Mini-helicopters, flying saucers and robot buggies fight it out for war games prize
From The Guardian,
Friday May 2 2008
"We call it boys' toys for warfare," bellows Chris Burgess, as the hip-hop act Stromkern roars "Come Armageddon come" from the plasma screen behind him.
On the video a radio-controlled buggy is zipping along a dusty street, its onboard camera swivelling left and right, on the lookout for snipers and roadside bombs that might lie ahead.
Burgess belongs to Mindsheet, one of 11 teams unveiled as finalists in the Ministry of Defence's most ambitious - and unusual - attempt to bring hi-tech science to the frontline. Called the Grand Challenge, the £4m project calls on engineers to design a robot that can scour an urban area for enemy combatants and explosives and report back, preferably without human intervention …"
Read full article at www.guardian.co.uk
War of the future: Robot versus robot
From the Toronto Star,
May 02, 2008
LONDON–A fleet of tiny tanks, each no bigger than a breadbox, cruising in remote-control formation down the dusty alleys of Afghanistan to neutralize roadside bombs...
…The Grand Challenge (detailed at www.challenge.mod.uk) was launched in 2006 in an attempt to solve modern military riddles ...
... Several of the systems entailed futuristic flying bots built from scratch. Others, such as the fleet-formation ground system by the British firm Mindsheet, are adapting conceptual robot armies based on over-the-counter cars available at hobby shops everywhere.
"We chose not to reinvent the wheel but to work instead with the wheels readily available. That way we are able to more easily concentrate on providing a tool that a soldier in Afghanistan would be able to begin using immediately," said Mindsheet managing director Raglan Tribe ...
…"It is a weird extrapolation, the idea that war is becoming a scenario of `Your robots versus our robots,' Why not just fight it out on a video game instead?" said Mindsheet's Tribe. "But this is where things are moving."
Read full article at www.thestar.com
ITI Techmedia Invests £4.3M In R&D Programme To Reduce Errors In The Software Design Process
ITI Scoltland, Feb 05, 2008
Market for tools to deliver greater efficiency to the software industry
set to reach $3.8 billion by 2016
ITI Techmedia today announced plans to create software design and development technologies which will play a role in reducing the incidence of critical errors in commonly applied software design processes.
ITI Techmedia has engaged the services of a number of R&D providers. Mindsheet, BitWise and Roke Manor Research (Roke) have been contracted to undertake the initial work required in research and system design. It is expected that additional organisations will be added to complement the skills of this core team during the lifetime of the programme.
Read full article at www.itiscotland.com
The Mindsheet R&D Business Exchange
There are now over 500 articles and resources on the R&D Business Exchange that help support strategic business development. Free registration allows all members to contribute articles too.
Front page article summaries are available here for fast download onto portable devices.
Download Innovation Management Guide
Innovation like clockwork is an easy to read, 22 page guide that covers all facets of innovation in technology type companies. The paper discusses the importance of innovation and the main factors that contribute to innovation performance. Also, included is a useful questionnaire for assessing idea strength and some key pointers to the future of innovation.
This free but valuable 22 page, easy to read, guide details the major factors that drive innovation and it specifically addresses:
- The strategic importance of innovation
- 10 major causes of innovation failure
- Proven methods for managing innovation
- Mechanisms for managing collaborative innovation
- The importance of invention uniqueness and IP protection
- The drive towards open innovation
- A questionnaire to score idea uniqueness upfront
|
Implementing business strategy with virtual R&D teams
This pdf paper is aimed at R&D decision makers who maybe considering or actively planning the outsourcing of more of their development activities. The paper discusses some of the issues surrounding the outsourcing of R&D and presents some strategies and practical tips for successful implementation. Download here.