Posted on 09/29/2014 10:47:11 AM PDT by Utilizer
Microsoft has made the Kinect motion detection sensor available for use in commercial and non-gaming scenarios for some time, but for some reason it hasn't really caught on. We've heard next to no stories about people using it, although it could always be that they are keeping quiet for a competitive advantage.
But a military contractor has come up with something that has the U.S. Marine Corps interested. The Augmented Reality Sand Table is currently being developed by the Army Research Laboratory and was on display at the Modern Day Marine Expo that recently took place on Marine Corps Base Quantico in Virginia.
According to The Marine Corps Times, the set-up is simple: a table-sized sandbox is rigged with a Microsoft Kinect video game motion sensor and an off-the-shelf projector. Using existing software, the sensor detects features in the sand and projects a realistic topographical map that corresponds to the layout, which can change in real time as observers move the sand around in the box.
(Excerpt) Read more at networkworld.com ...
It’s extremely sensitive - a slight bump and it needs recalibrated. If they can resolve that, it would be much more useful in the real world.
I read several articles about this a few years back when the Kinect was in Beta and when it first came out. The technology is being used for a lot of interesting things im many areas including medicine. Not new, just becoming more common.
Why wouldn’t one create a series of passive listening posts outside your perimeter composed of commercially available security system cams with good microphones?
You could run the whole thing wirelessly, silently, with few humans, etc.
Then, all you need to do is hook each up to a claymore, and ....
Batteries (electric, not the artillery kind), especially functional ones, are rather difficult to come by in your typical battlefield environment.
I like the way you think, however, can it be hacked?
How about they create mini cameras on those i-spy bees and fly them around for real time intel.
Interesting.
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