The US military spent millions of dollars on self-destruction technology
The US military is spending millions of dollars to develop technology
The US military is spending millions of dollars to develop "self-destruct" technology on the battlefield, just as the tape recorder will melt away in the drama "Mission: Impossible."
The Pentagon's Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) has won contracts worth more than $ 17 million over the past two months with the task of ensuring microelectronic sensors and Other equipment does not fall into the hands of the enemy.
Self-destruct recording equipment in Mission: Impossible. (Photo: pinoytutorial.com)
DARPA companies are tasked with developing electronic devices that can be destroyed remotely or break up themselves.
In the 1960s TV series, the main agent always received the top secret from a tape recorder, in which the last sentence was "this tape will self-destruct in 5 seconds".
Today, DARPA is sponsoring 21st century tape recordings and pilot projects under the Self Destructive Program Program.
In the most recent contract announced on Jan. 31, DARPA has provided $ 3.5 million to IBM to make a proposal to use radio frequencies to break down the glass cover of a silicon chip and Turn it into dust.
Meanwhile, defense giant BAE Systems won a $ 4.5 million contract on Jan. 22 and Honeywell Group Inc. also made a $ 2.5 million deal on Feb. 3 to carry out more. "self destructive" technology studies.
- Process of decontamination from weapons of mass destruction by the US military
- The destruction of foreign animals
- The reason billionaire Jeff Bezos spent billions of dollars on space technology
- Search for 'descendants' of Moore's law
- 'Millions of dollars' is spent on filtering urine into drinking water
- Bill Gates spent millions of dollars researching ... human feces
- New method to protect personal data.
- 'Skeleton' for military personnel
- Treasure coins worth tens of millions of dollars in Wales
- Today software company: Much money is not necessarily good
Technology of growing plants in the dark World's largest digital camera ready for action China once again surprised the world when it let the humanoid robot Star1 race across the Gobi Desert. Octopus-inspired underwater sticky device Humans have been able to communicate in dreams. South Korea successfully researches the world's first 'single atom editing' technique Sweden successfully developed the world's first wooden transistor American company develops propeller-less aircraft with speed of nearly 1,000km/h