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Navy Carries Out Test Flight of Jets Adapted for Autonomy

WHO to Ship 250,000 Coronavirus Test Kits as Human-to-Human Cases Rise

The World Health Organization (WHO) is sending 250,000 coronavirus test kits to labs around the world as the number of cases from human-to-human transmission rises. The test kits will be shipped on Tuesday from Germany to 70 labs globally to support an influx of test samples, Dr. Maria聽Van Kerkhove, the head of the Outbreak Investigation Task Force at Institut Pasteur鈥檚 Center for Global Health in Paris, told United Nations’ member states during a briefing on the virus on Tuesday. Specialized laboratories in Africa, the United States, Europe, and Asia will get the kits to facilitate faster testing for the virus. Tens of thousands of cases have been officially reported in China, though some health experts believe the true number of cases is higher. A number of deaths have been reported…

Navy Carries Out Test Flight of Jets Adapted for Autonomy

The military’s vision of the unmanned wingman—dogged, unflappable, and ready to make the ultimate sacrifice—has moved a step closer with the successful test flight of two autonomously piloted Navy jets.

Boeing confirmed on Jan. 5 that the U.S. Navy simultaneously flew two autonomously piloted carrier jets, using a third human-piloted jet as a mission controller.

The EA-18G Growler jets used in the test are electronic warfare aircraft—modified versions of the F-18. Over the course of four flights, 21 demonstration missions were completed, according to Boeing.

The test marks another step toward a warfare strategy that involves greater numbers of autonomous platforms in the air, land, and sea.

Autonomous jets, tanks, helicopters, and submarines not only take away the risk to human life but are also potentially cheaper and simpler to make. With no flesh and blood to protect, they need less armor, less air, less space, and have fewer design constraints.

With fly-by-wire, some current manned platforms can be adapted for autonomy—such as the Growler.

“This technology allows the Navy to extend the reach of sensors while keeping manned aircraft out of harm’s way,” said Tom Brandt, Boeing Manned-UnManned Teaming demonstration lead, in a statement.

“It’s a force multiplier that enables a single aircrew to control multiple aircraft without greatly increasing workload. It has the potential to increase survivability as well as situational awareness.”

Both of the autonomously piloted aircraft had pilots on board during testing, according to AFP.

With China now spending over a dozen times more on defense than it did 20 years ago, the U.S. military is revamping for renewed “great power competition” with Russia and China, as demanded by the 2018 National Defense Strategy.

Both Russia and China have developed extensive integrated anti-aircraft systems and long-range missile shields to try to neuter the once indomitable U.S. air carriers.

Navy Carries Out Test Flight of Jets Adapted for Autonomy The Nimitz-class aircraft carrier USS Abraham Lincoln transits the Strait of Gibraltar, entering the Mediterranean Sea on April 13, 2019. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Clint Davis/Released)

U.S. strategic solutions have emphasized the need for next-generation capabilities, but a key theme is also a greater integration of different weapons systems and spreading the load among more numerous platforms, including unmanned.

One of the challenges to teaming up the different platforms is a mismatch of communications between systems that currently run throughout the U.S. military, according to analysts. Even the next-generation F-35 is famously unable to talk to its stablemate, the F-22.

In what was described as a major milestone for the military’s new integrated battle concept, on Jan. 22 two F-35s were integrated into the Army’s missile defense system to be used as sensors to detect and track threats for the first time during testing.

The F-35, which was finally ready for deployment in 2015, provides bundles of next-generation capabilities so far unmatched by rivals. But the military planners aren’t just looking for one-man shows: they want weapons systems to work together.

The Navy is developing the concept of distributed operations. This means moving away from reliance on a few large ships, and instead distributing the firepower and surveillance across many more platforms, including unmanned ships, with no single point of failure.

The Marine Corps has outlined a parallel strategy. They propose using smaller boats to slip onto Pacific islands where they can station missile batteries safe from China’s anti-ship missiles.

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Gambling Capital Macau Orders All Casinos to Close Over Virus Outbreak

Gambling hub Macau announced it would shut down casinos for 15 days as coronavirus spirals out of control, triggering lockdowns and quarantines in China. Officials in Macau, considered the world’s gambling capital, called on its several dozen casinos to close, impacting American casino firms such as Wynn Resorts and Las Vegas Sands. “Of course this was a difficult decision, but we must do it for the health of Macau’s residents,” Ho Iat Seng, the head of the Chinese territory, said in a TV press conference, according to The New York Times. Secretary for Economy and Finance Lei Wai Nong said confirmed that 41 casinos, bars, theaters, and clubs would be shut down in the meantime, reported The Wall Street Journal. Ho said there would be a meeting of local casino operators on…