Bullock, Dave. 'Inside the Navy's Armed-Robot Labs.' Wired Magazine.

"SAN DIEGO -- The Navy's MDARS-E is an armed robot that can track anything that moves. Told that I was the target, the unmanned vehicle trained its guns on me and ordered, "Stay where you are," in an intimidating robot voice. And yes, it was frightening.

Perched atop a strip of cliffs lining a beautiful section of the Pacific Ocean, the Space and Naval Warfare System Command in San Diego develops semiautonomous armed robots for use in combat by the U.S. military. "We're not building Skynet" says Bart Everett, the technical director for robotics at SPAWAR. Though Everett assured me that the use of the robots' on-board weapons is under the strict control of their operators, the lab's bots can navigate and map complicated terrain, work cooperatively with soldiers and identify and confront hostile targets. Sure, they're no Johnny Five, but robots with guns are both creepy and fascinating."

Date/sJanuary 30, 2008
Taxonomymedia » text » U.S. Navy » research
NRHP classificationdocument-text
Location32.710350036621094, -117.2507095336914
Sources
  1. "Gallery: Inside the Navy's Armed-Robot Labs" by Dave Bullock
Record createdApril 12, 2008