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posted by martyb on Thursday October 14 2021, @01:44AM   Printer-friendly
from the Sit!-Stay!-Aim!-Shoot!-Good(?)-doggie! dept.

Uh Oh, They Strapped a Sniper Rifle to a Robot Dog:

For years, we've been warning that it was only a matter of time — and now, the inevitable has happened.

Somebody strapped an honest-to-god sniper rifle to the back of a quadrupedal robot dog.

An image shared on Twitter by military robot maker Ghost Robotics shows the terrifying contraption in all its dystopian glory.

Latest lethality 6.5 #creedmoor sniper payload from @SWORDINT. Check out the latest partner payloads @AUSAorg Wash DC. Keeping US and allied #sof #warfighter equipped with the latest innovations. @USSOCOM #defense #defence #NationalSecurity #drone #robotics pic.twitter.com/Dvk6OvL3Bu

— Ghost Robotics (@Ghost_Robotics) October 11, 2021

[...] There's a lot we don't know about the machine, but according to an Instagram post by Sword International, a gun manufacturer, the machine is called the SPUR or Special Purpose Unmanned Rifle.

More at the Sword's website [Ed Comment: Link is sometimes giving 404 since this story was released--JR].


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  • (Score: 2) by HiThere on Thursday October 14 2021, @02:00PM (3 children)

    by HiThere (866) Subscriber Badge on Thursday October 14 2021, @02:00PM (#1186969) Journal

    Recoil is probably a problem limiting the device/weapon combinations that would be useful. But yes.

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  • (Score: 2) by JoeMerchant on Thursday October 14 2021, @06:20PM

    by JoeMerchant (3937) on Thursday October 14 2021, @06:20PM (#1187061)

    Recoil would indeed limit the weapons that such a platform could practically fire (more than once), but not the size nor power of the projectiles fired. Recoil-less weapons can fire some impressively large and destructive shells.

    Of course, the unsuspecting public would never know if/when half the fuel cell has been replaced with C4... sure, you can only use it once, but if it can get close enough to a high value target? And if "officer friendly" dogs regularly patrol all the time...

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  • (Score: 2) by FatPhil on Friday October 15 2021, @11:49AM (1 child)

    by FatPhil (863) <{pc-soylent} {at} {asdf.fi}> on Friday October 15 2021, @11:49AM (#1187250) Homepage
    With no body-parts anywhere near this thing, a rear-jet recoil reduction technique could be used, such as: https://www.mdpi.com/2073-8994/13/3/396
    Or if you want something with even greater effect, try something like an inertial mass damper, but of course that would reduce the mobility of the bot due to the extra weight. Real world big guns have already solved this problem, there's no reason such technology can't be shrunk, it's just that previously there was little need for it to be shrunk. Of course, the bot itself is an intertial mass, and its legs can act as dampers, there's no reason for the bot itself to not have a "prepare to fire" stance and post-firing recovery programmed into it. If we're making these things smart, why stop at just stair climing and door opening?
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    • (Score: 2, Disagree) by HiThere on Friday October 15 2021, @01:59PM

      by HiThere (866) Subscriber Badge on Friday October 15 2021, @01:59PM (#1187268) Journal

      But what you're postulating is a highly modified "robot dog", to the extent that it's actually a mini-tank. (And I don't believe the intelligence controlling it resides if the vehicle...this has both significant effects, but among other things to me it means that calling it a robot is incorrect. But we do need a better name than "telefactor".

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