Advances in tactical robotics are changing operations on the battlefield and beyond. Both the private sector and the government are driving innovation in the robotics fields, towards four cardinal points:
1) Mobility and dexterity to maneuver in the degraded environments typical of disaster zones
2) Ability to manipulate and use a diverse assortment of tools designed for humans
3) Ability to be operated by humans who have had little to no robotics training
4) Partial autonomy in task-level decision-making based on operator commands and sensor inputs
Main UGV OEMs are doing much to advance in the areas of command-and-control for various purposes, including bomb disposal, unmanned convoys and reconnaissance. Just as an example, iRobot R&D Engineering Team have created a controller called uPoint that functions similar to a universal remote control, but for ground robots instead of entertainment devices. With it, users can operate all iRobot UGVs through a tablet application, switching instantly between one robot and another.
Running on an Android system, the uPoint offers an open-architecture ability to integrate with larger cloud environments and provides enhanced communications capabilities. It features frequency agility within the bands it operates on, automatically seeking out least-congested frequencies. Less experienced users can enjoy those benefits automatically while experts could access deeper into the system to manually tailor communications options.
With uPoint, all the iRobot UGVs have similar, if not identical graphical user interfaces that reduce the time to reach proficiency, said Tim Trainer, vice president of robotic products at the company. They all talk on the same radio networks, playing into the idea of the family of systems. By reaching back into the cloud, uPoint can upload sensor data to command-and-control networks while simultaneously downloading specific mission data, training and maintenance tools. Trainer said iRobot fully expects that as the ecosystem of application-based programs grows, more third parties will release apps that can be leveraged by operators on the company’s system.
No hay comentarios:
Publicar un comentario
Nota: solo los miembros de este blog pueden publicar comentarios.