‘When it comes to changing the face of warfare,’ proclaims our ex-Navy officer turned newsletter editor, Byron King, ‘this one tops them all’.
‘Scientists and engineers,’ he says ‘are taking us closer to the day of the last warrior.’
‘I’m talking about an America that no longer sends significant numbers of troops overseas.’
At some point in the future, in other words, your children or grandchildren may be spared the horrors of the battlefield that have been a necessary evil since history can remember.
Let it be known: Byron is no utopian. He knows that for now, armed forces are needed.
Last year alone he says, ‘The US narrowly avoided another Mideast entanglement in Syria.’
‘Meanwhile, we learned that US troops will remain in Afghanistan beyond next year.’
‘Plus,’ he goes on, ‘it looks like that tenuous ‘peace’ between Israel and Iran is shakier than ever as Western powers loosen restrictions on Tehran’s nuclear ambitions. And then there’s that new issue of Asian airspace, with China’s new assertiveness.’
Yikes.
Good thing then that in the future, the US won’t send troops overseas. They’ll send things with names like ‘Warrior’, ‘Big Dog’ and ‘Gladiator’… and ‘PackBot’, a much less fearsome but equally important scout robot — and what must be Pixar’s WALL-E doppelganger.
‘That ‘world peace’ thing is just too good to be true, but this,’ Byron says of this mil-tech in question, ‘could be the next best thing.’ And what’s better, it’s investable.
Here we go…
More than 20 years ago in the cradle of MIT, a trio of young scientists got to work on real-world applications for artificial intelligence (AI). After university, they became entrepreneurs, founded the company iRobot Corp. (NASDAQ: IRBT), and before the end of the decade were offered a contract to assist the US military through DARPA (the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency). The first result was PackBot, a SUGV (Small Unmanned Ground Vehicle), pictured below:
Two wars were raging in the Middle East when PackBot was approved and deployed by the US Army and Marine Corp. And by the end of 2004, IED’s or Improvised Explosive Devices became the norm. That’s where PackBots became soldiers’ little helper, saving untold American lives. These rovers enabled US soldiers and Marines to check out suspected bomb sites remotely, sending the robot to inspect and — if necessary — detonate explosives riddled throughout the terrain. Soldiers — and civilians — meanwhile, could be kept a safe distance from the ‘kill zone’. By 2010, iRobot delivered its 3,000th PackBot; at the height of US involvement in Afghanistan and Iraq, there were 2,000 of these robots in theatre…mainly performing Explosive Ordnance Disposal (EOD) missions.
But that’s the past. The future for iRobot is autonomy. iRobot recently announced that its robots can come equipped with a ‘User Assist Package’ or UAP, imbuing these AI with a limited degree of self-awareness and self-direction. Some PackBots can now provide situational awareness to SWAT teams in urban warfare by locating enemy snipers with high-tech acoustics.
These same machines were critical in 2011 when the Japanese government scrambled to contain the world’s worst nuclear disaster at the Fukushima power plant. It was too hot inside the reactors — any human being would have received a fatal radiation dose after 20 minutes. The Japanese have been world leaders in industrial robotics since the 1970s, but when it really mattered, they turned to iRobot. ‘Packbot was ready like Cup Noodles’ said The Japan Times — an allusion to Japan’s national microwavable soup — ‘PackBots were the obvious choice to explore the No. 1 plant’s shattered, radiation-saturated reactor units.’
PackBot’s successor will be the ’710 Warrior’ — but that’s another story for another time.
iRobot is a great example of a company that’s bringing about ‘the day of the last warrior’. However, most of iRobot’s revenue comes from its sale of common household appliances. Just this morning, I saw a magazine outside my neighbour’s front door. On the front-page it featured the Roomba robotic vacuum cleaner that has been sold to a mind-boggling 10 million customers.
Readers may remember when iRobot’s share price spiked after Google bought Boston Dynamics, a company with similar origins. It was the tail-end of an eight company acquisition binge. ‘Given the innovative horsepower of [Google’s] eight acquisitions,’ we said at the time, ‘it would probably take Google under a month to come up with a better vacuum cleaner that sells for less than iRobot’s Roomba.’
‘It’s worth saying that iRobot makes other robotics, including mobile hospital delivery platforms, but its bread and butter is consumer items like a $300 gutter cleaner that still requires you to climb a ladder and place the thing in the gutter. The companies Google bought are highly innovative. I think iRobot is both unlikely to be bought by Google and able to compete with anything Google decides to focus on since the king of search started buying robotics firms.’
Hmm, you don’t say?
Tomorrow we’ll see what Google’s been up to…
Josh Grasmick,
Contributing Editor, Money Morning
Ed Note: The above article was originally published in Tomorrow in Review.