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"They're looking at anything and everything they can
right now," said Air Force Col. Mike Shortsleeve, commander of a unit here
that monitors drone videos.
The remote-controlled aircraft are mounted with cameras that
transmit real-time video of terrorism suspects to military analysts in the USA .
The amount of video streaming into this base, one of a
number of sites that monitors and analyzes the images, is immense. Drone video
transmissions rose to 327,384 hours last year, up from 4,806 in 2001.
Given the huge amount of feeds, the Air Force has launched
an aggressive effort to seek out technology or techniques that will help them
process video without adding more people to stare at monitors.
"We need to be careful we don't drown in the
data," said David Deptula, a retired Air Force lieutenant general and a
senior military scholar at the Air Force Academy.
Air Force officials have met with the sports cable network
ESPN to discuss how it handles large amounts of video that stream in.
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