- The US Army is building a second version of Earth on
computer to help it prepare for conflicts around the world.
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- The detailed simulation will be drawn from a real-world
terrain database and will be drawn to the same scale as the original.
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- The software Earth is being created for the US Army by
gaming company There, which is currently working on a virtual world for
gamers.
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- The first version of the virtual planet should be finished
by September.
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- Big picture
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- The ambitious project aims to help the US Army plan future
conflicts which are unlikely to involve set-piece battles and instead be
smaller in scale.
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- Details of the project were revealed by Robert Gehorsam,
a senior vice president at There, during a lengthy interview posted on
the Homelan Fed gaming website.
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- Mr Gehorsam said the world being created will not be
a game but instead will be a "massively multi-user persistent environment"
that will model real world physics as closely as possible.
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- The emphasis in the artificial Earth will be on human
interaction rather than conflicts involving lots of military hardware.
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- He said combat will be a part of the game but it is also
intended to let the Army simulate intelligence work as well as patrols,
planning and working with indigenous populations.
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- Also included will be lots of tools that help trainers
and pupils work out how they did and review their progress during and after
a simulation exercise.
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- There is planning to model the entire planet at the proper
scale so it would be possible to walk across the United States if participants
wanted to.
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- However, currently the virtual Earth is almost bare as
the only thing modelled in any detail is part of Kuwait City.
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- He said There was working with the US Army researchers
to ensure that existing models of the way that things such as crowds and
vehicles react can be included in the simulated planet.
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- In spring a group of sergeants and junior officers that
have served in Iraq will become the first soldiers to try out the virtual
Earth.
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- © BBC MMIV
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- http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/technology/3507531.stm
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