You remember the BigDog Robot, don't you? It's that loud all-terrain prototype robot quadruped that peopled your dreams with Terminator-esque nightmares when you saw the video. DARPA just awarded a $32 million contract to build it.
The contract's been won by maker Boston Dynamics, which has just 30
months to turn the research prototype machines into a genuine
load-toting, four-legged, semi-intelligent war robot--"first walk-out"
of the newly-designated LS3 is scheduled in 2012.
LS3 stands for Legged Squad Support System, and that pretty much sums
up what the device is all about: It's a semi-autonomous assistant
designed to follow soldiers and Marines across the battlefield, carrying
up to 400 pounds of gear and enough fuel to keep it going for 24 hours
over a march of 20 miles.
LS3 is a direct descendant of the BigDog robot, and it'll be battle-hardened
and clever enough to use GPS and machine vision to either yomp along
behind a pack of troops, or navigate its own way to a pre-programmed
assembly point. Yup, that's right, LS3 is smart enough to trot off over
the horizon all on its lonesome. That opens up all sorts of amazing
military possibilities, like resupply of materiel to troops who are
deployed in difficult remote locations, as well as the standard "If LS3
can offload 50 pounds from the back of each soldier in a squad, it will
reduce warfighter injuries and fatigue and increase the combat
effectiveness of our troops" as described by BD's president Marc
Raibert.
And its clear that these, and other, potential benefits have been
proven to DARPA enough that it's prepared to fund what seems to be an
extremely future-focused piece of military hardware. But LS3, of course,
stands for much more than its simple "squad support" label would
suggest. It's placing artificially-intelligent robots right next to
soldiers on the battle field, which is a natural extension of the way
robots are currently used in combat--essentially as smart remote control
units for situations too dangerous for a human to risk. And in that
sense, LS3 is a significant piece of kit. Because it won't be too long
before someone considers the benefits of replacing its 400-pound load
with a heavy gun, and LS32 becomes an AI-equipped armed battlefield robot. More terminator-dog than K9, you see.
Here's BigDog auto-tracking a human, just to give you an extra robocalyptic chill:
Article courtesy Fast Company
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