What I mean, usually right generals have already planned moves for every possible outcome, and these moves are already painted on maps and in text plans, or even practiced at trainees, and have exact names like many combinations in chess game [1].
So, real military command center activity, typically need human hands just because old software was not capable to understand high abstraction level commands, but with AI grow this could change.
As example, now conduct works on AI pilots for UAVs, which controlled by human pilot voice commands like "cover me", "check cell at coordinates alpha 7", "attack target number 2", "follow me", "return to base", etc.
BTW, as I know from pilot trainings, they usually flight at constant altitude, coordinating altitude change with dispatcher.
Also consider that Air Traffic Control and marine VHF radio[1] (and anything else based on old school radio) are a "standalone sound interface". It requires a formalized setting and training, sure. Rattling off grid coordinates isn't exactly relaxing, but it's a thing.
For usability, consider something more along the lines of "Hey roomba, go clean up the spill in the kitchen. [...] You missed a spot near the door."
My favorite part of the AI era is the polite prompting of our LLM assistants... "_please_ fork the swarm of killbots..." I bet the narrator didn't even realize he was doing it. It's just become a natural part of prompting.
so far drones are producing battlefield stalemates and a war of atrition, the ability to deny access to the radio spectrum by any motivated oponent renders drones as terror weapons rather that tools of conquest, and that against soft unprepared targets only
not that, was raised by combat veterans, and have a bit of down range experience myself....so it's a habitual type of museing.....not uncommon I think.I got into a discussion with a checkout girl about muckers and general mayhem just bieng part of life and she related how she dreams up ways of assembling various items in the store into weapons
and actualy just saw a short video clip of someone taking out a drone with a spear......so
You need view or gesture pointers to go make "go from here to there" meaningful . A standalone sound interface will always fail .
And for 3d space it needs ai, as omly ai can deduce the depth along the view axis by analysing context.
Then you need a cubic volume selection . With a relational addition .
"a,3,5 Select all except resting drones and fly to here."
Not exact, at least for military.
What I mean, usually right generals have already planned moves for every possible outcome, and these moves are already painted on maps and in text plans, or even practiced at trainees, and have exact names like many combinations in chess game [1].
So, real military command center activity, typically need human hands just because old software was not capable to understand high abstraction level commands, but with AI grow this could change.
As example, now conduct works on AI pilots for UAVs, which controlled by human pilot voice commands like "cover me", "check cell at coordinates alpha 7", "attack target number 2", "follow me", "return to base", etc.
BTW, as I know from pilot trainings, they usually flight at constant altitude, coordinating altitude change with dispatcher.
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_chess_openings
Also consider that Air Traffic Control and marine VHF radio[1] (and anything else based on old school radio) are a "standalone sound interface". It requires a formalized setting and training, sure. Rattling off grid coordinates isn't exactly relaxing, but it's a thing.
For usability, consider something more along the lines of "Hey roomba, go clean up the spill in the kitchen. [...] You missed a spot near the door."
[1]: As in maritime, not military.
Agree. As usually military is better organized than ordinary citizen, also navy better organized than land military.
Awesome. If this were a game I would buy it.
Sooo… we’re just posting our defense contractor kill-swarm audition tapes online now?
My favorite part of the AI era is the polite prompting of our LLM assistants... "_please_ fork the swarm of killbots..." I bet the narrator didn't even realize he was doing it. It's just become a natural part of prompting.
so far drones are producing battlefield stalemates and a war of atrition, the ability to deny access to the radio spectrum by any motivated oponent renders drones as terror weapons rather that tools of conquest, and that against soft unprepared targets only
Looks like you’ve got the start of your grant application down. Congrats, and thanks for sharing!
not that, was raised by combat veterans, and have a bit of down range experience myself....so it's a habitual type of museing.....not uncommon I think.I got into a discussion with a checkout girl about muckers and general mayhem just bieng part of life and she related how she dreams up ways of assembling various items in the store into weapons and actualy just saw a short video clip of someone taking out a drone with a spear......so
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