Future of the Marine Corps - Page 2
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  1. #16

  2. #17

  3. #18
    Registered User Free Member leroy8541's Avatar
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    bones you must be bored out of your mind


  4. #19

    Actually!

    The kids keep asking questions. I thought I'd provide some answers! LOL.

    I spend as much or more time around here as anyone else!LOL.
    I see it all, Brother!

    As for the Art of War, I was pasting it. Danged if I can type that good! LOL.

    (The thing is, I got busted up in the Corps and it finally caught up with me! That's one reason I have a little more time to be here than the rest of these good folks.)


  5. #20

  6. #21

  7. #22

    BBC news


  8. #23

    the future of war?

    http://www.google.com/search?sourcei...otech+soldiers



    http://www.technologyreview.com/articles/talbot1002.asp


    Ya gotta subscribe to get the whole story on that one, but go back to the homepage when ya get done readin'. Interesting.


  9. #24

    Here's one from MIT


  10. #25

    What if?

    http://www.jrmooneyham.com/wtoy2060.html

    The top of the page is a what if scenario. Scroll down the page.

    Tech News

    Guess who else is backing the research?

    http://www.techtv.com/news/computing...312201,00.html


    Let's see....who else might be involved?

    http://web.mit.edu/newsoffice/tt/200...-nanotech.html


  11. #26

    What other nation might be working on this?

    http://www.nanotechbulletin.com/news.htm


    one of the answers is towards the bottom of the page......


  12. #27

    more....

    http://www.cnn.com/2001/TECH/industr...idg/index.html

    more if you scroll to the bottom of the page.


    in the story that got me started on this, it was said that nanotech is worth 100 million dollars today. In fifteen years, projetions say that it will be worth 1 trillion dollars per year.

    I used nanotech soldier on Google to look this stuff up. There is much more information available.


  13. #28

    Marine Corps anti-terrorism in the magazines now


  14. #29

  15. #30

    Dual Track Systems

    http://www.cloudberry.com/success/usmc.htm








    40 Cloudberry DualTrak+ Systems Deployed in Marine Corps Warfighting Lab Millennium Dragon Experiment
    Air-Trak.com participated in the Marine Corps Warfighting Lab (MCWL) experiment Millennium Dragon by invitation of Brigadier General Tim Donovan (Commanding General, MCWL). 40 Cloudberry DualTrak+ beta prototype systems based on the EMS Technologies PDT-100 packet data satellite terminal were installed on vehicles operated by USMC personnel. Experimental equipment were installed on site at the Air National Guard Combat Readiness Training Center, Gulfport, MS. MCWL used the vehicles prior to the experiment in a series of tests to ensure the communication links and ties to the appropriate agencies were serviceable and working properly. Operations were performed between Gulfport and Camp Shelby over a 2-week period. Cloudberry DualTrak+ systems operated successfully even during some extreme weather conditions as a seasonal hurricane approached the Mississippi coast.

    Military maps and tactical symbology for USMC units were integrated into Cloudberry for tracking displays. Air-Trak.com support personnel installed, tested, and did dry runs on all equipment and systems. Air-Trak.com trained Marine Corps operators and provided back-up support off site to trouble shoot any problems

    Millennium Challenge was a Joint Experiment conducted by USJFCOM (US Joint Forces Command). The US Marine Corps piece was called Millennium Dragon. Millennium Dragon was a limited objective experiment conducted within the larger joint experiment. Millennium Dragon focused on command and control issues, MOUT (CO) (Military Operations on Urban Terrain – Command Operations), ECOC (Electronic Command Operations Center and over the horizon communications challenges associated with Ship-to-Objective Maneuver (STOM). The experiment took place in Southern Mississippi from 20 Aug – 13 Sep 2000 and included a joint interoperability test with the U.S. Army's 1st Brigade, 10th Mountain Division.






    The Air-Trak Mini-Browser
    The Air-Trak Mini-Browser displays “web pages” which can contain data entry fields, hyperlinks, combo-boxes, and buttons.

    The Mobile Main Page contains the following options:

    Threat List: Read-Only messages that will inform Marine(s) in the field of impending threats that have been identified and posted by the Command Post(s). (see Threat List section).
    Emergency: This section provides pre-defined responses to Emergency situations. (see Emergency section).
    Send Message: This section provides a free-form 2-way messaging application used to communicate between the Marine(s) in the field and the Command Post.

    Threat List Page

    The Threat List displays a number of threats as shown in Figure. The thumbwheel is used to scroll through the list. Each threat has the following identifying characteristics:

    Threat identification
    Location: latitude and longitude and Military Grid Reference System (MGRS).
    Direction/heading
    Speed



    Send mail to webmaster@cloudberry.com with questions or comments about this web site.
    Copyright © 2002 cb Wireless, Incorporated
    Last modified: February 4, 2002


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