Robot Dog Not So Cute With Submachine Gun Strapped to Its Back - Someone in Russia appears to be firing a gun from the back of a robot dog.

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A video started circulating on Twitter Thursday of a Boston Dynamics-style robot dog firing a submachine gun into targets amid a snowy backdrop. This type of robot dog (it doesn’t seem like the robot in the video is a Boston Dynamics Spot, just looks alot like it) is famous for dancing, but now appears to have fulfilled every warning given by journalists and analysts. It’s got a gun and it’s ready to kill.

A lot of questions remain. First, the robot dog doesn’t seem to be able to handle the recoil of the gun well. As it fires its rounds, the barrel trails up and the dog has to take a minute to get its balance back. We also don’t know if the dog is firing on its own or if, and this is more likely, someone is off-camera pulling the trigger remotely.

The robot’s feet, various ports, and its front are completely different from Boston Dynamics’ Spot. There’s dozens of knockoffs of the Boston Dynamics dog selling on the international market. The one in the video appears to be a UnitreeYusu “technology dog” selling on AliExpress for about $3,000. The feet, port placement, and joint coverings are all the same.

The robot also has strips of Velcro on either of its flanks. The left flank bears a Russian flag and the other appears with a wolf’s head. In another video on the channel, a man wears a similar patch on his arm. It appears to be a wolf’s head insignia commonly associated with Russian Special Operations Forces or Spetsnaz. That doesn’t mean that Spetsnaz is using armed robot dogs, as pretty much anyone can buy a similar patch online in various places.

The gun is also Russian. It appears to be a PP-19 Vityaz, a submachine gun based on the AK-74 design. As the dog wanders around and fires, it sometimes moves in front of an armored personnel carrier with a unique triangular door. That’s a BDRM-2, a Russian armored car that’s been spotted recently in Ukraine.

Finally, there’s the account the video originally appeared on. Before making its way to Twitter, the video of the dog was posted to the YouTube account of Alexander Atamov on March 22, 2022. Atamov is listed on his LinkedIn profile as the founder of “HOVERSURF” and his Facebook page lists him as living in Moscow. He posted a picture of the robot dog on March 21. According to Facebook’s translation of his post, he called the dog “Skynet.”

Boston Dynamics has said it won’t sell its dogs to people who intend to use them as weapons. But that doesn’t stop people from doing questionable things with them. The NYPD has sent them on patrol in apartment buildings and cops in Hawaii used them to take the temperatures of its homeless population during the pandemic. But no one has, that we know of, strapped a gun to the roof of one.
Other companies certainly are however. Most notably, the defense contractor Ghost Robotics showed off a robot dog with a gun pod built onto its back. The company that made the gun and the robot both said that a person would have to operate the weapons manually.

That’s a small comfort in a world where people are strapping guns to the back of robots that can be purchased online for a few thousand dollars.
 
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This is fucking hilarious! Dare I say even more so than that drone firing a handgun from several years back.

 
I'm sure that when DARPA picked up the funding tab for Boston Dynamics this isn't remotely what they had in mind.

Not at all.

No siree Bob.

If it turns out that Doston Bynamics of Shenzhen managed to get it working first, I shall laugh, shit myself, dig a deep hole and sign up for the CCP.

Also buy a paintball gun.
 
That's rather silly integration, mounting it so the axis of the barrel is so high, it's pushing the thing over on full-auto. Robot dogs can change their stance, crouching their hind legs and tilting the entire chassis, which gives them a great deal of elevation built-in. Damn near 45 degrees of elevation and enough depression to shoot the ground right in front of them, at least. The azimuth can be handled by rotating the whole chassis.

A proper design would use a compensated belt-fed machine gun fully integrated into the body of the robot, with a servo-operated trigger instead of a mechanical one, with several hundred rounds of ammo and just the action and the barrel and no furniture of any kind. The only part of it you should see is the muzzle sticking out of the front of the chassis, like a coaxial gun on a tank turret. That would make it much harder to capture and reuse the gun. It would also place the center of thrust much closer to the center of mass

This thing? I could pop it in the battery with my AR-10 from several hundred yards, watch its lithium-ion pack go off like a firecracker, and then head over and pick up a free machine gun.
 
This is both horrifying but the recoil on the gun makes it hilarious as all hell.
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Now we know his weakness. Take advantage of the recoil pause.

I was expecting something a little more sophisticated but the gunhat is adorable so I'm happy with it anyways.
Terminator would have been a whole lot cuter if Skynet started with these instead of chrome skeletons.

Black Mirror warned us. We didn't listen.

There was an unused scene at the end of Metalhead where it was going to show a guy in another country controlling the robo doggos then stepping away from the controls to play with his kids. I'm not sure if it was actually filmed or just didn't get past the storyboard stage. I like the AI run amok story better. But it's a short episode unfortunately, and there isn't much explanation as to what happened to cause the doggo drones to start stalking humanity. Too bad it wasn't one of the movie length episodes.



He's trying his best.

He's a good boy. 🐶
 
if its a fucking robot with that sort of self-balancing ability why can't it accommodate for muzzle climb?

It's short, maybe they want it to have muzzle climb? It's been a while since I last played Counter Strike but we all used to like the AK in the day because of the muzzle climb in close quarters, aim for center mass and it just walks up to a headshot in a few rounds.
 
Pfft an SMG is weaksauce shit. Call me when someone slaps a .50 on there so we can go full Black Tusk
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This is both horrifying but the recoil on the gun makes it hilarious as all hell.
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This seems like it would be far more effective in single-shot semi auto. (Especially if you could have it more stable, like when it folds flat at the end of the video.)

I'm reminded of the idea I had for a sort of "urban ambush sniper drone", good for picking off a target in a CBD or other area with some verticality to the buildings. Fly a drone until it can land on the roof or railing of a building, and have it position with legs with graspers on the edge of the building so it has a solid position to aim at the street below. Then use a light rifle component (either integral to the body or attached underneath) along with pre-existing human detection software for vision to pick targets, aim, and then fire. Once your target is down, release the grabbers, fold up and take off again. No shooter, no forensics (especially if you use a brass catcher), no way to deal with it.
You could even combine this with multiple drones placed on different buildings to create a zone-of-death scenario with crossfire. Slaughter a given group with no possibility of them escaping behind cover (cars etc) after the first one or two people go down.

Personally this isn't how I'd have cracked this particular nut but still very impressive. If you really want to make NGOs and peace loving faggots shit their pants, integrate something a bit more autonomous:
That project is from 2008 and nobody knew what NFC/RFID was then. Integrate with a semi-reliable IFF and you've got a scary autonomous patrol sentry.
I'm amused that the guy wings his own laptop with a paintball right at the start of the firing arc.
I'm sure that when DARPA picked up the funding tab for Boston Dynamics this isn't remotely what they had in mind.
I remember seeing someone making a case based on funding briefs etc that the military (and FBI) had a target of a sort of "interior kill dog", a kind of robot where you could let a pack loose into a building and have them terminate all the people inside. They wanted something that took the risk out of a breach-and-clear operation.
 
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