many take the Piperian stance that it means that the competent don't wait until the last extreme to resort to violence.
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Governments fight wars. Businesses trade peacefully.
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for those unable to go to the exhibit (Score:2)
All Five? (Score:2)
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Don't get me wrong. I respect the men and women who do it, I don't want to be on the water like that.
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Prior to the formation of the Department of Homeland Security, the US Coast Guard was part of the Treasury Department (along with Customs and Border Patrol) during peacetime, and transferred to the Department of Defense during times of war. e.g. During Desert Storm (Iraq War I), the Coast Guard was transferred to the DoD and some of its ships
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In your snarkiness, you were partly right (since you left out the Coast Guard), even as you knew you were wrong about DHS. If you're going down that road, why not say that Agriculture Department is part of the DoD, since pilots have to eat? Or that the IRS is just the revenue collecting branch of the military? Or that Nancy Pelosi is part of the military since it's something she t
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Yes, but there are only two departments that control "Armed Forces" and four that control "uniformed services", as defined in Subtitle A ("General Military Law") of Title 10 of the United States Code.
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USCG is part of DHS (Score:2)
Unless I'm missing something, or not comprehending something correctly, in your response, the U.S. Coast Guard is structured under the Department of Homeland Security. Prior to the existence of DHS, it was part of the Department of Transportation. FWIW.
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The Coast Guard is part of DHS. So you're either not paying attention to the last five years or you're trolling.
And in response to your other post about what constitutes "military", it's a service which uses military rate & rank structure & is subject to the UCMJ. Of which there are five branches in the US - Army, Navy, Air Force, Marines, and Coast Guard. There's two othe
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There's not a Secretary of the CG, either (Score:2)
As an aside, if you're trying to imply that the Marine Corps is part of the Navy, you're either a former squid yourself or just trying to start a fight. Possibly both. :)
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There are five branches of the U.S. Armed Forces (defined in 10 USC 101(a)(4)) and seven branches of the U.S. uniformed services (defined in 10 USC 101(a)(5)) (the two not included in the Armed Forces being in the Department of Health and Human Services and the Department of Commerce). The uniformed services that are not part of the armed forces were specifically created as uniformed
Excellent (Score:1)
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Yeah, but you'd have to leave the basement to do so. I've heard there's a daystar that burns you if you venture outdoors. Much easier to just use Google Earth for all your domestic spying needs.
A must see... (Score:2)
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Other geek-friendly places to see?
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It's worth noting that the charge for parking at the Dulles Air and Space annex.
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One of the things they were doing inside was putting together a UAV so you could see the packaging it came in and how quickly a team could get the thing put together and ready for flight.
The museum is way cool if you have any interest in flight. There are a lot of historic aircraft there including a Blackbird, Rutan's first Cozy, adn like the poster above stated, the Enterpri
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In the same room as the shuttle, they have a cut away of a V2 rocket engine bell which allows you to see the channels the liquid fuel went through when it cooled the bell before being consumed
Used Daily by the SGC (Score:2, Funny)
My brain asplode (Score:2)
UAVs (unmanned aerial vehicles)
Unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs)
Was that really necessary? :p
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Funny part of the article (Score:2)
Ahhh ha ha. Suckers.
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From the article:
On one notable mission, a group of Iraqi fighters surrendered to the [UAV] as it flew over their heads. Marines were directed to their position, where they then captured the fighters.
Ahhh ha ha. Suckers.
The UAV was supplying live feed to a US battleship for targeting coordinates. This was the second UAV to fly over them. Just previously they had received some presents curtesy of the USS Wisconsin's and USS Missouri's 16 inch guns. They decided they wanted to live. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/USS_Wisconsin_(BB-64)#Gulf_War [wikipedia.org]
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other countries... (Score:2)
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2008/03/26/phoenix_says_goodbye/ [theregister.co.uk]
if only so future generations can learn how not to make a drone.
Interesting names (Score:2)
I wonder ... (Score:2)
Obviously, someone vetted putting these on display, so I'm likely wrong
Then again, I'm sure all of the good bits like avionics have been stripped, so the carcass of the drones probably doesn't tell you much.
Cheers
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They are essentially airplanes. I shouldn't say that- they _are_ airplanes, plain and simple. There just isn't a crew compartment. You could easily build one with a little money to buy the fiberglass and graphite and Epon and Rolls Royce engine. No biggy.
The problem has never been, "How do I build an airplane?"; It has always been, "How do I build a reliable autonomous/remote-co
New? (Score:3, Informative)
I found it underwhelming - I mean, instead of an interesting exhibition on some of the capabilities of UAVs and how significantly they are changing the tactical landscape, it was just a few UAVs hanging at one end of the hall. (shrug).
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