Tuesday, 27 April 2021

Augmented Reality for Warships

 Life on warships can be devoted dramatically since the beginning of their first wood several hundred years ago. Although the general appearance of the warships did not change radically in the last century, the technology packaged on vessels had increased their ability substantially. For example, Royal Navy's UK developed a radar system and PAAM weapons used in type 45 Destroyer is a large increase for cannonball.


And even though the dress uniform was charged by Royal Navy personnel designed for practicality on Galleon wood (blue-collar to keep the uniform tar off and bells were to help rub the deck) the role of the ship's corporate war could not be further than this.


Personnel usually must monitor various aspects of the ship at a time, especially when in a war situation. Weapon systems, propulsion, and radar images are just a few things that must be watched simultaneously, sometimes making it difficult to obtain accurate situational awareness.


But Bae Systems, who was involved in most surface ships and Royal Navy submarines, recently announced the development of augmented reality systems to overcome this. The technology collection that has been launched is set to further improve the ability of senior service warships - not by increasing the potential of the battle system but by increasing the effectiveness of ship companies.


The inclusion of augmented reality (AR) to the ship area such as bridges or operating rooms will mean a commander must not always depend on watching consoles, or clarifying with other crew members to gain knowledge about what happened. This can be very important when important, critical safety, decisions must be made quickly in a depressed environment. AR technology that can also be used can also mean that the commander has more freedom to tour the temporary ship 'eyes on' for all relevant information needed to carry out their roles.


This development by the BAE system shows how the effectiveness of the battle can not only be improved with enhanced hardware, such as a stronger radar but can also be improved by allowing personnel to use equipment more effectively. With the workforce that decreases throughout the British armed forces, it is expected that more innovation can be made that allows higher combat effectiveness with the same crew level.

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