Recent testing at Fort Hood, TX showed state-of-the-art autonomy for critically needed applications for the US Army.

 

Unmanned operations in snow and rain.

 

Owners Karl Murphy (L) and Alberto Lacaze (R) in front of an unmanned Stryker vehicle.

 
 

Robotic Research in the News


Source: CNET News
By Mark Rutherford
Sep 03 2009

FORT HOOD, Texas--Soldiers and civilian contractors braved the heat here this week for the first Robotics Rodeo to view and interact with a long lineup of robot systems and to give feedback on which ones could potentially find a place in the U.S. Army's robo stable.

Despite the hundreds of military robots that show up in concept or as prototypes on company Web sites and corporate reports, humans still do the fighting on the ground and it's likely to stay that way for a while. However, there's a growing niche for "the dirty, the dull, and the dangerous" jobs where robots could take over. In fact, it's the law. The 2001 Senate defense authorization bill mandates that "one third of the operational ground combat vehicles of the armed forces will be unmanned by 2015."

Click here for full article.

Robotic Research is supporting the demo by General Dynamics Robotic Systems during the Robotics Rodeo.

Copyright © 2009 Robotic Research LLC, All Rights Reserved.