The full details of Podolyak's comments which rip into Russia's "stereotypical mindset" pic.twitter.com/hXC0ignqV2
— Samuel Ramani (@SamRamani2) May 17, 2022
The full details of Podolyak's comments which rip into Russia's "stereotypical mindset" pic.twitter.com/hXC0ignqV2
— Samuel Ramani (@SamRamani2) May 17, 2022
Latest from Ukraine's eastern front. Keeping the gateway to the Donbas region firmly shut. On the ground with Ukrainian forces under fire. With @dcinfocus and @StuHollandEsq #BBCNewsTen pic.twitter.com/rCqRpbgsZJ
— Quentin Sommerville (@sommervilletv) May 16, 2022
Putin's War -- The May 17th map briefing.
— Nathan Ruser (@Nrg8000) May 17, 2022
Russian gains around Popasna, Sievierodonetsk and Adiivka.
Further Ukrainian assaults into the forest west of Izyum.
I have also updated the frontline around Kherson and the Vuhledar-Orikhiv area. pic.twitter.com/r25qpJn76m
And a map showing all of Ukraine. pic.twitter.com/VmrWhoZHTn
— Nathan Ruser (@Nrg8000) May 17, 2022
AGS-R-TUFF said:Wow, this is such a powerful image. I had to just sit and stare at it for a few seconds, thinking about the incredible bravery demonstrated by these fighters.Eliminatus said:
I still think there are pockets of resistance in Mariupol. Maybe it was just for the wounded that were exchanged?
Pic below is claimed to be yesterday from the depths of the steel plant. Info is still muddled from what I can tell. Anyone have any definitive word? Haven't found any myself yet.
“Leonid Slutsky, one of Moscow's negotiators in talks with Ukraine and chairman of the Duma's international affairs committee, called the evacuated Azov fighters "animals in human form" and said they should receive the death penalty.”https://t.co/fCe5DHR9le
— Julia Davis (@JuliaDavisNews) May 17, 2022
JFABNRGR said:I agree UKR far more creative in their technological uses of munitions and drones but in case there are some who don't understand the reasoning by the cup/glass here's why. It allows the user to pull the safety pin while the cup or the glass holds the spoon in place which prevents the fuze from ignition. Once the cup/glass with grenade impacts the ground and the two separate, the restraint on the spoon (the cup/glass) no longer works and the grenade goes off immediately or up to several seconds depending on the grenade version and how it was set up.Ag In Ok said:Gilligan said:
...and the RuSSians are dropping grenades in a solo cup!
Says so much about innovation - the Ukes 3D print, upgrade mortars, and modernize their drones for military uses. The Russians, who landed on the moon and have hyeprsonics, use high end Dixie cups to drop handheld grenades.
Who is the world power with a technical advantage...
I will be more impressed when they figure out how to air burst the fragmentation munitions over troops increasing their lethality ten fold.
#LearnToCode ;-)ABATTBQ11 said:JFABNRGR said:I agree UKR far more creative in their technological uses of munitions and drones but in case there are some who don't understand the reasoning by the cup/glass here's why. It allows the user to pull the safety pin while the cup or the glass holds the spoon in place which prevents the fuze from ignition. Once the cup/glass with grenade impacts the ground and the two separate, the restraint on the spoon (the cup/glass) no longer works and the grenade goes off immediately or up to several seconds depending on the grenade version and how it was set up.Ag In Ok said:Gilligan said:
...and the RuSSians are dropping grenades in a solo cup!
Says so much about innovation - the Ukes 3D print, upgrade mortars, and modernize their drones for military uses. The Russians, who landed on the moon and have hyeprsonics, use high end Dixie cups to drop handheld grenades.
Who is the world power with a technical advantage...
I will be more impressed when they figure out how to air burst the fragmentation munitions over troops increasing their lethality ten fold.
Probably not too hard with an arduino and basic sonar sensor. I'm sure there's better and cheaper electro-mechanical options, but you're really just looking to make a proximity fuse, and that's an easy way.
Disclaimer - I've never used any marine traffic tracking site, so I don't know how accurate they are compared to similar sites for air traffic - but this site shows USNS Soderman headed south of port. I don't know what a typical trans-Atlantic route would look like either, so this may be typical, but I would think it would start heading east, not south.AgBQ-00 said:
Massive cargo movements. roll on roll off ships for wheeled/tracked vehicles etc. If heading for Europe it may be back filling for all the equipment given by allies to Ukraine. Could also be prestaging in case of escalation.
If it came out of NC and is headed a little west of south, I would think it is more likely it is headed for Panama to go through the canal than going to Europe.rally-cap said:Disclaimer - I've never used any marine traffic tracking site, so I don't know how accurate they are compared to similar sites for air traffic - but this site shows USNS Soderman headed south of port. I don't know what a typical trans-Atlantic route would look like either, so this may be typical, but I would think it would start heading east, not south.AgBQ-00 said:
Massive cargo movements. roll on roll off ships for wheeled/tracked vehicles etc. If heading for Europe it may be back filling for all the equipment given by allies to Ukraine. Could also be prestaging in case of escalation.
USNS Soderman Tracking
Seriously?aggiehawg said:Hope the Russian subs don't start shooting torpedoes at our ships.Rossticus said:There appears to be a massive Sealift Operation currently underway from the Eastern United States involving almost all USNS Ships in the Atlantic, including the USNS Soderman one of the Navy’s RORO Ships who left the Sunny Point Naval Yard yesterday heading likely toward Europe. https://t.co/Y2d9colHMP
— OSINTdefender (@sentdefender) May 17, 2022
Meanwhile DNR’s field commander Oleksandr Khodakovsky says Azovstal defenders are slowly leaving the plant in groups of 7 to 80 people. Videos from the scene show mostly able-bodied men and women surrendering to the Russians. Khodakovsky says the total is still well below 1K.
— Leonid Ragozin (@leonidragozin) May 17, 2022
"A new chapter in Finnish history," foreign minister @Haavisto signed the country's application for membership in NATO.
— UkraineWorld (@ukraine_world) May 17, 2022
Why not mark 2022 as the year Finland, Sweden and Ukraine join NATO? Valuable enlargement, isn't it? pic.twitter.com/7kTEJGr18v
“I am sure that the dictator will lose. We will win this war,” Ukraine's President spoke at the opening of the Cannes Film Festival. pic.twitter.com/ivOJuHq1SN
— UkraineWorld (@ukraine_world) May 17, 2022
'All dictators die… liberty will never perish': Zelensky quotes from Charlie Chaplin's 1940 film about Hitler https://t.co/ZG7VA6m0PX
— Daily Mail Online (@MailOnline) May 17, 2022
JFABNRGR said:
I agree UKR far more creative in their technological uses of munitions and drones but in case there are some who don't understand the reasoning by the cup/glass here's why. It allows the user to pull the safety pin while the cup or the glass holds the spoon in place which prevents the fuze from ignition. Once the cup/glass with grenade impacts the ground and the two separate, the restraint on the spoon (the cup/glass) no longer works and the grenade goes off immediately or up to several seconds depending on the grenade version and how it was set up.
I will be more impressed when they figure out how to air burst the fragmentation munitions over troops increasing their lethality ten fold.
#Ukraine: UA forces continue further development of ways to deliver munitions from commercial drones - this time they adapted fish bait bombs, placing ordinary F-1/RGD-5 grenades inside.
— 🇺🇦 Ukraine Weapons Tracker (@UAWeapons) May 17, 2022
Note that the UZRGM fuze can be modified to remove the delay, causing an instant explosion. pic.twitter.com/vQokEqKWMg
If it's headed to Europe, it would probably go north and east to follow a great circle route.rally-cap said:Disclaimer - I've never used any marine traffic tracking site, so I don't know how accurate they are compared to similar sites for air traffic - but this site shows USNS Soderman headed south of port. I don't know what a typical trans-Atlantic route would look like either, so this may be typical, but I would think it would start heading east, not south.AgBQ-00 said:
Massive cargo movements. roll on roll off ships for wheeled/tracked vehicles etc. If heading for Europe it may be back filling for all the equipment given by allies to Ukraine. Could also be prestaging in case of escalation.
USNS Soderman Tracking
I am thinking the next weapon to hit the battlefield will be a HARM type missile designed to be launched like a MANPAD and home in on drone controllers using their radio signals.Ag In Ok said:
Matched to a $10k delivery platform with decent range, this is amazing. What success has either side had in taking down drones that are several hundred feet up, controlled a mile or two away?
I can only think of the damage 100 of these would do if they could operate simultaneously- i assume bandwidth literally is the constraint.
NEW: Russia is mounting night raids to overrun Ukrainian positions in the contested Donbas, two Ukrainian sources told @ForeignPolicy.
— Jack Detsch (@JackDetsch) May 17, 2022
Russia's twilight attacks have left Ukraine in dire need of strike and night vision drones to launch counterattacks.https://t.co/IxXDjPmXL2
Various pro-Russian Twitter accounts were so desperate for something positive to post they used a video editor to reverse the footage and then claimed it showed the Russian T-90 recovering a Ukrainian tank.🙃 https://t.co/GDMbBzT4ra
— Jimmy (@JimmySecUK) May 17, 2022
RED ALERT
— Kama (@Kama_Kamilia) May 17, 2022
We have reached new level of COPIUM.
They’re now reversing videos, to show russian captured equipment, “towing” the Ukrainian.
I’m done. https://t.co/P3NDt5ux0j
txags92 said:I am thinking the next weapon to hit the battlefield will be a HARM type missile designed to be launched like a MANPAD and home in on drone controllers using their radio signals.Ag In Ok said:
Matched to a $10k delivery platform with decent range, this is amazing. What success has either side had in taking down drones that are several hundred feet up, controlled a mile or two away?
I can only think of the damage 100 of these would do if they could operate simultaneously- i assume bandwidth literally is the constraint.
If it is emitting a signal, I am sure there is a way to isolate it. Might not be off-the-shelf equipment, but somebody is working on it I am sure.ABATTBQ11 said:txags92 said:I am thinking the next weapon to hit the battlefield will be a HARM type missile designed to be launched like a MANPAD and home in on drone controllers using their radio signals.Ag In Ok said:
Matched to a $10k delivery platform with decent range, this is amazing. What success has either side had in taking down drones that are several hundred feet up, controlled a mile or two away?
I can only think of the damage 100 of these would do if they could operate simultaneously- i assume bandwidth literally is the constraint.
Many off the shelf drones basically operate in the Wi-Fi range, so good luck.
Drones can already fly to way-points with no controller input. The next generation of drones will be seeking their own targets. I would expect prototypes to hit the battlefield this fall. If the war continues into 2023, we're going to see some wild battle-tech innovations.txags92 said:I am thinking the next weapon to hit the battlefield will be a HARM type missile designed to be launched like a MANPAD and home in on drone controllers using their radio signals.Ag In Ok said:
Matched to a $10k delivery platform with decent range, this is amazing. What success has either side had in taking down drones that are several hundred feet up, controlled a mile or two away?
I can only think of the damage 100 of these would do if they could operate simultaneously- i assume bandwidth literally is the constraint.
It is if the drone is equipped with the same kind of technology as the Anti Tank missiles to evaluate target shapes and choose where to attack. But then, I wonder how easy those are to spoof with fake models?GAC06 said:
Flying to a point without communication isn't useful. I'm sure military tech will have some very scary stuff but commercial off the shelf drones are having a huge impact. Countering them is of the utmost importance and every military is scrambling now.
This. Imagine launch-and-forget drones with active radar imaging and a half-dozen laser guided 'bombs' swarming a battlefield. This is virtually off-the-shelf technology waiting to be packaged into a weapon system.lb3 said:
Drones can already fly to way-points with no controller input. The next generation of drones will be seeking their own targets. I would expect prototypes to hit the battlefield this fall. If the war continues into 2023, we're going to see some wild battle-tech innovations.