http://www.escapistmagazine.com/news/view/103585-U-S-Air-Force-Wants-Soldiers-to-Be-Like-Batman
A program started by the U.S. Air Force  focuses on making soldiers as versatile as the caped crusader.
Batman is awesome, but only because he's so smart.  He figures out  exactly what he'll need in the field and stuffs in all into his Batsuit  and utility belt.  This is exactly what inspired the U.S. Air Force's  "BATMAN" program, which aims to develop new equipment so that soldiers  are as capable as Batman himself.
BATMAN stands for Battlefield Air Targeting Man-Aided kNowledge.   Sure, it cheats, but who's really going to criticize the Air Force when  it's running a program called BATMAN?  BATMAN program engineer Reggie  Daniels says: "[Batman's] devices allow him to have an advantage. That  is what we're trying to do."
The goal of BATMAN is to make soldiers "lighter, smarter, and  deadlier."  Where a soldier on today's battle field might have to lug  160 pounds of equipment around, Batman is seemingly able to carry even  more gadgetry without the weight.  The Air Force says this weight is a  burden, and hopes to make soldiers more able to complete their missions  with less burden through BATMAN.
The program uses the "human chassis" as its Batsuit, with engineers  focusing on how to make it more agile by moving equipment to less  straining areas of the body.  BATMAN is pioneering the use of chest  mounted computers and speech recognition, in addition to batteries that  get lighter as they're used.
The most Bat-like object is the "Bat Hook," the nickname used for the  Remote Auxiliary Power System developed by Defense Research Associates  that was also inspired by Batman.  DRA's lead test engineer recalls  thinking:  "You know what would be really cool?  Something like what  Batman has on his belt that he can take out and wing it up to a power  line and get power."  The Remote Auxiliary Power System has a hook that  can be thrown onto power lines, with a razor inside that will cut tap  into them.  Power can then be siphoned from the hook through a wire that  will recharge a soldier's devices, if necessary.
Future developments are still underway in the BATMAN program, such as  a light-based communications system that can be used instead of wiring.   Batman's array of gadgetry always seemed like it was impossible for  anyone but billionaire Bruce Wayne to create, but the Air Force is  pretty rich too.
Source: Tech News Daily
 
Showing my daily support I really NEED yours aswell!
ReplyDeleteI'm joining the AirForce and that BATMAN program!
ReplyDeleteSO instead of all these trucks are they gonna make bat cars aswell? lols
ReplyDeletehttp://lpphotographer.blogspot.com
That would be cool I'd buy a batsuit
ReplyDeleteFight smart; not hard. The Chairforce motto XD
ReplyDeleteShowin' mah daily support
lol awesome batman soldiers ftw
ReplyDelete