With all the knowledge Türkiye gathered over the years in drone technology, do you guys think that we will see a turkish Global Hawk one day?
Very likely.
With all the knowledge Türkiye gathered over the years in drone technology, do you guys think that we will see a turkish Global Hawk one day?
I'd love to see that one day.Very likely.
Masallah!
Turkiye has everything to build "Global hawk" since is building 5 gen fighter and mutiple other drones , EXCEPT ENGINE .With all the knowledge Türkiye gathered over the years in drone technology, do you guys think that we will see a turkish Global Hawk one day?
At least TF6000 is starting to materialize. It is not too far from global hawks engine.Turkiye has everything to build "Global hawk" since is building 5 gen fighter and mutiple other drones , EXCEPT ENGINE .
The role of AI in maneuvering, intelligence gathering, mission planning etc. will certainly increase but I personally don't believe we or any country in the world will have weapons with autonomous engagement with no human in the loop. Not in the next 10 years, maybe even 20. The thing is software is buggy. No matter how capable your software team is, once the program is run in the real world with billions of unforeseen parameters, you can't simply verify and validate the software to not to do something stupid and cause catastrophic damages. You will have to have a person with a red button to give the last command. Anything before that can be automated but not the kill command. At least not in the next decade, imho. The real world is messy and cannot be truly simulated in computer.The simulation of the AI prepared for KE, which will enable autonomous engagement, against a real fighter jet pilot in a simulation environment could create a sensational news story in the international aviation press.
That's a simulated environment, not the real world. And even if it was real world, a few instances of success over fighter jet pilot wouldn't mean anything.Didn't DARPA try something similar to that a few years back? Pilot vs AI in sim, two F-16s in a knifefight. AI won.
It may be a long way to go to demonstrate this in a real combat environment exercise, but I don't think it is that have same threshold to demonstrate it in a software-based simulation. The field of deep learning and artificial intelligence has been developing at an extraordinary pace in recent years. The TAF has thousands of hours of radar and engagement data from a wide variety of environments and scenarios. Especially over the Aegean Sea, and from air force exercises in Konya. I think even these records alone are an extraordinarily valuable resource. With deep learning, the running software can interpret this data and may predict possibilities which action the adversary will take in which situation and which envelope it will stay in or which maneuver pilot can perform, depending on manned jet's pilot training and human physiology/psychology. As far as I know, Darpa's work on Air Combat Evolution (ACE) also had a great deal of technical support from the air force.The role of AI in maneuvering, intelligence gathering, mission planning etc. will certainly increase but I personally don't believe we or any country in the world will have weapons with autonomous engagement with no human in the loop. Not in the next 10 years, maybe even 20. The thing is software is buggy. No matter how capable your software team is, once the program is run in the real world with billions of unforeseen parameters, you can't simply verify and validate the software to not to do something stupid and cause catastrophic damages. You will have to have a person with a red button to give the last command. Anything before that can be automated but not the kill command. At least not in the next decade, imho. The real world is messy and cannot be truly simulated in computer.
I'm not questioning BAYKAR's abilities. I doubt if Tusaş has more capabilities than Baykar in that regard. What i'm trying to convey is the sheer magnitude of the problem and buying into the hype often the companies or the media pump for various reasons. I'm not singling out Baykar. In my reasoning, american companies are equally incapable of delivering such software in the next decade. We'll see if this opinion will age well in time.I doubt baykar can write a good AI for that, they need TUSAŞ's help they can pull that of with ease.