http://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2013/01/17000-linux-powered-rifle-brings-auto-aim-to-the-real-world/

$17,000 Linux-powered rifle brings “auto-aim” to the real world


Ars at CES 2013

Vegas in full swing: a CES centerfold
Why the UN’s push to control the Internet isn’t over
SSD predictions at CES: fewer OEMs, lower prices
Wireless mesh networks at 65MPH—linking cars to prevent crashes
FCC says it will open up Gov’t radio spectrum to improve Wi-Fi
View all…
CES is about technology of all kinds; while we're busy covering cameras, TVs, 
and CPUs, there's a huge number of products that fall outside our normal 
coverage. Austin-based startup TrackingPoint isn't typical Ars fare, but its 
use of technology to enable getting just the perfect shot was intriguing enough 
to get me to stop by and take a look at the company's products.

TrackingPoint makes "Precision Guided Firearms, or "PGFs," which are a series 
of three heavily customized hunting rifles, ranging from a .300 Winchester 
Magnum with a 22-inch barrel up to a .338 Lapua Magnum with 27-inch barrel, all 
fitted with advanced computerized scopes that look like something directly out 
of The Terminator. Indeed, the comparison to that movie is somewhat apt, 
because looking through the scope of a Precision Guided Firearm presents you 
with a collection of data points and numbers, all designed to get a bullet 
directly from point A to point B.


The view through the TrackingPoint's computerized optics.

TrackingPoint

The PGF isn't just a fancy scope on top of a rifle. All together, the PGF is 
made up of a firearm, a modified trigger mechanism with variable weighting, the 
computerized digital tracking scope, and hand-loaded match grade rounds (which 
you need to purchase from TrackingPoint). This is a little like selling both 
the razor and the razor blades, but the rounds must be manufactured to tight 
tolerances since precise guidance of a round to a target by the rifle's 
computer requires that the round perform within known boundaries.


Enlarge / The TrackingPoint XS1, chambered in a .338 Lapua Magnum, with a 
27-inch Krieger barrel and 300 grain match rounds.
TrackingPoint

The image displayed on the scope isn't a direct visual, but rather a video 
image taken through the scope's objective lens. The Linux-powered scope 
produces a display that looks something like the heads-up display you'd see 
sitting in the cockpit of a fighter jet, showing the weapon's compass 
orientation, cant, and incline. To shoot at something, you first "mark" it 
using a button near the trigger. Marking a target illuminates it with the 
tracking scope's built-in laser, and the target gains a pip in the scope's 
display. When a target is marked, the tracking scope takes into account the 
range of the target, the ambient temperature and humidity, the age of the 
barrel, and a whole boatload of other parameters. It quickly reorients the 
display so the crosshairs in the center accurately show where the round will go.

Image recognition routines keep the pip stuck to the marked target in the 
scope's field of view, and at that point, you squeeze the trigger. This doesn't 
fire the weapon; rather, the reticle goes from blue to red, and while keeping 
the trigger held down, you position the reticle over the marked target's pip. 
As soon as they coincide, the rifle fires.


Enlarge / Mark a target, squeeze the trigger, and line up the crosshairs to the 
target's pip.
TrackingPoint

TrackingPoint is quick to emphasize the rifle doesn't fire "by itself," but 
rather the trigger's pull force is dynamically raised to be very high until the 
reticle and pip coincide, at which point the pull force is reset to its 
default. In this way, the shooter is still in control of the rifle's firing, 
and at any point prior to firing you can release the trigger. In the mockups 
the company had on display for the press to experiment with, the action 
appeared to be the same—I pulled the trigger and lined up the dots and the blue 
plastic toy gun went click.


Enlarge / The computerized scope.
Having the round fire when the shot is lined up rather than in immediate 
response to a trigger pull eliminates a tremendous amount of uncertainty from 
the shot. Even the most experienced shooters can upset a weapon's aim when 
pulling the trigger, and overcoming the reflex to twitch or preemptively move 
against a weapon's recoil is very, very difficult. By allowing the computer to 
choose the precise moment to take the shot, accuracy is greatly enhanced.

Putting lead accurately on targets is only part of what TrackingPoint's PGF 
system does. The computerized tracking scope contains some amount of 
nonvolatile storage, and like an airplane's "black box," it's constantly 
recording the visual feed from the optics. It also contains a small Wi-Fi 
server, and TrackingPoint offers an iOS app that connects to the scope via an 
ad-hoc Wi-Fi network and streams the scope's display to the app, allowing 
someone with an iPad or iPhone to act as a spotter. TrackingPoint notes that 
for novice hunters, having the ability to duplicate the scope's picture onto an 
external display makes it a lot easier for an experienced spotter to give 
advice on how and when to shoot.


Enlarge / The iPad app mirrors the scope's display, allowing a spotter to 
assist with shots.
TrackingPoint

There's a social media aspect, too—the scope's video recordings can be uploaded 
to video sharing sites like YouTube. Rather than bragging to buddies about that 
amazing 1000-yard shot you took at the range or out in the field last week, you 
can simply show them, complete with all the heads-up display data about 
conditions and range.

TrackingPoint had one actual rifle on display in the press room, along with 
several mock-ups equipped with iPhones in place of scopes. The iPhones were 
running a simulated version of the TrackingPoint scope software, letting demo 
users line up their shots on polygonal deer and hogs in a landscape much like 
popular hunting video games. It felt a bit like playing with an "easy mode" 
cheat turned on, though, as it was nearly impossible to miss, even at 
tremendous distances. TrackingPoint is considering selling the demo software as 
a standalone hunting app, though from my brief experience with it, there wasn't 
a whole lot of challenge to felling game once you had the mark-and-fire 
procedure worked out.

This might not make a compelling video game, but it certainly does make for an 
accurate weapon system. TrackingPoint says the "first shot success 
probability"—that is, a shooter's ability to successfully land a round on 
target in a single try—is drastically increased. The TrackingPoint 
representatives present brought this up when I commented on the necessity of 
buying (more expensive) ammunition directly from TrackingPoint rather than 
buying or loading one's own rounds. TrackingPoint contends the ability to be 
drastically more precise with aiming means fewer rounds have to be fired for 
the same effect, ultimately saving money.


Enlarge
TrackingPoint

I asked about potential military applications, since they are obvious, but 
TrackingPoint was quick to downplay involvement with the Department of Defense. 
The "connected shooter" goal of the PGF system in many ways lines up with the 
Army's limping, on-again-off-again Land Warrior program. However, the very 
nature of the government contract and procurement process ensures that any 
technology developed for military use must go through an incredibly lengthy and 
convoluted development process, meeting shifting and sometimes outdated design 
goals along the way. TrackingPoint said that its goal is to produce the 
technology first, and then find the market and applications once it actually 
had something ready to go—and this is what it has done.

The company is also keenly aware of the potential negative public perception 
right now around firearms and firearm manufactures, in the wake of recent 
mass-shooting events like the ones in Sandy Hook and Aurora. The three models 
of PGF are bolt-action hunting rifles, unwieldy for any kind of close-quarters 
work; the tracking system itself requires patience and care to line up and 
fire, and it doesn't appear at all to be the kind of thing a mass-shooter would 
employ. At this time, TrackingPoint indicated that it has no intention of 
producing a PGF system for anything other than bolt-action rifles.

Hunting is a controversial pastime, but it's an undeniably popular one, and 
TrackingPoint is dialed in very well at its target market. The price is 
relatively high—the rifles start at about $17,000 (a price which includes an 
iPad with the TrackingPoint app pre-configured and ready to go), but that isn't 
a huge premium over parting together one's own rifle and precision optics.


-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "The 
Unique Geek" group.
To post to this group, send email to [email protected].
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
[email protected].
For more options, visit this group at 
http://groups.google.com/group/theuniquegeek?hl=en.

Reply via email to