• 1 day

    At least they don’t put people in them this time 😅

  • That’s the eco-friendliness we deserve, and from Japan no less.

  • This is an approach that could never succeed in the U.S., because there the focus is always on throwing as much money as possible at the defense contractors so that the billionaires can get even richer.

    A current example: the war of aggression against Iran that the U.S. is waging in violation of international law.

    To my knowledge, not even a halfway plausible reason has been given for this. And so it becomes quite clear that this is simply about shifting state resources into the pockets of the super-rich - and U.S. citizens just go along with it, even though it isn’t even them who are dying by the thousands, but rather, among others, Iranian schoolchildren, hundreds of whom were murdered simply by a bombing of a school…

    • The usa military budget is non comparable to european military budgets, they pay for different things. IMO.

        • In addition, they patrol the entire planets oceans, and are the main reason why you don’t have pirates just taking ships constantly.

          • (I’m not necessarily saying piracy is bad…)

            But I feel like the violent enforcement of extreme inequality is what creates pirates, not what stops them.

            • 2 minutes

              No, mass scale looting of ships is stopped by armed navies, along with the instant communication and remote viewing that make it impossible to do it without anyone noticing. You don’t even need severe inequality for people to think about stealing 100 million dollar cargo moving slowly by itself.

        • It includes costs for retired personnel and social security (social security is not in the military budget in most or any European countries) for example.

    • 10 hours

      It only needs to fly once. Honestly, it’d probably work.

      But hey, I’m sure it’s all irrelevant, I mean who would ever want to vindictively drone strike Seattle…

    • 24 hours

      I saw the cardboard festival tent hold up to a couple days of rain. Thats probably more than the maximum mission time it needs.

    • There are cheap and easy ways to waterproof cardboard, but I’m not sure why you would want to attack Seattle.

      • Microslop has its headquarters there. That’s enough reason to flatten the city and salt the earth.

          • 15 hours

            …which is basically just a bedroom community for Seattle.

            We need to think big here, lads!

  • The number of our amazon boxes will block out the sun.

    Then we will fight in the shade.

    • Doubt they have much carrying capacity for explosives like a shahed drone which is $25k, while these $2k cardboard drones are great for surveillance with little concern for loss.

      • It doesn’t take much explosive to defeat infantry.

        Sure, it isn’t flying across the country to hit an installation like a Shahed, but it could function as a longer-range, loitering mortar round.

        Lots of small payloads would be useful if you can put a lot of them in the right place: blast fragmentation, HEDP, thermobaric, smoke, illumination, etc.

    • Radar doesn’t work very well on cardboard. Ukraine has already been using drones like this since 2023.

  • For single use it’s not a bad idea honestly but I can’t imagine they would carry much and things like the wind might play a big factor.

    • According to the article, they are mainly intended as defensive devices. Think of them as anti-drone cardboard chaff.

      AirKamuy Chief Engineer Naoki Morita said that the cardboard drone was mainly envisioned as a counter-drone device. The idea is to fly a swarm of drones in front of other targets and absorb blows. “This is regular cardboard, so no special foam board or material, so every cardboard manufacturer can make this plane,” he said.

      But other uses are possible. Naoki said that the AirKamuy 150 could carry around three pounds, which is just enough to carry a small amount of supplies or munitions to a target and it’s not hard to imagine swarms of incendiary cardboard drones slamming into targets in the near future.