It has been some time since the deployment of remote-controlled combat robots, developed by the US Military, for use in Iraq. Are they any good? Are any more improvements planned? Anyone suggested an AI for them yet? Would combat droids be reality in about ten or twenty years time?
The British Army started using robots simmilar to those in Tripler’s link in Northern Ireland since 1972. Presumably they would have given up on them long ago if they were rubbish.
As the commandant of the military academy that Lisa and Bart go to in the Simpsons episode 4F21 so nicely puts it:
The wars of the future will not be fought on the battlefield or at sea.
They will be fought in space, or possibly on top of a very tall
mountain. In either case, most of the actual fighting will be done by
small robots. And as you go forth today remember always, your duty is
clear: to build and maintain those robots. Thank you.
And now that scientists at Cornell University have created self-replicating robots (http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/7815160/), even that may become unnecessary.
Semi-autonomous killer robots work just fine, and have for some time - I’m talking about guided missiles and torpedoes. No one thinks of them as robots, but that’s what they are, for all practical purposes - Machines that are designed to hunt down and destroy their targets.
Well, if you consider the Predator and Global Hawk, then yes. The Predator was fitted with Hellfire missiles, and has been credited with several ‘kills’ against targets.
But from what I think you’re getting at: no. There are no self-autonomous machines roving around the battlefield yet that actively select their own targets for prosecution. As Tranquilis mentioned, the robots that are out there need some sort of active human programming for targeting.
Tripler
Don’t worry. SKYNET hasn’t become self-aware just yet. . .