A former Army Ranger who fought in Afghanistan, Iraq, and Ukraine said the fighting in the Eastern European country was much worse than that in those other countries. David Bramlette told The Daily Beast that he had air support, intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance when he was in Iraq and Afghanistan.
“The worst day in Afghanistan and Iraq is a great day in Ukraine,” he said.
Because there were no wars with extensive trench warfare after WW2. It was always insurgents vs regular military, or insurgents vs other insurgents. Now there is regular military on both sides, and they had 1.5 years to dig fortifications and cover every flat piece of land with mines and tripwires.
I’d put the Korean war into the regular military vs regular military category.
True. If any side tries to cross established battle lines, they’ll get similarly huge losses.
On the other hand it’s Koreans, they’ll send an army of robot dogs named Zerg.
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Eh, what’s so racist about admitting that Korea is technologically superior to Ukraine? SK has some stupidly advanced technology like automated turrets with cameras on their border with NK.
Robot dogs are only a half joke, there are talks about using walking robots for military purposes for something like five years already.
I wonder if we could use data from satellites and develop an AI program to extrapolate where possible mines might be placed based on previously found mine locations using video and geo-spatial data along with real-time verification to improve modeling.
Or would that be too practical and not make enough money?
It’s easy, there are mines everywhere. No need for an AI.
Aaah, the occasional AI bro.
The problem isn’t knowing roughly where mines could be, people are good at that and you don’t need an AI for this. The problem is knowing precisely where mines are, which is something AIs won’t help with.
Imagine being the grad student who has to go out and collect real training data because your advisor thought it might be interesting
This.
Even if some AI or algorithm could tell you that a certain area was less likely to be heavily mined, then what would prevent the opposing force from using similar tools to also identify the weak points?
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