In San Diego, cutting-edge technology is revolutionizing public safety. Robots are now integral to our city's security efforts, with police, SWAT teams, the San Diego Fire-Rescue Department, and private security companies deploying advanced robotic systems to enhance their operations.
These autonomous machines, capable of performing tasks that once required human intervention, are supposed to make streets safer and responses more efficient. Meanwhile, the U.S. Navy bases are launching unmanned boats from San Diego's shores, extending this technological prowess to protect our nation's waters.
On May 20, the U.S. Navy posted a video on YouTube showcasing its two new unmanned boats patrolling the Coronado Bridge. The 16-foot grey craft operate from the Naval Amphibious Base Coronado.
Just like the robots helping police officers and SWAT teams inland, these crewless boats made by Maritime Applied Physics Corporation are packed with computers, cameras, sensors, a power supply to help the Navy monitor the waters.
“This will be accomplished through experimentation with the fleet testing,” says Captain Derek Rader, who recently assumed command of the unmanned boats.
"If the Navy integrates robots to perform tasks on — and more so, off the vessels, that's going to be on the next level," exclaimed Jack S., a toy dealer and robot fanatic from Chula Vista. "The unmanned boats and robots will be able to relay intel back to our bases and much more.
"On Instagram, I saw a robot that climbed stairs and helped our police in North County capture a man hiding on the second floor of a building. I always tell people, 'It was not like Robocop,' but rad nonetheless."
While the robots helping local law enforcement agents do not resemble the cyborg portrayed by Peter Weller in the 1987 Robocop cult classic, they get the job done. Some of SDPD's robots are much smaller and look more like the "Big Trak toy from the 1980s," Jack added.
Jack referred to the FLIRs, which San Diego police discussed in a community meeting in February, as six different technological devices that would help the officers serve the San Diego communities more safely.
The first two devices discussed in February were FLIR's FirstLook Generation 1 and 2 robots. These resemble the Big Trak toy Jack, the robot collector mentioned earlier.
The FLIRs are throwable six-pound robots with tracks which can climb seven-inch obstacles like curbs and stairs. When the robots are flipped over, they have a pair of symmetrical and parallel protrusions from the rear that help to flip the robot upright. The unit has four built-in cameras with illumination and zoom features and audio capabilities and is small enough to chuck into a dangerous situation.
A video on FLIR's site depicts military-looking men throwing the robots through a window. The robot is "ideal for building clearing, raids, and other close-in scenarios—or to remotely assess industrial environments."
In 2021, news broke of a remote-controlled robot, which Jack says might've been a FLIR or a robot equally as small, that helped SWAT officers rescue a woman from Christopher Marquez, an armed man. Marquez and the woman were holed up in a downtown San Diego High School dumpster. Because the robot was "Able to hear what was being said inside, two SWAT officers fired at Marquez after he allegedly made concerning comments and maneuvered a rifle towards the woman," reads the Campus Safety magazine site.)
The FLIR robots have add-ons like a manipulator's arm, motorized retention pins for delivering smaller items, and thermal cameras to look for fugitives in dark places. There are optional chemical, biological, radiological, and nuclear material and Hazmat sensors and a disruptor in case a mysterious-looking item needs to be abruptly moved.
San Diego Fire-Rescue Department's bomb squad uses or plans to use three FirstLook 110 robots that closely resemble the FLIR's FirstLook robots.
The third robot presented by police in February was an ICOR Mini-Caliber Robot, which is larger than the FLIRs above. The ICOR has tracks and a mechanical arm protruding with a grip to hold something. The ICOR resembles a robotic unit used in an October standoff with a man holed up with a deceased woman in a Del Cerro motel room. NBC 7 news footage shows a police robot bringing the suspect a cigarette during the standoff, and after he took the cigarette, he tossed the robot over the motel's railing.
The other three electronic devices presented by police in February were two 836 Technologies communication devices and a SWIFT Under Door Camera.
In April, JDS Security Services reportedly deployed the first of three autonomous security robots, which began patrolling the Stratton Apartments and adjacent streets in Clairemont.
In San Diego, cutting-edge technology is revolutionizing public safety. Robots are now integral to our city's security efforts, with police, SWAT teams, the San Diego Fire-Rescue Department, and private security companies deploying advanced robotic systems to enhance their operations.
These autonomous machines, capable of performing tasks that once required human intervention, are supposed to make streets safer and responses more efficient. Meanwhile, the U.S. Navy bases are launching unmanned boats from San Diego's shores, extending this technological prowess to protect our nation's waters.
On May 20, the U.S. Navy posted a video on YouTube showcasing its two new unmanned boats patrolling the Coronado Bridge. The 16-foot grey craft operate from the Naval Amphibious Base Coronado.
Just like the robots helping police officers and SWAT teams inland, these crewless boats made by Maritime Applied Physics Corporation are packed with computers, cameras, sensors, a power supply to help the Navy monitor the waters.
“This will be accomplished through experimentation with the fleet testing,” says Captain Derek Rader, who recently assumed command of the unmanned boats.
"If the Navy integrates robots to perform tasks on — and more so, off the vessels, that's going to be on the next level," exclaimed Jack S., a toy dealer and robot fanatic from Chula Vista. "The unmanned boats and robots will be able to relay intel back to our bases and much more.
"On Instagram, I saw a robot that climbed stairs and helped our police in North County capture a man hiding on the second floor of a building. I always tell people, 'It was not like Robocop,' but rad nonetheless."
While the robots helping local law enforcement agents do not resemble the cyborg portrayed by Peter Weller in the 1987 Robocop cult classic, they get the job done. Some of SDPD's robots are much smaller and look more like the "Big Trak toy from the 1980s," Jack added.
Jack referred to the FLIRs, which San Diego police discussed in a community meeting in February, as six different technological devices that would help the officers serve the San Diego communities more safely.
The first two devices discussed in February were FLIR's FirstLook Generation 1 and 2 robots. These resemble the Big Trak toy Jack, the robot collector mentioned earlier.
The FLIRs are throwable six-pound robots with tracks which can climb seven-inch obstacles like curbs and stairs. When the robots are flipped over, they have a pair of symmetrical and parallel protrusions from the rear that help to flip the robot upright. The unit has four built-in cameras with illumination and zoom features and audio capabilities and is small enough to chuck into a dangerous situation.
A video on FLIR's site depicts military-looking men throwing the robots through a window. The robot is "ideal for building clearing, raids, and other close-in scenarios—or to remotely assess industrial environments."
In 2021, news broke of a remote-controlled robot, which Jack says might've been a FLIR or a robot equally as small, that helped SWAT officers rescue a woman from Christopher Marquez, an armed man. Marquez and the woman were holed up in a downtown San Diego High School dumpster. Because the robot was "Able to hear what was being said inside, two SWAT officers fired at Marquez after he allegedly made concerning comments and maneuvered a rifle towards the woman," reads the Campus Safety magazine site.)
The FLIR robots have add-ons like a manipulator's arm, motorized retention pins for delivering smaller items, and thermal cameras to look for fugitives in dark places. There are optional chemical, biological, radiological, and nuclear material and Hazmat sensors and a disruptor in case a mysterious-looking item needs to be abruptly moved.
San Diego Fire-Rescue Department's bomb squad uses or plans to use three FirstLook 110 robots that closely resemble the FLIR's FirstLook robots.
The third robot presented by police in February was an ICOR Mini-Caliber Robot, which is larger than the FLIRs above. The ICOR has tracks and a mechanical arm protruding with a grip to hold something. The ICOR resembles a robotic unit used in an October standoff with a man holed up with a deceased woman in a Del Cerro motel room. NBC 7 news footage shows a police robot bringing the suspect a cigarette during the standoff, and after he took the cigarette, he tossed the robot over the motel's railing.
The other three electronic devices presented by police in February were two 836 Technologies communication devices and a SWIFT Under Door Camera.
In April, JDS Security Services reportedly deployed the first of three autonomous security robots, which began patrolling the Stratton Apartments and adjacent streets in Clairemont.
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