09-06-2017, 10:27 AM
All that is needed is a wireless camera installed in the robot circuit that captures images and videos from enemy territories and transmits these images, which are received by the receiver unit of the TV. Military robots are autonomous robots or remote controlled mobile robots designed for Military, from transport to search and rescue and attack. Some of these systems are currently in use, and many are in development.
History
Widely defined, military robots date from World War II and the Cold War in the form of mines followed by the German Goliath and Soviet teletanks. The drone Predator MQB-1 was when "CIA officers began to see the first practical results of their decades-old fantasy of using airborne robots to gather intelligence."
The use of robots in war, although traditionally a subject for science fiction, is being investigated as a possible future future of fighting wars. Already several military robots have been developed by several armies.
Some believe that the future of modern war will be fought by automated weapons systems. The United States is investing heavily in research and development to test and deploy increasingly automated systems. The most prominent system currently in use is the unmanned aerial vehicle (IAI Pioneer & RQ-1 Predator) that can be armed with air-to-ground missiles and operated remotely from a reconnaissance command center. DARPA has organized contests in 2004 and 2005 to involve private companies and universities to develop unmanned ground vehicles to navigate rugged terrain in the Mojave Desert for a final prize of 2 million.
Artillery has seen promising research with an experimental weapon system called "Dragon Fire II" that automates the loading and ballistics calculations needed for accurate predictable fire, providing a 12-second response time to fire support requests. However, military weapons are prevented from being fully autonomous: they require human input at certain points of intervention to ensure that the objectives are not within areas of restricted fire as defined in the Geneva Conventions for the laws of war.
There have been some developments towards the autonomous development of fighter jets and bombers. The use of autonomous fighters and bombers to destroy enemy targets is especially promising because of the lack of training required for robotic pilots, autonomous planes are capable of performing maneuvers that otherwise could not be done with human pilots (due to the large G-Force quantity), Flat designs do not require a life support system, and a loss of an aircraft does not mean a loss of a pilot. However, the biggest drawback to robotics is its inability to accommodate non-standard conditions. Advances in artificial intelligence in the near future can help rectify this.