Rolling Drone Thread

Message Bookmarked
Bookmark Removed
Not all messages are displayed: show all messages (160 of them)

The first flight demonstrations occurred from January 11, 2012 to May 30. Milestones achieved included the lead receiver aircraft extending and retracting its aerial refueling hose several times, the trail tanker aircraft successfully demonstrating precision control in formation with manual and automated “breakaway” maneuvers for safety, the two Global Hawks successfully flying in close formation, at times as close as 30 feet away, and one aircraft flying more than 2.5 hours under autonomous formation control with the other flying within 100 ft.[3]

http://www.ien.com/uploadedImages/ien/IENblog/TerminatorHand.jpg

Matt Armstrong, Tuesday, 27 November 2012 05:39 (eleven years ago) link

two months pass...

http://m.citypaper.com/news/the-kill-chain-1.1436761

Raymond Cummings, Wednesday, 30 January 2013 11:53 (eleven years ago) link

Seriously, we should be debating this with something closer to the intensity of the US gun control debate. And by "everyone" I don't mean ILE, but rather "the whole fucking planet."

Raymond Cummings, Wednesday, 30 January 2013 12:01 (eleven years ago) link

I'm with you there. Every time something comes up about new drone capabilities it's fucking terrifying.

Emperor Cos Dashit (Adam Bruneau), Sunday, 3 February 2013 05:41 (eleven years ago) link

http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2013/02/06/the-drone-memo-s-origins.html

Into the frying pan we go

Raymond Cummings, Wednesday, 6 February 2013 21:09 (eleven years ago) link

worth noting

Yesterday, as a task force of 125 officers, some riding Snowcats in the rugged terrain, continued their search, it was revealed that Dorner has become the first human target for remotely-controlled airborne drones on US soil.

unarmed spy drones, i guess, but yknow

a permanent mental health break (difficult listening hour), Sunday, 10 February 2013 20:03 (eleven years ago) link

What became of literature’s vaunted power to inspire empathy? Why was the candidate Obama, in word and in deed, so radically different from the President he became? In Andrei Tarkovsky’s eerie 1979 masterpiece, “Stalker,” the landscape called the Zona has the power to grant people’s deepest wishes, but it can also derange those who traverse it. I wonder if the Presidency is like that: a psychoactive landscape that can madden whomever walks into it, be he inarticulate and incurious, or literary and cosmopolitan.

According to a report in the New York Times, the targets of drone strikes are selected for death at weekly meetings in the White House; no name is added to the list without the President’s approval. Where land mines are indiscrimate, cheap, and brutal, drones are discriminate, expensive, and brutal. And yet they are insufficiently discriminate: the assassination of the Taliban chief Baitullah Mehsud in Pakistan in 2009 succeeded only on the seventeenth attempt. The sixteen near misses of the preceding year killed between two hunderd and eighty and four hundred and ten other people. Literature fails us here. What makes certain Somali, Pakistani, Yemeni, and American people of so little account that even after killing them, the United States disavows all knowledge of their deaths? How much furious despair is generated from so much collateral damage?

Of late, riding the subway in Brooklyn, I have been having a waking dream, or rather a daytime nightmare, in which the subway car ahead of mine explodes. My fellow riders and I look at one another, then look again at the burning car ahead, certain of our deaths. The fire comes closer, and what I feel is bitterness and sorrow that it’s all ending so soon: no more books, no more love, no more jokes, no more Schubert, no more Black Star. All this spins through my mind on tranquil mornings as the D train trundles between 36th Street and Atlantic Avenue and bored commuters check their phones. They just want to get to work. I sit rigid in my seat, thinking, I don’t want to die, not here, not yet. I imagine those in northwest Pakistan or just outside Sana’a who go about their day thinking the same. The difference for some of them is that the plane is already hovering in the air, ready to strike.

I know language is unreliable, that it is not a vending machine of the desires, but the law seems to be getting us nowhere. And so I take helpless refuge in literature again, rewriting the opening lines of seven well-known books:

Mrs. Dalloway said she would buy the flowers herself. Pity. A signature strike leveled the florist’s.

Call me Ishmael. I was a young man of military age. I was immolated at my wedding. My parents are inconsolable.

Stately, plump Buck Mulligan came from the stairhead bearing a bowl of lather. A bomb whistled in. Blood on the walls. Fire from heaven.

I am an invisible man. My name is unknown. My loves are a mystery. But an unmanned aerial vehicle from a secret location has come for me.

Someone must have slandered Josef K., for one morning, without having done anything truly wrong, he was killed by a Predator drone.

Okonkwo was well known throughout the nine villages and even beyond. His torso was found, not his head.

Mother died today. The program saves American lives.

I was in New York City on 9/11. Grief remains from that awful day, but not only grief. There is fear, too, a fear informed by the knowledge that whatever my worst nightmare is, there is someone out there embittered enough to carry it out. I know that something has to be done to secure the airports, waterways, infrastructure, and embassies of our country. I don’t like war; no one does. But I also know that the world is exceedingly complex, and that our enemies are not all imaginary. I am not naïve about the incessant and unseen (by most of us) military activity that undergirds our ability to read, go to concerts, earn a living, and criticize the government in relative safety. I am grateful to those whose bravery keeps us safe.

This ominous, discomfiting, illegal, and immoral use of weaponized drones against defenseless strangers is done for our sakes. But more and more we are seeing a gap between the intention behind the President’s clandestine brand of justice and the real-world effect of those killings. Martin Luther King, Jr.’s words against the Vietnam War in 1967 remain resonant today: “What do they think as we test our latest weapons on them?” We do know what they think: many of them have the normal human reaction to grief and injustice, and some of them take that reaction to a vengeful and murderous extreme. In the Arabian peninsula, East Africa, and Pakistan, thanks to the policies of Obama and Biden, we are acquiring more of the angriest young enemies money can buy. As a New York Times report put it last year, “Drones have replaced Guantánamo as the recruiting tool of choice for militants.”

Assassinations should never have happened in our name. But now we see that they endanger us physically, endanger our democracy, and endanger our Constitution. I believe that when President Obama personally selects the next name to add to his “kill list,” he does it in the belief that he is protecting the country. I trust that he makes the selections with great seriousness, bringing his rich sense of history, literature, and the lives of others to bear on his decisions. And yet we have been drawn into a war without end, and into cruelties that persist in the psychic atmosphere like ritual pollution.

schlump, Monday, 11 February 2013 14:22 (eleven years ago) link

http://newyorker.com/online/blogs/books/2013/02/a-readers-war.html

schlump, Monday, 11 February 2013 14:23 (eleven years ago) link

salon asks the one nagging question that was troubling us all:

http://www.salon.com/2013/02/11/would_lincoln_use_drones/

(The Other) J.D. (J.D.), Monday, 11 February 2013 22:28 (eleven years ago) link

you know, i'm not sure i'm against (unarmed) drones searching for a particular bad guy. seems materially different from "surveillance"

manti 乒乓 (k3vin k.), Monday, 11 February 2013 22:34 (eleven years ago) link

Rather laughable to talk about reducing collateral damage through the use of drones in countries the US is not at war with and would have no other practical option for attacking if it were not for unmanned aircraft.

Head Cheerleader, Homecoming Queen and part-time model (ShariVari), Thursday, 21 February 2013 08:44 (eleven years ago) link

Damn, schlump - that's a powerful piece you linked to.

Raymond Cummings, Thursday, 21 February 2013 11:44 (eleven years ago) link

that slate piece is incredibly awful

(The Other) J.D. (J.D.), Thursday, 21 February 2013 20:17 (eleven years ago) link

OT?: The Cannes '12 sound & light show performed by a 16 drone swarm and mentioned en passant in the Time piece is rather pretty.

Sanpaku, Thursday, 21 February 2013 21:42 (eleven years ago) link

four weeks pass...

Obama’s Defense Budget Shows the Drone Spending Boom Is Over
www.wired.com/dangerroom/2013/04/drone-budget/

Mordy, Wednesday, 10 April 2013 20:22 (eleven years ago) link

The laser cannons the Navy are installing are purportedly for downing drones.

He has a lot of baggage (handlers' perks) (Michael White), Wednesday, 10 April 2013 21:01 (eleven years ago) link

two weeks pass...

http://www.wired.com/dangerroom/2013/04/pentagon-global-observer

The Pentagon spent millions developing a humongous hydrogen-fueled drone that, it hoped, could fly at soaring altitudes for a week at a time. Now the drone is all on its lonesome, because no one wants to buy it.

Built by drone manufacturer AeroVironment, the Global Observer is a 70-foot-long jumbo drone with a wingspan nearly as long as one of the Air Force’s B-52 bombers. Powered by liquid-hydrogen fuel cells, it was billed as a persistent eye-in-the-sky capable of loitering at 65,000 feet for a week a time without spewing carbon dioxide into the atmosphere. The Pentagon also envisioned many missions. The drone’s 380-pound payload of spy cameras and sensors could stare at a diameter of 600 miles of earth at once, while doubling as a communications relay. It could patrol the oceans and possibly track hurricanes — the Department of Homeland Security was interested in it too.

But now no one wants the giant drone. “Currently, no service or defense agency has advocated for it to be a program,” Pentagon spokeswoman Maureen Schumann told InsideDefense (subscription only) in April. This was after spending $27.9 million developing the drone since 2007, which came to an end in December when the Pentagon closed down its development contract, the trade journal reports.

Mordy, Tuesday, 30 April 2013 13:50 (eleven years ago) link

Flies on the nose of the Pentagon in fairness - the F-35 jet cost $40 billion and is just as unloved.

Andrew Farrell, Tuesday, 30 April 2013 13:59 (eleven years ago) link

I feel like we're so close to

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/9/9b/Helicarrier.jpg

Mordy, Tuesday, 30 April 2013 14:06 (eleven years ago) link

two weeks pass...

Speculating that technology nobody is building could be programmed using criteria nobody has outlined to be less malicious / incompetent than the people operating drones IRL is an odd "liberal case" but it's an attention-grabbing headline, i suppose.

хуто-хуторянка (ShariVari), Wednesday, 15 May 2013 07:37 (ten years ago) link

two weeks pass...

http://www.imore.com/tom-clancys-division-let-mobile-players-get-post-apocalyptic-console-action

In a lot of ways, it's a standard duck-and-cover action game with lots of gadgets, skills, progression, and persistent open world player-versus-player, but what's really interesting to us is the mobile element. Players on unnamed tablets will be able to join in the fun as a drone, offering tactical support by way of surveillance, healing, and providing other bonuses. You can still get shot at, even though you're in the air, so watch out.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?&v=njfj6KwEAfg
3.54 here. this is some straight up ender's game/last starfighter shit imo

i didn't even give much of a fuck that you were mod (forksclovetofu), Tuesday, 11 June 2013 05:36 (ten years ago) link

one month passes...
four weeks pass...
one month passes...

http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/post-politics/files/2013/10/whitehouse-photo.png

Malala Yousafzai may not have won the Nobel Peace Prize on Friday, but she enjoyed a private Oval Office audience with President Obama and the first family.

Yousafzai, the 16-year-old Pakistani student who was shot in the head by Taliban gunmen for speaking out in support of the right of girls to go to school, met Friday with Obama and his wife, Michelle. A photograph issued by the White House shows the Obamas' 15-year-old daughter, Malia, also present during the visit.

...Yousafzai said she was honored to meet Obama and that she raised concerns with him about the administration's use of drones, saying they are "fueling terrorism."
"I thanked President Obama for the United States' work in supporting education in Pakistan and Afghanistan and for Syrian refugees," Yousafzai said in a statement published by the Associated Press. "I also expressed my concerns that drone attacks are fueling terrorism. Innocent victims are killed in these acts, and they lead to resentment among the Pakistani people. If we refocus efforts on education it will make a big impact."

http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/post-politics/wp/2013/10/11/malala-yousafzai-meets-with-the-obamas-in-the-oval-office/

reckless woo (Z S), Saturday, 12 October 2013 16:38 (ten years ago) link

otmfm

Emperor Cos Dashit (Adam Bruneau), Monday, 14 October 2013 01:40 (ten years ago) link

http://www.wired.com/dangerroom/2013/10/drone-reports/

Mordy , Tuesday, 22 October 2013 23:35 (ten years ago) link

three weeks pass...

http://www.wired.com/images_blogs/dangerroom/2013/11/Maveric_Prioria.jpg

Mordy , Wednesday, 27 November 2013 17:20 (ten years ago) link

Ha! just last month my gf and I were brainstorming future products/services for an art project and one of our ideas was drone-delivered takeout.

Fetchboy, Wednesday, 4 December 2013 01:48 (ten years ago) link

american govt p big on that already

love mike love (ko komo) (schlump), Wednesday, 4 December 2013 02:18 (ten years ago) link

http://www.cnn.com/2013/12/10/us/colorado-town-drone-ordinance/index.html?hpt=hp_t2

"I would shoot a drone down if it's peering in my window, scanning me, and it's within elevation where I can nail it," said Robert Copely, a resident.

how's life, Tuesday, 10 December 2013 16:23 (ten years ago) link

three weeks pass...

Navy’s 757-Sized Drone Will Provide Big-Time Surveillance

http://www.wired.com/dangerroom/2014/01/triton/

http://www.wired.com/images_blogs/dangerroom/2014/01/23941-660x440.jpg

Mordy , Tuesday, 7 January 2014 19:21 (ten years ago) link

Gonna be an interesting next couple decades

Beatrix Kiddo (Raymond Cummings), Tuesday, 7 January 2014 19:24 (ten years ago) link

Making super-huge and expensive drones like that Navy one is just very, very stupid. Because the whole point of drones is that they are cheap and expendable. Having no pilot means you can put them in harm's way. All those advantages are inapplicable to a massively expensive drone filled with super-secret hardware. You might as well give the damn thing a pilot who can respond to sticky situations better than some techie sitting in a room 8,000 miles away with a joystick.

Aimless, Tuesday, 7 January 2014 19:34 (ten years ago) link

I'm skeptical that a human in a plane can pilot better than a gamer w/ a joystick.

Mordy , Tuesday, 7 January 2014 19:35 (ten years ago) link

may you live in interesting decades

this harmless group of nerds and the women that love them (forksclovetofu), Tuesday, 7 January 2014 19:36 (ten years ago) link

I'm still aligned with the reality-based community myself.

Aimless, Tuesday, 7 January 2014 19:38 (ten years ago) link

A drone or another intelligence device is sorta like being at a football game sitting on the 50-yard line and looking through a soda straw. I mean you see what you see.

A quote from retired Brigadier General Craig Nixon from that Atlantic article

curmudgeon, Monday, 27 April 2015 20:09 (nine years ago) link

Morbs otm

Acid Hose (Capitaine Jay Vee), Monday, 27 April 2015 20:36 (nine years ago) link

Never read Burroughs novels I confess, so I had to look up "Dr. Benway."

curmudgeon, Monday, 27 April 2015 20:44 (nine years ago) link

five months pass...

where the satisfied customer gets killed!

The drone infrastructure uses Big Data to “build target packages” about its high-value individuals, while corporations can “build profiles of the most profitable current customers.” Drones attempt “to maintain 24/7 persistent stare,” just as corporations need “to get a 360 view of the customer.”

https://theintercept.com/2015/10/23/drones-ibm-and-the-big-data-of-death/

skateboards are the new combover (Dr Morbius), Monday, 26 October 2015 12:11 (eight years ago) link

three months pass...

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/birth-control-drones-africa_us_56a8a3b4e4b0947efb65fc11

The idea grew into a successful pilot program called Project Last Mile, which has for months been successfully flying birth control, condoms and other medical supplies to rural areas of Ghana on 5-foot-wide drones. The program, which is jointly funded by Coca-Cola, UNFPA, the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation and the United States Agency for International Development, is now expanding into six other African countries in hopes of revolutionizing women's health and family planning across the continent. The drone operator simply packs the vehicle with contraception and medical supplies from a warehouse in an urban area and pilots it over to places that are difficult to access by car. There, a local health worker meets the drone and picks up the supplies.

"Delivery to the rural areas used to take two days," Sunkutu said at the International Conference on Family Planning in Bali, Indonesia. "It will now take 30 minutes."

Access to birth control is a massive problem in Africa, especially Sub-Saharan Africa, where fewer than 20 percent of women are using modern contraceptives. The World Health Organization estimates that 225 million women in developing countries around the world would like to delay or stop childbearing, but lack reliable birth control methods. The lack of access leads to exceedingly high rates of unintended pregnancy in these areas, which prevents women and girls from finishing school or becoming employed. And roughly 47,000 women a year die of complications from unsafe abortions.

Mordy, Wednesday, 27 January 2016 21:41 (eight years ago) link

one month passes...

WASHINGTON — President Obama on Thursday offered an emotional apology for the accidental killing of two hostages held by Al Qaeda, one of them American, in a United States government counterterrorism operation in January, saying he takes “full responsibility” for their deaths.

“As president and as commander in chief, I take full responsibility for all our counterterrorism operations,” including the one that inadvertently took the lives of the two captives, a grim-faced Mr. Obama said in a statement to reporters in the White House briefing room.

“I profoundly regret what happened,” he added. “On behalf of the U.S. government, I offer our deepest apologies to the families.”

Mr. Obama’s remarks came shortly after the White House released an extraordinary statement revealing that intelligence officials had confirmed that Warren Weinstein, an American held by Al Qaeda since 2011, and Giovanni Lo Porto, an Italian held since 2012, died during a drone strike.

― Mordy, Thursday, April 23, 2015 2:54 PM (10 months ago)

The White House promised a “full review” of the strike, possible changes to policies around drone strikes, and compensation for the Weinstein and Lo Porto families.

Nearly a year later, little has emerged about the investigation. And while Weinstein’s family is reportedly still negotiating a settlement with the CIA, Lo Porto’s relations have had no contact with the U.S. government, directly or through the Italian authorities....

https://theintercept.com/2016/03/15/one-year-on-no-justice-for-giovanni-lo-porto-italian-hostage-killed-in-us-drone-strike/

we can be heroes just for about 3.6 seconds (Dr Morbius), Tuesday, 15 March 2016 20:35 (eight years ago) link

one month passes...
three months pass...

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2014/nov/24/-sp-us-drone-strikes-kill-1147?CMP=share_btn_tw

The drones came for Ayman Zawahiri on 13 January 2006, hovering over a village in Pakistan called Damadola. Ten months later, they came again for the man who would become al-Qaida’s leader, this time in Bajaur.

Eight years later, Zawahiri is still alive. Seventy-six children and 29 adults, according to reports after the two strikes, are not.

However many Americans know who Zawahiri is, far fewer are familiar with Qari Hussain. Hussain was a deputy commander of the Pakistani Taliban, a militant group aligned with al-Qaida that trained the would-be Times Square bomber, Faisal Shahzad, before his unsuccessful 2010 attack. The drones first came for Hussain years before, on 29 January 2008. Then they came on 23 June 2009, 15 January 2010, 2 October 2010 and 7 October 2010.

Finally, on 15 October 2010, Hellfire missiles fired from a Predator or Reaper drone killed Hussain, the Pakistani Taliban later confirmed. For the death of a man whom practically no American can name, the US killed 128 people, 13 of them children, none of whom it meant to harm.

On a Raqqa tip (ShariVari), Friday, 26 August 2016 10:14 (seven years ago) link

Wait, that's from 2014 - i just saw it come up again on Twitter.

On a Raqqa tip (ShariVari), Friday, 26 August 2016 10:19 (seven years ago) link

nine months pass...

regular drone, not killer drone, but hey this is the thread we have

Hit-and-Run Drone Collision Causes Power Outage for 1,600 in Google’s Hometown

sleeve, Monday, 12 June 2017 17:33 (six years ago) link

eight months pass...

Home-made drones now threaten conventional armed forces

sleeve, Thursday, 15 February 2018 19:09 (six years ago) link

^ yup

F-35 fighter aircraft cost roughly $100 million per unit, not counting maintenance. You can buy one helluva lot of drone aircraft for that kind of money.

A is for (Aimless), Thursday, 15 February 2018 19:20 (six years ago) link

ten months pass...

drones

large bananas pregnant (ledge), Friday, 21 December 2018 08:50 (five years ago) link

six months pass...

i can't remember this and it's impossible to google and it's driving me crazy: who composed the early drone/experimental piece "was?" (german for "what?")

na (NA), Tuesday, 9 July 2019 17:02 (four years ago) link

fuck wrong thread

na (NA), Tuesday, 9 July 2019 17:02 (four years ago) link

five months pass...

You think?

"“Like in many other areas of drone regulation, the statutory and regulatory framework is lagging the technology,” said Reggie Govan, a former chief counsel to the F.A.A. who now teaches at the University of Pennsylvania Law School. “It’s just that simple.”"

https://www.nytimes.com/2020/01/01/us/drones-FAA-colorado-nebraska.html?action=click&module=Top%20Stories&pgtype=Homepage

Lactose Shaolin Wanker (Raymond Cummings), Thursday, 2 January 2020 10:22 (four years ago) link


You must be logged in to post. Please either login here, or if you are not registered, you may register here.