I'm not a fan. Mostly for one reason:BOOM headshot65 said:So, I want to know escapist, what is your view of Armed military robotics?
That was true, but IIRC, only for new soldiers. They also have developed new training methods to deal with that, soldiers fire at targets shaped like people, not circular shapes, because of this and so on.Xifel said:3) There is a theory that someone came up with that only 20% of soldier on the frontline actually shot anyone. That even if you have a clear shot most people can't take the life of someone else, an even miss on purpose. (This is why many bad guys in movies and games have masks to cover their faces, to de-humanise them). If this is true, suddenly you got much more firepower in battle with these robot since there is no bad feelings in killing a killer robot.
Note however the theory is from the World Wars, and that the battlefield were different back then...
Hmmm, I wonder how effective that is. When I was a soldier (conscripted, non-voluntarily) I had a minor breakdown on the shooting range because I felt extremely uncomfortable shooting at something shaped like a human. Although I was a medic, and also somewhat a pacifist. But many of my fellow soldiers felt the same way.thaluikhain said:That was true, but IIRC, only for new soldiers. They also have developed new training methods to deal with that, soldiers fire at targets shaped like people, not circular shapes, because of this and so on.Xifel said:3) There is a theory that someone came up with that only 20% of soldier on the frontline actually shot anyone. That even if you have a clear shot most people can't take the life of someone else, an even miss on purpose. (This is why many bad guys in movies and games have masks to cover their faces, to de-humanise them). If this is true, suddenly you got much more firepower in battle with these robot since there is no bad feelings in killing a killer robot.
Note however the theory is from the World Wars, and that the battlefield were different back then...
Though I do tend to agree with everything you said.
Dunno how much it works, but then again, best to have the problem there than wait till teh targets are shooting back.Xifel said:Hmmm, I wonder how effective that is. When I was a soldier (conscripted, non-voluntarily) I had a minor breakdown on the shooting range because I felt extremely uncomfortable shooting at something shaped like a human. Although I was a medic, and also somewhat a pacifist. But many of my fellow soldiers felt the same way.
Going to disagree with that. Conflicts are supposed to be unfair, people go to massive amounts of time and effort to make their militaries better than their opponents.Xifel said:Anyway, as I said the little amount of honour that is still left on the battlefields would disappear. A roadside bomb of a convoy of soldiers, that is a cowards way of fighting, but I don't believe any soldier, or even any army, in the world would have any problem using it against that thing up there.
Well, the training is expensive, and I think most solider would have a lot more valuable gear, but yes, that's entirely true. I'd say much more than 10 million, though. A Phalanx system costs more than half that, IIRC.Xifel said:An other thing I came to think about: War Economics. I have no idea How much that robot thing would cost, but maybe 10 million dollar? I'm just guessing here, but think that a luck you with an AT4 (cost: $2000) could wipe it out. This is way we still use infantry; A soldier with maybe 1 year of training and about $5000 of equipment is smarter, more creative, easier to conceal, can cover large areas, don't need that much maintenance or supplies, etc.
Well, that's going to be a problem with any sort of vehicle, though.Xifel said:Also: that tank thing looks very effective if you fight on a football field. What if I run indoors? Or if they had a second Vietnam war in dense forest areas. That would be fun to watch![]()
By far the most effective way to defeat an enemy is to wound the enemy soldiers sufficiently that they cannot walk (at least temporarily) unaided. This ties up enemy manpower, as not only is that soldier down, but at least 1 or 2 are needed to transport that soldier away. Horrific looking injuries and those that allow the enemy to still scream also have a bonus of being bad for moral. (Top battlefield/disaster triage tip in many cases the screaming patients injuries aren't immediately life threatening, check the quiet ones 1st).Xifel said:1) Ehmm, people do realise that even in war the point isn't to "kill" the enemy but to "defeat" them. And this usually that means capture the enemy, and more importantly (more me; former medic) treat their wounded.
It's not so hard to break those laws. Just give the robot an order it won't know would harm another human being. Or tell it to go somewhere it won't know would harm itself. Done.flames09 said:None follow Issac Asimovs Three Laws of Robotics:
1 )A robot may not injure a human being or, through inaction, allow a human being to come to harm.
2) A robot must obey the orders given to it by human beings, except where such orders would conflict with the First Law.
3) A robot must protect its own existence as long as such protection does not conflict with the First or Second Laws.
though through hugely complicated logic it is possible to break those laws with an extremely high tech positronic brain.... they are a very good start.
The fact that we have no real laws for robotics worries me deeply, this can only end badly.