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FEDOR, colloquially known as Fyodor the robot (Russian: робот "Фёдор"), is a Russian humanoid robot that replicates movements of a remote operator and can perform some actions autonomously. [1] Originally intended for rescue operations, it was sent on an experimental mission to the International Space Station in 2019. [2]
In 2020, the Russian Defence Ministry received the first batch of Orion drones for trial operation. By 9 April during the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine, there was video confirmation of Orion performing six successful strikes on Ukrainian vehicles, however the first combat loss of a drone was reported on 7 April. [12]
Slaughterbots is a 2017 arms-control advocacy video presenting a dramatized near-future scenario where swarms of inexpensive microdrones use artificial intelligence and facial recognition software to assassinate political opponents based on preprogrammed criteria.
First-person view (FPV), also known as remote-person view (RPV), or video piloting, is a method used to control a radio-controlled vehicle from the driver or pilot's viewpoint. Most commonly it is used to pilot a radio-controlled aircraft or other type of unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) such as a military drone .
UAV ZALA 421-08, a man-portable Russian UAV capable of 90min flight time with video/photo/IR camera Ka-135 Ka-175 Korshun. Aist ("Stork") — multirole UAV [205] Altius-RU — medium-altitude long-endurance reconnaissance and combat UAV [206] [207] Chirok — hybrid amphibious UAV vehicle [208] Dozor-3 — heavy reconnaissance and combat UAV ...
T-72B3 tanks supplied to the Russian Airborne Forces in 2018 have been upgraded and are equipped with Andromeda automatic control system and some of them with top-attack defence screens. [134] As of 2021, the Russian Airborne Forces have 150 T-72B3 and 10 T-72B3 mod. 2016. T-90M tanks are also attached to VDV units as of August 2023. [135]
The ZALA Lancet (official designation: Item 52/Item 51) [2] is an unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) and loitering munition developed by the Russian company ZALA Aero Group (part of Kalashnikov Concern) for the Russian Armed Forces.
Russia has tested flying an FPV drone from a patrol boat into a fixed target. Use in naval combat had not yet been reported by December 2023. By January 2024, Russian countermeasures had become increasingly capable and the Ukrainian Navy indicated that some offensive USV "tactics that were worked out in 2022 and 2023 will not work in 2024."