[cia-drugs] Fwd: [SPY NEWS] Bug-Sized Spies: U.S. Develops Tiny Flying Robots

2008-11-22 Thread RoadsEnd



Begin forwarded message:

From: Mario Profaca [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: November 22, 2008 4:22:53 AM PST
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [SPY NEWS] Bug-Sized Spies: U.S. Develops Tiny Flying Robots
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,456384,00.html
Bug-Sized Spies: U.S. Develops Tiny Flying Robots

Friday, November 21, 2008



 AP


Nov. 21: This photo taken from computer animation video shows the next  
generation of drones, called Micro Aerial Vehicles.


DAYTON, Ohio —  If only we could be a fly on the wall when our enemies  
are plotting to attack us. Better yet, what if that fly could record  
voices, transmit video and even fire tiny weapons?


That kind of James Bond-style fantasy is actually on the drawing  
board. U.S. military engineers are trying to design flying robots  
disguised as insects that could one day spy on enemies and conduct  
dangerous missions without risking lives.


The way we envision it is, there would be a bunch of these sent out  
in a swarm, said Greg Parker, who helps lead the research project at  
Wright-Patterson Air Force Base in Dayton. If we know there's a  
possibility of bad guys in a certain building, how do we find out? We  
think this would fill that void.


In essence, the research seeks to miniaturize the Unmanned Aerial  
Vehicle drones used in Iraq and Afghanistan for surveillance and  
reconnaissance.


The next generation of drones, called Micro Aerial Vehicles, or MAVs,  
could be as tiny as bumblebees and capable of flying undetected into  
buildings, where they could photograph, record, and even attack  
insurgents and terrorists.


By identifying and assaulting adversaries more precisely, the robots  
would also help reduce or avoid civilian casualties, the military says.


Parker and his colleagues plan to start by developing a bird-sized  
robot as soon as 2015, followed by the insect-sized models by 2030.


The vehicles could be useful on battlefields where the biggest  
challenge is collecting reliable intelligence about enemies.


If we could get inside the buildings and inside the rooms where their  
activities are unfolding, we would be able to get the kind of  
intelligence we need to shut them down, said Loren Thompson, a  
defense analyst with the Lexington Institute in Arlington, Va.


Philip Coyle, senior adviser with the Center for Defense Information  
in Washington D.C., said a major hurdle would be enabling the vehicles  
to carry the weight of cameras and microphones.


If you make the robot so small that it's like a bumblebee and then  
you ask the bumblebee to carry a video camera and everything else, it  
may not be able to get off the ground, Coyle said.


Parker envisions the bird-sized vehicles as being able to spy on  
adversaries by flying into cities and perching on building ledges or  
power lines. The vehicles would have flappable wings as a disguise but  
use a separate propulsion system to fly.


We think the flapping is more so people don't notice it, he said.  
They think it's a bird.


Unlike the bird-sized vehicles, the insect-sized ones would actually  
use flappable wings to fly, Parker said.


He said engineers want to build a vehicle with a 1-inch wingspan,  
possibly made of an elastic material. The vehicle would have sensors  
to help avoid slamming into buildings or other objects.


Existing airborne robots are flown by a ground-based pilot, but the  
smaller versions would fly independently, relying on preprogrammed  
instructions.


Parker said the tiny vehicles should also be able to withstand bumps.

If you look at insects, they can bounce off of walls and keep  
flying, he said. You can't do that with a big airplane, but I don't  
see any reason we can't do that with a small one.


An Air Force video describing the vehicles said they could possibly  
carry chemicals or explosives for use in attacks.


Once prototypes are developed, they will be flight-tested in a new  
building at Wright-Patterson dubbed the micro aviary forMicro Air  
Vehicle Integration Application Research Institute.


This type of technology is really the wave of the future, Thompson  
said. More and more military research is going into things that are  
small, that are precise and that are extremely focused on particular  
types of missions or activities.








[cia-drugs] Fwd: [SPY NEWS] Bug-Sized Spies: U.S. Develops Tiny Flying Robots

2008-11-22 Thread RoadsEnd



Begin forwarded message:

From: Mario Profaca [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: November 22, 2008 4:22:53 AM PST
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [SPY NEWS] Bug-Sized Spies: U.S. Develops Tiny Flying Robots
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,456384,00.html
Bug-Sized Spies: U.S. Develops Tiny Flying Robots

Friday, November 21, 2008



 AP


Nov. 21: This photo taken from computer animation video shows the next  
generation of drones, called Micro Aerial Vehicles.


DAYTON, Ohio —  If only we could be a fly on the wall when our enemies  
are plotting to attack us. Better yet, what if that fly could record  
voices, transmit video and even fire tiny weapons?


That kind of James Bond-style fantasy is actually on the drawing  
board. U.S. military engineers are trying to design flying robots  
disguised as insects that could one day spy on enemies and conduct  
dangerous missions without risking lives.


The way we envision it is, there would be a bunch of these sent out  
in a swarm, said Greg Parker, who helps lead the research project at  
Wright-Patterson Air Force Base in Dayton. If we know there's a  
possibility of bad guys in a certain building, how do we find out? We  
think this would fill that void.


In essence, the research seeks to miniaturize the Unmanned Aerial  
Vehicle drones used in Iraq and Afghanistan for surveillance and  
reconnaissance.


The next generation of drones, called Micro Aerial Vehicles, or MAVs,  
could be as tiny as bumblebees and capable of flying undetected into  
buildings, where they could photograph, record, and even attack  
insurgents and terrorists.


By identifying and assaulting adversaries more precisely, the robots  
would also help reduce or avoid civilian casualties, the military says.


Parker and his colleagues plan to start by developing a bird-sized  
robot as soon as 2015, followed by the insect-sized models by 2030.


The vehicles could be useful on battlefields where the biggest  
challenge is collecting reliable intelligence about enemies.


If we could get inside the buildings and inside the rooms where their  
activities are unfolding, we would be able to get the kind of  
intelligence we need to shut them down, said Loren Thompson, a  
defense analyst with the Lexington Institute in Arlington, Va.


Philip Coyle, senior adviser with the Center for Defense Information  
in Washington D.C., said a major hurdle would be enabling the vehicles  
to carry the weight of cameras and microphones.


If you make the robot so small that it's like a bumblebee and then  
you ask the bumblebee to carry a video camera and everything else, it  
may not be able to get off the ground, Coyle said.


Parker envisions the bird-sized vehicles as being able to spy on  
adversaries by flying into cities and perching on building ledges or  
power lines. The vehicles would have flappable wings as a disguise but  
use a separate propulsion system to fly.


We think the flapping is more so people don't notice it, he said.  
They think it's a bird.


Unlike the bird-sized vehicles, the insect-sized ones would actually  
use flappable wings to fly, Parker said.


He said engineers want to build a vehicle with a 1-inch wingspan,  
possibly made of an elastic material. The vehicle would have sensors  
to help avoid slamming into buildings or other objects.


Existing airborne robots are flown by a ground-based pilot, but the  
smaller versions would fly independently, relying on preprogrammed  
instructions.


Parker said the tiny vehicles should also be able to withstand bumps.

If you look at insects, they can bounce off of walls and keep  
flying, he said. You can't do that with a big airplane, but I don't  
see any reason we can't do that with a small one.


An Air Force video describing the vehicles said they could possibly  
carry chemicals or explosives for use in attacks.


Once prototypes are developed, they will be flight-tested in a new  
building at Wright-Patterson dubbed the micro aviary forMicro Air  
Vehicle Integration Application Research Institute.


This type of technology is really the wave of the future, Thompson  
said. More and more military research is going into things that are  
small, that are precise and that are extremely focused on particular  
types of missions or activities.








Re: [cia-drugs] Fwd: [SPY NEWS] Bug-Sized Spies: U.S. Develops Tiny Flying Robots

2008-11-22 Thread Vigilius Haufniensis
Wasn't it a year or two ago when they had those fake metallic dragonflies 
buzzing around protestors in DC?



  - Original Message - 
  From: RoadsEnd 
  To: Cia-drugs Cia-drugs 
  Sent: Saturday, November 22, 2008 10:23 AM
  Subject: [cia-drugs] Fwd: [SPY NEWS] Bug-Sized Spies: U.S. Develops Tiny 
Flying Robots






  Begin forwarded message:


  From: Mario Profaca [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  Date: November 22, 2008 4:22:53 AM PST
  To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  Subject: [SPY NEWS] Bug-Sized Spies: U.S. Develops Tiny Flying Robots
  Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]


  http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,456384,00.html

  Bug-Sized Spies: U.S. Develops Tiny Flying Robots
  Friday, November 21, 2008




   AP



  Nov. 21: This photo taken from computer animation video shows the next 
generation of drones, called Micro Aerial Vehicles.

  DAYTON, Ohio —  If only we could be a fly on the wall when our enemies are 
plotting to attack us. Better yet, what if that fly could record voices, 
transmit video and even fire tiny weapons?

  That kind of James Bond-style fantasy is actually on the drawing board. U.S. 
military engineers are trying to design flying robots disguised as insects that 
could one day spy on enemies and conduct dangerous missions without risking 
lives.

  The way we envision it is, there would be a bunch of these sent out in a 
swarm, said Greg Parker, who helps lead the research project at 
Wright-Patterson Air Force Base in Dayton. If we know there's a possibility of 
bad guys in a certain building, how do we find out? We think this would fill 
that void.

  In essence, the research seeks to miniaturize the Unmanned Aerial Vehicle 
drones used in Iraq and Afghanistan for surveillance and reconnaissance.

  The next generation of drones, called Micro Aerial Vehicles, or MAVs, could 
be as tiny as bumblebees and capable of flying undetected into buildings, where 
they could photograph, record, and even attack insurgents and terrorists.

  By identifying and assaulting adversaries more precisely, the robots would 
also help reduce or avoid civilian casualties, the military says.

  Parker and his colleagues plan to start by developing a bird-sized robot as 
soon as 2015, followed by the insect-sized models by 2030.

  The vehicles could be useful on battlefields where the biggest challenge is 
collecting reliable intelligence about enemies.

  If we could get inside the buildings and inside the rooms where their 
activities are unfolding, we would be able to get the kind of intelligence we 
need to shut them down, said Loren Thompson, a defense analyst with the 
Lexington Institute in Arlington, Va.

  Philip Coyle, senior adviser with the Center for Defense Information in 
Washington D.C., said a major hurdle would be enabling the vehicles to carry 
the weight of cameras and microphones.

  If you make the robot so small that it's like a bumblebee and then you ask 
the bumblebee to carry a video camera and everything else, it may not be able 
to get off the ground, Coyle said.

  Parker envisions the bird-sized vehicles as being able to spy on adversaries 
by flying into cities and perching on building ledges or power lines. The 
vehicles would have flappable wings as a disguise but use a separate propulsion 
system to fly.

  We think the flapping is more so people don't notice it, he said. They 
think it's a bird.

  Unlike the bird-sized vehicles, the insect-sized ones would actually use 
flappable wings to fly, Parker said.

  He said engineers want to build a vehicle with a 1-inch wingspan, possibly 
made of an elastic material. The vehicle would have sensors to help avoid 
slamming into buildings or other objects.

  Existing airborne robots are flown by a ground-based pilot, but the smaller 
versions would fly independently, relying on preprogrammed instructions.

  Parker said the tiny vehicles should also be able to withstand bumps.

  If you look at insects, they can bounce off of walls and keep flying, he 
said. You can't do that with a big airplane, but I don't see any reason we 
can't do that with a small one.

  An Air Force video describing the vehicles said they could possibly carry 
chemicals or explosives for use in attacks.

  Once prototypes are developed, they will be flight-tested in a new building 
at Wright-Patterson dubbed the micro aviary forMicro Air Vehicle Integration 
Application Research Institute.

  This type of technology is really the wave of the future, Thompson said. 
More and more military research is going into things that are small, that are 
precise and that are extremely focused on particular types of missions or 
activities.







   = 


--



  No virus found in this incoming message.
  Checked by AVG - http://www.avg.com 
  Version: 8.0.175 / Virus Database: 270.9.9/1804 - Release Date: 11/21/2008 
6:24 PM


Re: [cia-drugs] Fwd: [SPY NEWS] Bug-Sized Spies: U.S. Develops Tiny Flying Robots

2008-11-22 Thread Mary Hartman
Our tax dollars hard at work.  This stuff comes from the minds of the same 
idiots who thought pouring oil on the trails in Vietnam would cause the VC to 
slip and render the mountain trails insurpassable.  
 
They don't keep most of what they do a secret because of national security, 
but because it would show how absolutely corrupt and incompetent they are.  

--- On Sun, 11/23/08, Vigilius Haufniensis [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

From: Vigilius Haufniensis [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [cia-drugs] Fwd: [SPY NEWS] Bug-Sized Spies: U.S. Develops Tiny 
Flying Robots
To: cia-drugs@yahoogroups.com
Date: Sunday, November 23, 2008, 1:25 AM







Wasn't it a year or two ago when they had those fake metallic dragonflies 
buzzing around protestors in DC?
 
 
 

- Original Message - 
From: RoadsEnd 
To: Cia-drugs Cia-drugs 
Sent: Saturday, November 22, 2008 10:23 AM
Subject: [cia-drugs] Fwd: [SPY NEWS] Bug-Sized Spies: U.S. Develops Tiny Flying 
Robots





Begin forwarded message:


From: Mario Profaca mario.profaca@ zg.htnet. hr
Date: November 22, 2008 4:22:53 AM PST
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] .com
Subject: [SPY NEWS] Bug-Sized Spies: U.S. Develops Tiny Flying Robots
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] .com


http://www.foxnews. com/story/ 0,2933,456384, 00.html

Bug-Sized Spies: U.S. Develops Tiny Flying Robots
Friday, November 21, 2008

 
 AP

Nov. 21: This photo taken from computer animation video shows the next 
generation of drones, called Micro Aerial Vehicles.
DAYTON, Ohio —  If only we could be a fly on the wall when our enemies are 
plotting to attack us. Better yet, what if that fly could record voices, 
transmit video and even fire tiny weapons?
That kind of James Bond-style fantasy is actually on the drawing board. U..S. 
military engineers are trying to design flying robots disguised as insects that 
could one day spy on enemies and conduct dangerous missions without risking 
lives.
The way we envision it is, there would be a bunch of these sent out in a 
swarm, said Greg Parker, who helps lead the research project 
at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base in Dayton. If we know there's a possibility 
of bad guys in a certain building, how do we find out? We think this would fill 
that void.
In essence, the research seeks to miniaturize the Unmanned Aerial 
Vehicle drones used in Iraq and Afghanistan for surveillance and reconnaissance.
The next generation of drones, called Micro Aerial Vehicles, or MAVs, could be 
as tiny as bumblebees and capable of flying undetected into buildings, where 
they could photograph, record, and even attack insurgents and terrorists.

By identifying and assaulting adversaries more precisely, the robots would also 
help reduce or avoid civilian casualties, the military says.
Parker and his colleagues plan to start by developing a bird-sized robot as 
soon as 2015, followed by the insect-sized models by 2030.
The vehicles could be useful on battlefields where the biggest challenge is 
collecting reliable intelligence about enemies.
If we could get inside the buildings and inside the rooms where their 
activities are unfolding, we would be able to get the kind of intelligence we 
need to shut them down, said Loren Thompson, a defense analyst with the 
Lexington Institute in Arlington, Va.
Philip Coyle, senior adviser with the Center for Defense Information in 
Washington D.C., said a major hurdle would be enabling the vehicles to carry 
the weight of cameras and microphones.
If you make the robot so small that it's like a bumblebee and then you ask the 
bumblebee to carry a video camera and everything else, it may not be able to 
get off the ground, Coyle said.
Parker envisions the bird-sized vehicles as being able to spy on adversaries by 
flying into cities and perching on building ledges or power lines. The vehicles 
would have flappable wings as a disguise but use a separate propulsion system 
to fly.
We think the flapping is more so people don't notice it, he said. They think 
it's a bird.
Unlike the bird-sized vehicles, the insect-sized ones would actually use 
flappable wings to fly, Parker said.
He said engineers want to build a vehicle with a 1-inch wingspan, possibly made 
of an elastic material. The vehicle would have sensors to help avoid slamming 
into buildings or other objects.
Existing airborne robots are flown by a ground-based pilot, but the smaller 
versions would fly independently, relying on preprogrammed instructions.
Parker said the tiny vehicles should also be able to withstand bumps.
If you look at insects, they can bounce off of walls and keep flying, he 
said. You can't do that with a big airplane, but I don't see any reason we 
can't do that with a small one.
An Air Force video describing the vehicles said they could possibly carry 
chemicals or explosives for use in attacks.
Once prototypes are developed, they will be flight-tested in a new building at 
Wright-Patterson dubbed the micro aviary forMicro Air Vehicle Integration 
Application Research