by P.W. Singer, Senior Fellow, The Brookings Institution
More than just conventional wisdom, it has become almost a cliché to say that the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq have proved “how technology doesn’t have a big place in any doctrine of future war,” as one security analyst told me in 2007. But if anything, new technology has and will continue to redefine modern warfare.
by Peter Newcomb and Keenan Mayo, Contributing Writers, Vanity Fair
Fifty years ago, in response to the surprise Soviet launch of Sputnik, the U.S. military set up the Advanced Research Projects Agency. It would become the cradle of connectivity, spawning the era of Google and YouTube, of Amazon and Facebook, of the Drudge Report and the Obama campaign.
by David Hambling, Contributing Writer, New Scientist
The late Arthur C. Clarke is famous for having popularized the geostationary communications satellite in 1945. Now the Pentagon’s Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) is working to turn one of his more dangerous ideas into reality. Clarke’s 1955 novel “Earthlight” climaxes in a battle between a lunar fortress and three attacking spacecraft. At the height of the battle the defending commander unleashes “The Stiletto,” which resembles “a solid bar of light” and pierces one spacecraft “as an entomologist pierces a butterfly with a pin.”
The best program managers are “freewheeling zealots” with big ideas. The staff has been called “100 geniuses connected by a travel agent.” And the boss describes his agency as a home for “radical innovation.” It’s DARPA — the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, which is celebrating its 50th anniversary with a dinner for 1,700 alumni, friends and partners Thursday night in Washington.
by David Talbot, Chief Correspondent, Technology Review
… The days of patrol leaders operating half-blind on the deadly streets of Iraq are drawing to a close. After a two-year rush program by the Pentagon’s research arm, the U.S. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, or DARPA, troops are now getting what might be described as Google Maps for the Iraq counterinsurgency. There is nothing cutting-edge about the underlying technology: software that runs on PCs and taps multiple distributed databases. But the trove of information the system delivers is of central importance in the daily lives of soldiers. The new technology–called the Tactical Ground Reporting System, or TIGR–is a map-centric application that junior officers (the young sergeants and lieutenants who command patrols) can study before going on patrol and add to upon returning.
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