The aircraft flew up to speeds of 1,200mph. DARPA did not reveal which aircraft won the dogfight.

  • @Gigan@lemmy.world
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    47 months ago

    Jets are far more powerful than humans are capable of controlling. Flight suits and training can only do so much to keep the pilot from blacking out.

    Can they be piloted remotely? Or would that be too dangerous with latency

        • @psud@lemmy.world
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          7 months ago

          That’s not the case yet for fighters, just things like predator drones and global hawk

          So really just surveillance and delivery of a couple of light air to surface missiles, most reported on for assassinations

      • @grue@lemmy.world
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        7 months ago

        What’s the difference? A remotely or AI-piloted fighter jet is just a big drone.

        • AatubeOP
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          27 months ago

          Drones are designed without cockpits. Retrofitting remote-control into an F-16 does not seem like the best choice to me.

          • azuth
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            27 months ago

            Retrofitting F-16s to become drones (whether rc or ai-controlled) as well as designing a variant ditching human support for weight and monetary gains is the rational choice as long as non stealth aircraft are viable. In that case you’d stick to F-35s.

            It makes no sense to waste billions worth of perfectly capable and proven airframes, engines and avionics. Any future drone that will have at least the same level of capabilities as an f-16 will cost practically cost the same. At the cost of high performance aircraft life support does not add that much cost to a plane, pilot costs (and availability) are a much bigger issue.

    • @intensely_human@lemm.ee
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      27 months ago

      Latency, signal interference, and limited human intelligence are all limiting factors in that strategy.

      If the enemy interferes with any of those, the enemy wins.

      This was is already being fought with autonomous drones. By the end of it, the robots will be unrecognizable to us now.