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Taser Fired From Grenade Launcher Electrifies Safety Debate

Despite its wares being billed as "non-lethal," we'd rather not find ourselves on the business end of a product from Taser International, which designs weapons that use a strong dose of electricity to incapacitate people. After learning about the company's latest venture, we don't think we'll change our minds any time soon, either.

According to New Scientist, Taser is set to deliver prototypes of a new weapon -- the Human Electro-Muscular Incapacitation (HEMI) -- to the Pentagon early next year. The weapon can hit a target that's more than 60 meters away when fired from a standard 40-millimeter grenade launcher. Once the cartridge makes contact with the target, it delivers a powerful electric shock for as long as three minutes or until someone removes it -- which could be quite a while depending on the distance between shooter and target.

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Computers

Robotic 'Dragon Egg' Gives Soldiers a Roving Eye


Although the tools of war have evolved at an astonishing rate over the course of the modern age, the classic man with a gun hasn't changed much since the 1700s. Now that we've finished building bigger and bigger guns, however, we've turned our research muscle back towards doing our best to improve that basic unit of battle: the infantry man.

The Land Warrior system is currently getting its first large-scale test in Afghanistan, with hundreds of the wearable computers deployed to team leaders and vehicle commanders. The system, which includes a viewfinder for identifying friendlies and hostile targets, a thumb keypad, and other gadgets, is one of the more expensive and cumbersome tools at the disposal of the modern soldier.

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Taser Releases New Shocking Shotgun


Taser, maker of the controversial "less-lethal" weapon that zaps people with incapacitating levels of electricity (described as torture by the U.N.), has just released its latest tool for taking out the odd student protester and great-grandmother.

The X12 Taser shotgun combines the occasionally lethal fun of electrocuting people with the also occasionally lethal impact of "non-lethal" shotgun rounds. The X12 fires a self-contained, wireless shock cartridge up to 100 feet. It strikes a target with enough force to knock them down, then, as an added bonus, pumps them full of a few thousand volts.

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Cell Phones

NYPD Finding Weapons Hidden Inside Cell Phones


Although we seem to daily hear reports of stupid criminals being foiled by technology, some deviants have devised some clever uses for their tech, including turning cell phones into weapons and hiding places. According to Newsday, an incredibly common way to smuggle a weapon in a cell phone (specifically a T-Mobile Sidekick) is to hide a razor blade within the battery compartment between the battery and the back cover.

Newsday also reported that police officers in Harlem recently arrested a man who had turned his cell phone into a mild stun gun. This rise in cell phone-related criminal innovation is especially troublesome, because prisoners have created several methods of smuggling cell phones into jails in order to plan escapes, negotiate drug deals, and perform other illegal activities. While you can certainly expect upgraded prison security measures, don't be surprised either if you're asked to remove your battery the next time you go through airport security. [From: Newsday, via Textually]

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Editor's Picks

5 Weapons That Changed the World


History is filled with some great weapons, but generals like to say that wars are won with soldiers, not swords. What do they know? We like to keep abreast of our collective militant pasts, and can certainly think of a couple of devices of war that changed the course of world history. In honor of summer revolutionary holidays (and because we were too busy blowing ourselves up on July 4th), we're honoring France's Bastille Day on July 14 with five revolutionary weapon technologies that changed the game -- and changed the world. Vive la révolution!

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NYPD Working on 'Talking' Guns to Prevent Friendly Fire

After Detective Omar Edwards was shot and killed by friendly fire while in plain clothes on May 28th, New York Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly began seeking a way for firearms to communicate with one another in order to stop accidents like this from happening again.

According to FOX News, the NYPD has initiated preliminary discussions about such devices with the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNL), a government research lab. Ideas include using radio frequency tags that would allow cops to precisely locate other cops in the city, and gun-to-gun infrared sensors that would warn nearby officers whenever another removed his pistol from the holster.

At this point, the ideas are only that (the radio frequency tags strike the PNL as impractical), but the PNL is set to speak to the NYPD next week. Let's hope that these discussions are fruitful, and serve to protect those who serve and protect us. [From: FOX News]

Computers

A Code of Ethics for Robot Soldiers?

A Code of Ethics for Robot Soldiers?
Currently all battlefield robots have humans at the controls -- be they 100 yards away, or across the globe. But military machines are becoming more advanced and soon could be making decisions on when to fire and where to bomb, without human input.

In anticipation of that day, Professor Ronald Arkin, a professor of computer science at Georgia Tech, is developing software to govern the behavior of military robots as they become more advanced and autonomous. But we say, skip the exercise and leave battlefield decisions to the soft, fleshy kind of soldiers.

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Computers

Lasers Are the Only Way to Deal With Pirates, Says Homeland Security

Lasers - The Solution to All of Life's Problems
Despite what Homer would have you believe, beer is not the cause of, and solution to all of life's problems. According to homeland security analyst, James Jay Carafano, the solution to all life's problems is actually lasers.

Carafano, a PhD and Senior Research Fellow at the conservative Heritage Foundation, has been suggesting for years that the solution to just about every security issue we face is directed energy weapons (DEW) such as lasers and microwave guns.

In 2004, he suggested outfitting power plants and transportation hubs with lasers to defend against missiles. Then in 2005, he declared them the future of anti-terrorism technology. In 2006, he suggested that laser-based weapons could be used to destroy Hezbollah rockets. And as if his obsession wasn't obvious enough yet, in 2007 he argued for deploying such weapons on nuclear powered Navy ships and that the Russian-Georgian conflict highlighted the need for DEW systems.

Now, Carafano is suggesting that these weapons would be perfect for defending against pirate attacks in the lawless seas. He argues that even low-powered lasers would be effective at disabling the engines of small boats and detonating shoulder-fired missiles before they could be launched. In fact, it seems the only thing Carafano isn't suggesting we do with lasers is strap them to the heads of sharks. [From: Wired]

Computers

SecuriScan Shoe Scanner Could Make Airport Lines Shorter

Huge shocker here: removing your shoes at airport security causes massive headaches and makes the wait longer for everyone. Now that we're all good with Captain Obvious' latest headline, let us point you to one prototype that's looking to solve said dilemma. SecuriScan, which has been developed by Professor Wuqiang Yang at the University of Manchester, would theoretically be able to "detect and pinpoint suspicious objects instantly," all without requiring passengers to remove their kicks.

Better still, the system uses electric and magnetic sensing instead of a radiation source, which could also address safety concerns while helping you get where you're going more quickly.

Moving forward, Yang hopes to develop a more advanced and realistic prototype for testing, and just in case you were doubting this guy's determination, he's also investigating a handheld version that could hastily screen abandoned luggage or packages.

[Via Physorg, image courtesy of ChangeAirportSecurity]

Computers

Military to Get Laser Weapons By Year's End


Note: We guarantee there will be no jokes about "freakin' lasers" in this article.

Now that we've got that out of the way, word is that the U.S. military will finally get weapons grade lasers by the end of 2008. No joke, the holy grail of a laser-based weaponry is right around the corner, according to Northrop Grumman, a military contractor. Grumman recently tested an electronic laser system that combines small silicon-based lasers into one more powerful beam, much like the Death Star. 100 kilowatts (kW) is generally considered the threshold for a useful weapons grade laser, and the most recent test only hit 30 kW. Since the weapon is built simply by chaining smaller lasers together,it will be able to quickly scale up its power by the end of the year, according to Grumman.

These new electric lasers have replaced traditional chemical lasers, which are bulky and require noxious gases to generate their high-powered beams. The size and danger of these systems has rendered them impractical for most military situations.

Grumman isn't alone, though. The military also expects to see a laser truck from Boeing and a laser mortar from Raytheon soon. Plus, it just test-fired its aerial Advanced Tactical Laser for the first time. It's only a matter of time before we'll all have ray guns and plasma rifles. [From: Wired]

Computers

Israel Developing Robotic Missile Defense System

Israel Working on Robotic Missile Defense SystemThe Israeli government is moving us one step closer to the nightmare future envisioned in 'Terminator' in which completely autonomous weaponry turn against us and put humans on the endangered species list. Rafael Advanced Defense Systems, Israel's arms development firm, in conjunction with U.S. defense contractor Raytheon, are developing new interceptor missiles and a targeting system that is aimed at blasting mid- to long-range rockets out of the sky.

The system, code named "Magic Wand", is still about four years out, but the goal is to develop a system that requires minimal human input. Eventually the government hopes that "the envisioned super system [will] be able to generate a level of supreme situational awareness and snap intuitive capabilities that could surpass the very best wartime commanders." In other words, this system will think and operate on its own.

We just hope the Israelis have better luck with their automated system than the South Africans did.

From Wired

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Computers

Department of Homeland Security Considers Mind-Control Tech

Department of Homeland Security
The DHS (Department of Homeland Security) is considering offering a contract to PRI (the Psychotechnology Research Institute), where a group of researchers claim to have developed software that can pick out terrorists and even train individuals to pick out terrorists -- subconsciously.

The technology, called Semantic Stimuli Response Measurements Technology (SSRM Tek), is said to gauge a subject's involuntary response to subliminal messages. Images are shown to test subjects who press buttons in response. SSRM Tek supposedly measures those responses and understands what the subject is thinking subconsciously.

One obvious application of the technology may involve security checks at airports. Based on subjects' responses to the images and messages, "clean" respondents would be allowed through while "suspect" individuals would be taken through further testing.

Geoff Schoenbaum, a neuroscientist at the University of Maryland, dismisses PRI's technology, saying that modern neuroscience is just now trying to figure out how rats learn that a light can predict food. In reference to the idea of subconsciously sensing a person's intentions, he said, "If we could do [what they're talking about], you would know about it, it wouldn't be a handful of Russian folks in a basement."

From Boing Boing and Wired

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Green Tech

Russia Tests "Father of All Bombs" on September 11


The Cold War supposedly ended with the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, but it appears someone forgot to tell the Russians. On September 11th, Russia tested and detonated the new Tu-160, also known as the 'Father of All Bombs' (FOAB). This bomb is, by our calculations, a direct challenge to the United States-built 'Mother of All Bombs' (MOAB).

When detonated in 2003, the MOAB was the most powerful non-nuclear explosive ever detonated. It contains just over eight tons of explosives with the force of about 11 tons of TNT. The MOAB packs enough power to flatten an area of roughly 9 city blocks.

Russia couldn't be left behind in the race for massively destructive bombs and developed the FOAB. The new national genital compensator destroys an area twice as large as the MOAB, burns twice as hot, and explodes with four times the force -- 44 tons of TNT. All of this force comes out of just over seven tons of an undisclosed high explosive which weighs 2,000 pounds less than the MOAB's innards.

The Russian military is even trying to put a green spin on the device. Alexander Rukshin, deputy chief of the General Staff of the Russian Armed Forces, says, "It is environmentally friendly, compared to a nuclear bomb."

Now that the US has been one-upped on the weapons of mass destruction front, you can bet that the Pentagon is preparing to build a weapon that will essentially turn the Earth into a second Sun, bathing us all in its white-hot flames.

From Slashdot

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Homeland Security's New Flashlight Blinds and Disorients

Homeland Security Invests in Weaponized Flashlight
If you've ever stared directly into a flashlight, you've definitely experienced temporary blindness and disorientation, right? Well, multiply that feeling by about a million, and you've got a super flashlight that the Department of Homeland Security is funding.

Developed by a small California-based company called Intelligent Optical Systems, the LED based device is not intended to help you find firewood while camping. Rather, it's meant to incapacitate perps. The flashlight uses a range finder to determine the distance to the victims eyes, then blasts them with a super-bright, continually-changing burst of colored light that blinds and disorients.

The light could be used to subdue armed criminals, or stop those caught illegally crossing the border. Or terrorist suspects, which could turn out to be you if you find yourself randomly singled out in an airport security line (so don't get too surly with the TSA peeps).

Perfect for protests, the technology can also be scaled up to bazooka size to quell a crowd!

Well, at least it probably doesn't hurt as much as a taser.

From Slashdot and Wired

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