Unconventional Strategies for Defeating a Robotic Army in Urban Warfare

In summary, the conversation discusses the weaknesses of a robotic army in urban warfare and potential strategies for defeating them. Some ideas include targeting their mainframe, using scarecrows to reveal their positions, and using genetically modified wasps to attack their sensors. The conversation also mentions the possibility of a distributed system for the robot army, where one member can take over as the leader if another is taken out. It is suggested that in the future, robotic armies may have the ability to maintain and repair themselves. Additionally, the conversation brings up the idea of incorporating medical support and mechanization into the robot army. Overall, the conversation highlights the importance of using imagination and observational skills to create a compelling science fiction story.
  • #106
James Holland said:
this is all true but taking in that this is a rebel force that would be probably hard pressed for safe territory with speed as a necessity and recruit hard to come by. this would make every manouver of high chance to come into contact with enemy units.

I was talking about both forces, human and robot. Also, it's not guaranteed that the rebels will be pressed for territory (if I'm understanding GTOM's setting correctly). It could be the attackers who are hard-pressed to establish "beachheads" and take over territory from the rebels.
 
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  • #107
James Holland said:
i was under the impression this was for a book or film
sorry if i was just being thick

It would be great, for sure :D But at first i have to write, translate it etc...
 
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  • #108
Drakkith said:
I was talking about both forces, human and robot. Also, it's not guaranteed that the rebels will be pressed for territory (if I'm understanding GTOM's setting correctly). It could be the attackers who are hard-pressed to establish "beachheads" and take over territory from the rebels.
well i merely thought that by rebel it meant their government/nation had fallen and they were just a defiant force
 
  • #109
GTOM said:
It would be great, for sure :D But at first i have to write, translate it etc...
this sounds awesome and i suggest you do it.
i would offer help but i would be of no use considering I'm 14 and dyslexic
 
  • #110
If all else fails, maybe you could have Slim Whitman sing to them.
 
  • #111
Loren said:
If all else fails, maybe you could have Slim Whitman sing to them.

This is the Physics Forum. I'm not sure physicists are allowed to know who Slim Whitman is.
 
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  • #112
Khatti said:
This is the Physics Forum. I'm not sure physicists are allowed to know who Slim Whitman is.

It was a shock for me the first time I heard it. :)
 
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  • #113
Khatti said:
This is the Physics Forum. I'm not sure physicists are allowed to know who Slim Whitman is.
well its a good job i don'
 
  • #114
James Holland said:
well its a good job i don'

Rut-ro! Physicist Down!
 
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  • #115
:thumbup:
 
  • #116
GTOM said:
2. Use a number of scarecrows equipped by fake sniper guns to reveal to positions of drone snipers - they don't learn from their mistakes... (although their human commanders can, but still slower)
Wouldn't robots use heat signals/heart beat as well as sight so not to fire repeatedly at dead or inanimate objects that are remotely huminoid
 
  • #117
James Holland said:
Wouldn't robots use heat signals/heart beat as well as sight so not to fire repeatedly at dead or inanimate objects that are remotely huminoid

Not necessarily. It's entirely possible that the AI running them is advanced enough to tell humans from other objects/animals just using cameras.
 
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  • #118
James Holland said:
Wouldn't robots use heat signals/heart beat as well as sight so not to fire repeatedly at dead or inanimate objects that are remotely huminoid
I thought those scarerows are heated. Otherwise i think even common soldiers should have IR googles, passive radars, visors showing tactical maps with teammates and enemy positions.

Whether cameras are enough or not, the company i work for, produces smart cameras read license plates, passports, etc. Programs needs lots of human input for training, and different engines are optimised for different areas of the world. I asked someone, why not do more human way, not just calibrate a function to get the right input from sets of points, but watch patterns, lines, curves. He said, someone tried it, it is too slow. Based on it, i think image processing is a pretty hard task.

Of course it is space age i write about. Although i think there will be still a conflict between how robust are the electronics, how intelligent the robot will be without remote control, and how much it costs?

At this point, i think i will describe the scene, where human command is really needed for highly advanced drones :
"Drone 4 was hit. The missile hasnt exploded, but the drone damaged. I can still use it at least as decoy. It shakes, don't reply to command. Looks like i have to abandon it. What? It is turning, the cannon points toward us! Fire! Ignore IFF, take it out!
How could they take it over? We can drill inside a computer and extract codes from the memory... *** But not in battle. They could have learned the exact construction of our fighters. There are many supercomputers nearby, the missile didnt have to do it alone. Still it is shocking. It could have destroyed all its squadron, others couldn't consider that their own turned against them, only humans can betray. It is high time to end that madness! "

*** Snowden suggested that if FBI really wants to crack Apple encryption, they should open the phone, use some beams to read UID, then with a supercompu, iterate through a number of possibilities.
 
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  • #119
Very good point
 
  • #120
A large number of robots needing to perform independent functions that vary with the circumstances would require huge memory capacity. Like zombies just bash em in the head/receiver. That aside robots have no self interest. Survival instincts ought to count for something.
 
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  • #121
tobyr65 said:
A large number of robots needing to perform independent functions that vary with the circumstances would require huge memory capacity. Like zombies just bash em in the head/receiver. That aside robots have no self interest. Survival instincts ought to count for something.
well what if said head/receiver has armour? considering they are built fore war that shouldn't be a bad idea.
 
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  • #122
tobyr65 said:
A large number of robots needing to perform independent functions that vary with the circumstances would require huge memory capacity. Like zombies just bash em in the head/receiver.

It's a bit more difficult when the zombies are actually fast moving, quick-thinking war machines with autocannons, lasers, and missiles, who can hit harder and faster than a human ever could. o_O
 
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  • #123
Drakkith said:
It's a bit more difficult when the zombies are actually fast moving, quick-thinking war machines with autocannons, lasers, and missiles, who can hit harder and faster than a human ever could. o_O

Human special forces abilities extended by powered battle armors, sensors, they can have targeting computers too. Cyberpunk style offers some soultions to reduce the slow chemical reactions in nerves bottleneck : eyeball targeted weapons, wired reflexes (send electric signals in arms and legs) and i speculate about very advanced EEG caps as an alternative to implants in brain, so the brain waves can directly control vehicles and weapon systems.
 
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  • #124
GTOM said:
Human special forces abilities extended by powered battle armors, sensors, they can have targeting computers too. Cyberpunk style offers some soultions to reduce the slow chemical reactions in nerves bottleneck : eyeball targeted weapons, wired reflexes (send electric signals in arms and legs) and i speculate about very advanced EEG caps as an alternative to implants in brain, so the brain waves can directly control vehicles and weapon systems.

Sounds good to me. I was merely pointing out that comparing robots to zombies in this context is stretching the analogy a bit. Especially if they don't have a head and their main computer components are behind thick armor/shielding.
 
  • #125
tobyr65 said:
A large number of robots needing to perform independent functions that vary with the circumstances would require huge memory capacity. Like zombies just bash em in the head/receiver. That aside robots have no self interest. Survival instincts ought to count for something.
just as a comment i don't understand the concept of making humanoid robots. as humans only survive because of their minds would it not be better to have something without a head maybe mildly reminiscent of a rhino without a head. because this would make them able to take more weight move faster and have more armour around their central electrics/circuitry.
 
  • #126
James Holland said:
just as a comment i don't understand the concept of making humanoid robots. as humans only survive because of their minds would it not be better to have something without a head maybe mildly reminiscent of a rhino without a head. because this would make them able to take more weight move faster and have more armour around their central electrics/circuitry.

I also imagined main battle robots to be human like. Justifications : able to mimic every movement of operator for peace keeping, counter gerilla, police operations.
Legs fit for most type of terrain. Guns in arms, they can lean out of cover.
Head has the main image processing center. A hit by a coilgun (can be mounted by powered battle armor special troop) armor counts nothing.
Hit by plasma grenade (i speculate, that it could burn isotopes FAST with an alpha burst, such energy storage can power exoskeletons and space fighters dedicated for orbital combat too) armor counts nothing. AP rifle bullets, best defence don't get hit.
If engines in the body hit, everything inside the body is fryed, a head might need only minor maintenance before it could be reattached.
 
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  • #127
e
GTOM said:
able to mimic every movement of operator
i thought the point of a robotic army was to have large numbers without the need for human guidance individually.

GTOM said:
a head might need only minor maintenance before it could be reattached.
not if a sniper has ripped a hole straight through it.

GTOM said:
armor counts nothing.
maybe armour wouldn't be much use against grenades as they are made for targeting small groups or lightly armoured positions. But the ability to withstand small arms fire counts for a lot.
 
  • #128
James Holland said:
e
i thought the point of a robotic army was to have large numbers without the need for human guidance individually.not if a sniper has ripped a hole straight through it.maybe armour wouldn't be much use against grenades as they are made for targeting small groups or lightly armoured positions. But the ability to withstand small arms fire counts for a lot.

I think they only need direct operator control for things like capture a guerilla, handcuff and search him. The head is smaller target than the body.
Due to developments of body armor and robots, i don't think any soldier would have lighter than AP bullets.
 
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  • #129
well in that case you might want to adopt the fight light tactic that the British army is developing.
it works b giving every solider about 100 rounds (2-3 mags) and having a support quad bike that very quickly delivers ammo and other supplies to soldiers as and when they need it. as AP rounds are very heavy compared to regular rounds.
GTOM said:
Due to developments of body armour and robots
as weapons improve armour improves as armour improves weapons improve. and so soon those AP bullets would be of little to no effect.
 
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  • #130
James Holland said:
as weapons improve armour improves as armour improves weapons improve. and so soon those AP bullets would be of little to no effect.

It's not as black and white as that. There is a limit to how far you can take any particular type of armor or weapon before you hit a "softcap", the point where further improvement becomes overly expensive, complicated, logistically unmanageable, or something similar. Developing new types of armor or weapons to defeat the other takes time and resources and there's no guarantee that these new developments will be available when needed. If you haven't yet developed a clear-cut counter to the other then its entirely possible you're stuck in a deadlock of sorts, and factors other than pure performance, like cost or ease of use or maintenance, begin to dominate.

The best advice I can give when it comes to thinking about military weapons and armor (or any piece of equipment) is not to imagine them as standalone components, but as a single piece to a larger whole. A new type of rifle and/or ammunition may be able to penetrate more armor and at longer distances, but it may also be heavier, more expensive, more prone to misfires/failures, or any number of other things that would reduce its actual effectiveness. Perhaps its more difficult to use by soldiers, or it may just have a number of different traits which are simply a bad combination. In contrast, a weapon considered to be under-powered may be cheap, easy to use, or very reliable, drastically increasing its actual effectiveness relative to a supposed replacement (or rather it is the replacement that is not nearly as effective as its "performance characteristics" would imply).

A good example is the M4 Sherman tank of World War 2. It was initially (based on my limited reading) more than a match for German light and medium tanks in the North African theater. This changed by D-Day in 1944, where they were vastly outmatched by newer German tanks in terms of "performance". They were under armored, under gunned, and prone to fuel explosions when hit, unlike their German counterparts. They were also very cheap, reliable, and their widespread use meant that transportation on roads, rails, and ships was greatly simplified compared to what would have been required had several new tanks been developed and produced in large numbers during the war.

In addition, remember that weapons and armor do not operate in a vacuum. And I don't mean the physical kind of vacuum that boils the water off your tongue at the same time that it freezes. I mean that weapons and armor don't operate alone, but in concert with elements from many other weapons and equipment all at the same time. Part of the reason the U.S. was able to get away with using the M4 tank later in the war was because it had other weapons to take enemy tanks out with, such as tank destroyers, aircraft, and even some infantry weapons. Not to mention numbers, strategic bombing, and inept leadership at the top levels of German military command. The M4 was "good enough" to get by with given the state of the war at the time.

Everything is interconnected somehow. Remember that.
 
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  • #131
James Holland said:
well in that case you might want to adopt the fight light tactic that the British army is developing.
it works b giving every solider about 100 rounds (2-3 mags) and having a support quad bike that very quickly delivers ammo and other supplies to soldiers as and when they need it. as AP rounds are very heavy compared to regular rounds.

Good point, that they will need regular ammo supplies. As well as Drakkith's everything connected point.

I thought, while terminator like ones definitally scary, and versatile, but the most irritating ones can be small drones, that can literally dodge bullets.
If they hide between houses and trees even regular missiles can't just hit them.

I could think about three ways to counter them : other drones
get close enough so they can't dodge a supervelocity slug
use lasers... however, atmosphere quickly swallows short wavelengths, while longer wavelengths can be pretty well reflected.

I think there can be anti-flyer tanks with really strong lasers. otherwise the only thing that infantry could do against theese drones is rely on hide, camofluege, maybe active jammers, until drones get close enough, or vica versa.
 
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  • #132
GTOM said:
I thought, while terminator like ones definitally scary, and versatile, but the most irritating ones can be small drones, that can literally dodge bullets.

Why would they be able to dodge bullets?
 
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  • #133
the point of the drones that i was talking about was not to get close enough to the fighting to be targeted by anyone bar a little bit of infantry with small arms. they would be mostly in cover and only come out once they were at their destination.
 
  • #134
Drakkith said:
Why would they be able to dodge bullets?

My calculations are, drone at 300m, a really fast bullet could fly with a km/s. 1/3 sec for dodge, with 10g acceleration, it can make around 5m.
 
  • #135
10g acceleration? For 1/3 of a second? That's a final velocity of about 300 m/s. That's almost mach 1. With that kind of maneuverability it doesn't need to worry about shot down by small arms fire.
 
  • #136
Drakkith said:
10g acceleration? For 1/3 of a second? That's a final velocity of about 300 m/s. That's almost mach 1. With that kind of maneuverability it doesn't need to worry about shot down by small arms fire.
Isnt it 30 m/s? Of course i don't think it could maintain that acceleration for so long.
 
  • #137
GTOM said:
Isnt it 30 m/s? Of course i don't think it could maintain that acceleration for so long.

You're right. I must have misstyped something into my calculator last night. 10g's is 98.1 m/s2, and accelerating for 1/3 of a second is 98.1/3 = 32.7 m/s. Quite a difference!
 
<h2>1. How can unconventional strategies be used to defeat a robotic army in urban warfare?</h2><p>Unconventional strategies involve utilizing non-traditional tactics and techniques to gain an advantage over the enemy. In the case of a robotic army in urban warfare, this could include using guerrilla tactics, such as ambushes and hit-and-run attacks, to disrupt the robots' movements and communication. Additionally, unconventional strategies may involve exploiting the robots' weaknesses, such as their reliance on technology, to disable or destroy them.</p><h2>2. What are some potential challenges in implementing unconventional strategies against a robotic army in urban warfare?</h2><p>One of the main challenges in using unconventional strategies against a robotic army is the advanced technology and capabilities of the robots. It may be difficult to find vulnerabilities or weaknesses in their design, and they may be able to adapt quickly to new tactics. Another challenge is the potential for collateral damage and harm to civilians in urban areas.</p><h2>3. How can human soldiers effectively collaborate with robotic soldiers in an unconventional strategy?</h2><p>In an unconventional strategy, human soldiers can work together with robotic soldiers to complement each other's strengths and weaknesses. For example, human soldiers can use their creativity and adaptability to come up with new tactics and strategies, while robotic soldiers can provide support and firepower in dangerous situations. It is important for both sides to communicate and coordinate effectively to maximize their effectiveness.</p><h2>4. What role do intelligence and surveillance play in unconventional strategies against a robotic army in urban warfare?</h2><p>Intelligence and surveillance are crucial in unconventional strategies as they provide valuable information about the enemy's movements, capabilities, and weaknesses. In the case of a robotic army in urban warfare, intelligence gathering and surveillance can help identify vulnerable areas in the robots' design or detect patterns in their movements that can be exploited. This information can then be used to plan and execute effective unconventional strategies.</p><h2>5. Are unconventional strategies ethical in defeating a robotic army in urban warfare?</h2><p>The use of unconventional strategies in warfare raises ethical concerns, as it may involve tactics that could harm civilians or violate international laws. It is important for military leaders and policymakers to carefully consider the potential consequences and ethical implications of using unconventional strategies against a robotic army in urban warfare. Any actions taken should be in accordance with international laws and regulations, and efforts should be made to minimize harm to civilians and non-combatants.</p>

1. How can unconventional strategies be used to defeat a robotic army in urban warfare?

Unconventional strategies involve utilizing non-traditional tactics and techniques to gain an advantage over the enemy. In the case of a robotic army in urban warfare, this could include using guerrilla tactics, such as ambushes and hit-and-run attacks, to disrupt the robots' movements and communication. Additionally, unconventional strategies may involve exploiting the robots' weaknesses, such as their reliance on technology, to disable or destroy them.

2. What are some potential challenges in implementing unconventional strategies against a robotic army in urban warfare?

One of the main challenges in using unconventional strategies against a robotic army is the advanced technology and capabilities of the robots. It may be difficult to find vulnerabilities or weaknesses in their design, and they may be able to adapt quickly to new tactics. Another challenge is the potential for collateral damage and harm to civilians in urban areas.

3. How can human soldiers effectively collaborate with robotic soldiers in an unconventional strategy?

In an unconventional strategy, human soldiers can work together with robotic soldiers to complement each other's strengths and weaknesses. For example, human soldiers can use their creativity and adaptability to come up with new tactics and strategies, while robotic soldiers can provide support and firepower in dangerous situations. It is important for both sides to communicate and coordinate effectively to maximize their effectiveness.

4. What role do intelligence and surveillance play in unconventional strategies against a robotic army in urban warfare?

Intelligence and surveillance are crucial in unconventional strategies as they provide valuable information about the enemy's movements, capabilities, and weaknesses. In the case of a robotic army in urban warfare, intelligence gathering and surveillance can help identify vulnerable areas in the robots' design or detect patterns in their movements that can be exploited. This information can then be used to plan and execute effective unconventional strategies.

5. Are unconventional strategies ethical in defeating a robotic army in urban warfare?

The use of unconventional strategies in warfare raises ethical concerns, as it may involve tactics that could harm civilians or violate international laws. It is important for military leaders and policymakers to carefully consider the potential consequences and ethical implications of using unconventional strategies against a robotic army in urban warfare. Any actions taken should be in accordance with international laws and regulations, and efforts should be made to minimize harm to civilians and non-combatants.

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