DARPA's Map-Based Wiki Keeps Platoons Alive 86
blackbearnh writes "One of the biggest problem that a platoon on the ground in Iraq or Afghanistan faces is that when a new unit cycles in, all the street-sense and experience of the old unit is lost. Knowing where insurgents like to plant IEDs, or even which families have a lot of domestic disputes, can spell the difference between living and dying. In response to this, DARPA created TIGR, the Tactical Ground Reporting System. Developed as much on the ground in active warzones as in a lab, TIGR lets platoons access the latest satellite and drone imagery in an easy-to-use map based interface, as well as recording their experiences in the field and accessing the reports of other troops. In this O'Reilly Radar interview, two of the people responsible for the development of TIGR talk about the intel issues that troops face in hostile territory, the challenges of deploying new technology meant for combat areas, the specific tricks that they had to employ to make TIGR work over less-than-robust military networking, and how TIGR is impacting platoons in their day to day operations"
Sounds great if they protect the source from enemy (Score:1, Troll)
Of course this assume the enemy hackers are not as good as your hackers to protect the content and maps. Or it might be used against them.
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So, your justice system doesn't execute people who violate the laws of the land?
Is your problem is that they execute whores, rather than giving them a talk show where they can be a role model?
Is it that their community takes responsibility for justice in a personal way while you
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i sincerely hope that you die in a fire
If all the other women in the village think the woman is a whore and put their money where their mouth is by actually throwing rocks at her, who am I to tell them they're wrong? I don't live there, I just read propaganda written by parasites...
Do you not believe in peoples right to govern themselves?
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so a woman who shows a sliver of skin is a whore?
i sincerely hope that you die in a fire
If all the other women in the village think the woman is a whore and put their money where their mouth is by actually throwing rocks at her, who am I to tell them they're wrong? I don't live there, I just read propaganda written by parasites...
Do you not believe in peoples right to govern themselves?
Moral relativism, just as repungnant today as it was when it was first born. Certain things are simply wrong, regardless of cultural context. Murdering people for showing the wrong bit of skin or daring to walk around in public without a male family member is wrong, period. The fact that you can't see this means you're either lying to troll or you're a psychopath and should probably be put down like a rabid animal before you have a chance to hurt anyone again.
Re:Sounds great if they protect the source from en (Score:5, Insightful)
You are assuming the network over which it is served in the field is not completely localized. Or that somehow it never occurred to them that the Taliban might have hackers.
You are arm-chair IT managing.
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Wikimapia? (Score:2)
So they just ported Wikimapia [wikimapia.org]?
Or... dare say, they're using Wikimapia itself?! [wikimapia.org]
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Excellent tool (Score:5, Insightful)
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Um... Acronym? (Score:1)
TIGR = Tactical Ground Reporting System?
So... where did the I come from, and where did the S go? Surely it wouldn't have been hard to actually put something in for the I - Tactical Interactive Ground Reporting would have worked well, I think.
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Sorry, lack of funding. There was only enough money for one TIGR, but next year we might be able to afford a few more TIGRS.
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Even more disturbing, this acryonym could be confused with TIGER [wikipedia.org], resulting in some guy in Fallujah getting a map of Cleveland and some guy in Cleveland thinking there's a IED around the next turn.
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Its a silent "I," like the "P" in swimming.
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A poem (Score:5, Funny)
It doesn't have any trouble using Milit'ry networking.
It's good for intel in the field, and fun fun fun fun fun!
So boot up that there TIGR, while I go get my gun.
I prefer (Score:2, Interesting)
In the desert city night,
With intel at hand and eye
Our foe will surely fear to try!
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It's the eye of the TIGR, it's the cream of the fight
Risin' up to the challenge of our rival
And the last known survivor stalks his prey in the night
And he's watchin' us all in the eye of the TIGR
(Hmm, didn't have to change a thing.)
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Oh! Thank you so freakin' much!
Now I am going to have that song stuck in my head all damn day!
Im tempted to counter attack with the Wiggles "Fruit Salad" song, but it seems th new administration is serious about cracking down on those who use torture.
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...
Sgt. : Look, look. All right, smarty-pants. You two, you two, come at me then with raspberries. Come on, both of you, whole basket each.
Palin: No guns.
Sgt. : No.
Palin: No 16-ton weights.
Sgt. : No.
Idle : No pointed sticks.
Sgt. : Shut up.
Palin: No rocks up in the ceiling.
Sgt. : No.
Palin: And you won't kill us.
Sgt. : I won't.
Palin: Promise.
Sgt. : I promise I won't kill you. Now. Are you going to attack me?
Palin & Idle: Oh, all right.
Sgt. : Right, now don't rush me this time. Stalk me. Do it properly. St
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This gives a more intense meaning to the 'Edit Wars'
Useful and Needed (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Useful and Needed (Score:5, Insightful)
Sounds like the army encounters (on a more dangerous scale) one of the very same problems that the corporate world does. Loss of institutional knowledge.
Makes sense that they should try out systems similar to those that are being trialled in other areas to combat this problem.
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I do wonder how long until this gets picked up by local law enforcement...
This is a bit worrisome, depending on the eventual content of the wiki. Using the corporate example, imagine two different systems:
A) Reporting likes all their assignments to be ran by Sally first.
Vs...
B) Sally is a total conniving bitch. Do not trust her any farther than a child could throw her fat ass. Make sure she is on the hook for any assignments that go through Reporting, or she'll burn you - hard core.
While both of these ar
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It worries me that we give fallible people the ability to arrest, detain and fire weapons upon other people.
It worries me less that we give fallible people the ability to communicate.
Not to be curt, but "people suck" seems to be a catch all argument for anything government these days.
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I do wonder how long until this gets picked up by local law enforcement...
About -50 years. Maybe more. Law enforcement calls it the "blotter", and most anything of substance makes it there. The officers in the field don't have direct electronic access to did (or didn't -- now that they have radio-connected laptops in their cars, maybe they do), but the desk sergeant sure does.
The main problem that this tool is intended to solve, though, is one that law enforcement rarely has. Police departments tend to have a core staff with very low turnover that provides long-term institu
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Thanks for the search term, but I don't think this is quite the same thing.
Here's one Google found with your term:
http://www.randolphnj.org/police/blotter/ [randolphnj.org]
Incident Date: 4-19-09
Incident #: 2009-015167
Charged: Daniel D. Caputo, 48 of Randolph NJ
Mr. Caputo turned himself in to Officer Jason Gould at police headquarters to answer a Randolph warrant. The bail of $340.00 was posted and Mr. Caputo was released.
This is really just a form of 'crib notes' on the public record.
I do intend to keep looking, however...
Next "Ask Slashdot" (Score:5, Funny)
I'm a military commander and I often find that my troops are invading the wrong houses, bombing schools, et cetera. I've heard that in technical support organizations they use "knowledge base" software to keep track of the solutions to common problems. I have just two questions. 1) Which knowledge base packages meet military security requirements? 2) Will I be able to prevent soldiers from entering "put a bullet in it" as the solution to every problem?
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I'm a military commander and I often find that my troops are invading the wrong houses, bombing schools, et cetera.
Put a bullet in it.
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There is an actual limit to a soldier's usefulness in a high stress environment. Everybody is built differently so they use historical to make time limits for deployments. That being said, you could always volunteer to stay longer.
It's also a good idea to keep fresh eyes and ideas coming into the area. Not to mention new equipment (and the training to use it!).
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Exactly. And tying this information to a map is probably the best UI for military operations. In the corporate world, you may have to do a little head-scratching to put together the correct search term. But on the ground, the key parameter is usually your location. And that can be obtained automatically. You shouldn't have to ask it, it should be able to track your current position and alert you to anything of potential interest in the area. And if the troops are carrying cameras or other recording equipmen
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Don't panic (Score:5, Insightful)
I totally need something like this for my GPS-enabled cell phone for a real world Hichhiker's Guide. :)
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It does when your two statements are factually false. Do you really think Sunni vs Shia violence will magically stop when all foreign military is out of Iraq? Fat chance. Likely, it will escalate.
As far as 'no need for such tools'...it is an information sharing and continuity system. Useful in all sorts of (military) ways. For instance, a peacekeeping force in Africa somewhere. Or UN peacekeepers in Timor or Georgia.
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You're right - we should have just let Hitler have all of Europe and Tojo all of Asia.
Tojo and Hitler started the wars. The Allies just finished them.
might be a reason... (Score:2)
I'm guessing it was more a commentary on illogic than on your feelings about war...
Troops not being "there" years ago did not mean that there was no dying. I can think of numerous uses for such tools (disaster relief, sales, census-taking, etc). Lastly, entropy always increases.
I'm just sayin'...
Re:This is not good! (Score:4, Insightful)
I wish that there was a "-1: Straw-man" moderation...
No one has said (that I have seen) that this is a silver bullet to allow us to win. Beyond that, unless your definition of what it means to win (in Iraq) is vastly different from mine, winning would mean the end of military operations there, which I expect (based on the pair of comments you made about weapons) you would approve of.
That aside, This is a tool, not a strategy. This tool provides historical information to people (soldiers) who would make *worse* decisions (life-or-death decisions affecting Iraqi civilians as well as soldiers) without it.
Whether it's time to leave or not, how is this system a bad thing for the situation in Iraq?
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Indeed, it'll most likely aid immesurably for the residents of the next country we all go and liberate.
Joking aside, While I never agreed with going to war, I do agree that we should clean up what we've done, and this does go some way to ensure that can happen consistently and easilly.
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I do agree that we should clean up what we've done
Good. Since the UK screwed everything up to begin with, it's clear that any "cleaning up" should be done by them. (Of course you can cast responsibility for the Middle East even further back in time. The lesson being that while meddling with people is unethical, ultimately they are responsible for their own lives. Trying to clean someone up after you've raped them is creepy)
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Joking aside, While I never agreed with going to war, I do agree that we should clean up what we've done,
Me, too. So let's find a way to fix all this carbon :P
More seriously, how many major military conflicts in the world today has the USA not exacerbated somehow?
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There is no "silver bullet" that will allow us to win.
Uh...ever heard of Fat Man and Little Boy? I know it's a very different war (which is why nukes are not the "silver bullet" for this war) but that's not to say that there can't be one. And besides, I didn't see anyone claiming that this tool would win the war, just help to reduce casualties and increase the effectiveness (by increasing the environmental awareness) of the troops on the ground.
What's a Wiki? (Score:2)
Yes, it's apparently a wiki [wikipedia.org] ("a collection of Web pages designed to enable anyone with access to contribute or modify content, using a simplified markup language").
No, it's apparently not a Wiki [wikipedia.org] ("a type of collaborative software that runs a Wiki system"). From TFA:
TIGR is somewhat like Google Maps and Wiki, but the backend of TIGR was very, very carefully designed so that it would work over military networks in these tactical environments where, as you can imagine, the network is very fragile and the bandwidth is sparse.
Is it just me, or does Wikipedia have a pretty circular definition of what is not a wiki?
Marine Currently Deployed In Afghanistan (Score:2, Informative)
Wow, yet another fast tracked technology that just adds to our footprint. We have so many different types of systems: tons of mapping software, command and control software, sharepoint, COPOF(command post of the future), IRC, share drives... The list goes on and on.
The fact is while i haven't seen this particular piece of software yet i already see it now. It is going to come in its own green 'field expedient' case. It will be one more thing to take up the little bandwidth we have on our network.
Obviousl
Jargon disconnect (Score:2)
Have they tried using AMD instead?
Obvious promotion (Score:2)
I've actually used this tool... (Score:2, Informative)
I'm an Army LT currently deployed. I've seen this in action and have a good idea what it's capable of. The best analogy is that it's basically a customized version of Google Maps with the following:
- access to newer imagery
- customized route & search tools
- user submitted reporting
- automatically imports historical reports
There are no special pelican cases and 5 year old rubberized hardware. It won't tie in to your BFT in your vehicle (at least
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