Lets see if this clears the picture for anyone. [Stole this from Theo, he has the best stuff!]
Take a mo’
With the technology, the shooter “tags” a target using a red button on the trigger guard. After the tag is set, the shooter aims the gun and holds down the trigger. Once the tag and the crosshairs of the scope line up, the gun fires.
“There are a number of people who say the gun shoots itself,” Schauble said. “It doesn’t. The shooter is always in the loop.”
The network tracking scope’s technology takes environmental factors, such as temperature, wind speeds, and gravity, into account to ensure a clean shot.
A little more complicated than that, the gun itself must continue to perform to the programmed parameters or the bullet won’t end up where it’s aimed at. In other words, cleaning, zeroing using match-grade ammunition still required. Also, as the video shows, the calculation of wind speed over the range is still an external (human) function.
Some in the security sector, however, have reservations about the long-range rifle.
“There are a handful of snipers who can hit a target at 1,000 yards. But now, anybody can do it,” Rommel Dionisio, a gun industry analyst for Wedbush Securities told CNN Money. “You can put some tremendous capability in the hands of just about anybody, even an untrained shooter.”
This unit includes a WiFi feed, so add a device to activate the trigger remotely and sit in front of a computer anywhere in the world and wait for your target to wander in front of the sights. There is no visible laser “Dot” to warn the target (or the targets security) and once set in place it could be concealed within a open-ended box to small to hold a man. Bolt operated, not semi-auto, so no second (unattended) shot. Hell of a assassination device. Mount it inside one of Google’s Autonomous Cars and you have the perfect robot assassin, made from “off-the-shelf” parts.
If the IBM computers that beat the experts had names; “Big Blue” for chess and “Watson” for Jeopardy. What would you call this system? Hey! A Smartgun teamed up with a SmartCar, remake the movie “The Terminator” as a robotic buddy movie!
I spent forty years in Telecom and 911 police and fire systems were the one system I never installed or maintained. They were very specialized, the hours the engineers and techs worked also sucked. And as I’ve mentioned before, I hate customers who are carrying guns while you are working with them. The banking systems I focused on the last ten years of my career were bad enough, millions of dollars an hour or billions per day at stake if the system failed. 911 systems are a whole another level of pressure.
I was struck by this statement; (Police Commissioner Ray Kelly) defended system, saying the old one was 40 years old and had outdated technology.
Yes, BUT IT WORKED! That kills me, at my last site, the SL100/DMS100 system at BOA had been initially installed in the early 80’s and constantly upgraded almost every year. Best of all, it was paid for. But consultants don’t make any money telling the customer that the existing system doesn’t need to be replaced. Besides, listen to my voice as I speak the buzzword, “Voice Over IP!!!”. So they replaced the Legacy system with a Cisco VoIP…which failed three times in the first year. (wow, what a surprise…who could’a seen that coming)
We (the Telecom Techs) used to laugh when we saw how the computer (IT) geeks operated. They walked in the door and made a beeline for the RESET switch, first time and every time. We said to ourselves, “Could you imagine what would happen to us if we dropped the system and killed dial tone in the middle of the day like that?“. And,”As long as those dorks operate like that, we don’t have to worry about anyone giving them control of the voice network!“. Of course that is what happened and the reason that it did happen was that over time, almost all the managers and all the college trained consultants were IT/Computer oriented. Once they worked their way up into the management levels, everything became clock cycles and network speed, the latest and greatest tech and Apps…God I hate “Apps”. Another thing they changed was the attitude towards the person sitting at that desk, Voice Guys still referred to them as “the Customer”. To the IT people they became, “Workstation users”. Voice techs asked them, “What are your needs?”. IT techs told them, “You have been assigned this profile, and your profile only gets this.”.
I can’t really say what the real problems are with the NYC 911 system, but I suspect that somewhere at sometime prior to loss of service, in some secret closet or IT Center a computer geek pushed a button labeled “Reset”.

Unfortunately, offshore wind is enormously expensive. The US Department of Energy (DOE) estimates the levelized cost of wind-generated electricity at more than double the cost of coal-fired electricity and more than three times the cost of power from natural gas. For example, the proposed Cape Wind project off the coast of southeast Massachusetts will initially deliver electricity at 18.7 cents per kilowatt-hour with a built-in increase of 3.5 percent per year over a fifteen-year contract. This is more than triple the wholesale cost of electricity in New England.
I guess when Cape Wind goes online I’ll be shutting off the hot tub. Buying candles, using a manual toothbrush. Thank God I have NG for heating and cooking!

If you paid attention to the caption above, you noticed the divot. That divot was from a naval shell that appears to have barely grazed the sea wall, put the divot into the iron of the roof, and got past the armor/splinter shields of the beach gun, and hit the wall behind.
I wanted to comment on the Blackfive site but it requires “social media” login, and I don’t “face” and I’m not a twit, so I’m linking to their excellent page here and also saying my piece.
I am a avid reader of history and have read many books and articles about D-day and the Normandy campaign and have seen it written “The destroyers had to get in close to the beach to take out the German bunkers”, but I have never (before) seen a series of photos explaining the reason so well.
Normally…
Downstream…
This riverside home, high moon tide (normal maximum) 
Add rain…
Our new UN Ambassador, she once was recorded as urging the US to invade Israel to the benefit of the Palestinians,
Speaking about her own comments, Power said, “This makes no sense to me.” “Even I don’t understand it … The quote seems so weird”
Bi-Polar? Hope she stays on her meds.
From Dan Greenfield
And considering the official story, we then have to assume that while his protectors lost Stevens during the fire, the Jihadis got in, injected him with a lethal dose, for some reason, and then got out without succumbing to smoke inhalation, while brilliantly making it appear that Stevens had. Like a lot of movie action plots, this is so cleverly convoluted, it’s downright pointless.
But since smoke inhalation rules out claiming that they beheaded Stevens, this is another way of taking credit for his death while looking cool. Because the other thing that terrorists do is lie like cheap rugs.
What irritates me about this development is the FBI squeaking,”We knew about this, we have been investigating!!!”. Well Dude, its been eight months and we have been waiting to hear something other than that stupid YouTube video story that you didn’t refute, and now you’re scooped by a someone from a wacky website called, al Qaeda Airlines.
You’re been punked!
Hi Doug, hows the hip?
An al Qaeda terrorist stated in a recent online posting that U.S. Ambassador to Libya J. Christopher Stevens was killed by lethal injection after plans to kidnap him during the Sept. 11 attacks in Benghazi went bad.
The veracity of the claim by Abdallah Dhu–al-Bajadin, who was identified by U.S. officials as a weapons expert for al Qaeda, could not be determined. However, U.S. officials have not dismissed the terrorist’s assertion.
An FBI spokeswoman indicated that the bureau is aware of the claim but declined to comment because of the ongoing investigation into the Benghazi attacks.
“While there is a great deal of information in the media and on the Internet about the attack in Benghazi, the FBI is not in a position at this time to comment on anything specific with regard to the investigation,” spokeswoman Kathy Wright said.
A State Department spokesman had no comment.