Bumping into other pedestrians on the street while staring at your cellphone is merely a rude inconvenience.

In a battlefield setting, it could be deadly.

The Army is trying to prevent such a phenomenon by providing tablet data in soldier’s helmets.

The tablets, known as Nett Warrior systems, often provide the location of friendly forces and other mapping data. Now that information is being moved to a heads up display available with a soldier’s helmet. This would allow soldiers to look forward and on alert as opposed to focusing, head down, on a tablet.

What the Army wants to prevent is what is sometimes pejoratively termed the “Nett Warrior stare.”.\

“Anytime you’ve got a potential shooter looking down, when he’s looking down he’s not lethal,” Lt. Col. Ray Gary, Army Communications-Electronics Research, Development and Engineering Center (CERDEC) Night Vision and Electronic Sensors Directorate military deputy, said during a visit to its Fort Belvoir facility.

“We’re looking put some of that information onto an augmented reality suite so the solider is not looking down — they can concentrate and look down range.”

Gary said the Army wants to display that data in an augmented reality suite so the solider is not looking down and instead can concentrate down range.

The key is not to overwhelm soldiers with too much data, officials explained to C4ISRNET. While the Army is looking to provide a variety of mission command information to soldiers within these heads up displays, leaders want to allow soldiers to selectively choose what information is most critical to them.

The ability to display information on a soldier’s helmet through heads up display is expected to transition to the program executive office community in 2019.

Mark Pomerleau is a reporter for C4ISRNET, covering information warfare and cyberspace.

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