December22, 2006:
The U.S. Army is using thousands of small UAVs, that transmit
real-time video to commanders below. These videos enable officers to more
effectively deploy their troops. But the company, and sometimes platoon,
commanders have a very practical problem with keeping an eye on the video. With
some systems, theUAV video is shown on a laptop computer. But a more handy (and
expensive) controller is becoming common. These look like video game
controllers, with a small video screen built in. But even these can be hard to
handle for a company commander who is under fire, or otherwise distracted. Many
infantry commanders have been looking to goggle type video displays. These have
been around for years, and basically put a very small screen right in front of
your eye, providing the equivalent (to the viewer) of a laptop size screen. But
these devices are fragile, and expensive. Now an Israeli company has come up
with what might be a solution. A miniature LCD projector is mounted on the side
of eye glasses and projects an image that looks, to the user, like a 60 inch
flat screen display viewed at a distance of about three meters. Great for
keeping an eye on UAV video. Moreover, the "60 inch flat screen display" is
also transparent, so the user is not blind to his surroundings. For military
use, this device (called LOE, for Light-guide Optical Element) can be built into
the kind of goggles all troops wear in the field. Since it's an Israeli firm
that developed this, the Israeli army will probably be the first to adapt it to
military use. This has been the case with similar technologies developed
recently.