Dark Tech Official on MSN
Black Knight robotic combat vehicle and the challenge of unmanned ground warfare
The Black Knight Armed Robotic Combat Vehicle represents ongoing efforts to deploy unmanned armored systems on the battlefield. Designed to scout dangerous areas and support manned vehicles, the ...
Air Force Times on MSN
F-22 Raptor, MQ-20 drone complete manned-unmanned flight exercise
The exercise featured a human-piloted F-22 Raptor issuing real-time commands to the MQ-20 drone, which responded by carrying ...
In a significant milestone for the Indian Army’s push towards self-reliance and innovation, Major Rajprasad RS of the Corps of Engineers (7 Engineer Regiment) has developed India’s first in-house ...
Scout AI Inc. ("Scout AI") today publicly showcased for the first time its Fury Autonomous Vehicle Orchestrator running a heterogeneous fleet of autonomous air and ground systems from natural language ...
Interesting Engineering on MSN
Avengers assemble: F-22 Raptor successfully commands autonomous MQ-20 drone in flight
The U.S. Air Force has advanced its push toward autonomous air combat teaming with ...
It's likely at this point that most Ukrainian UGVs have thermal cameras. By contrast, only elite Russian troops wear night-vision goggles. At night, the 'bot has the edge. Especially when an unmanned ...
Hanwha Aerospace broke the ground for its K9 self-propelled howitzer (SPH) production facility in Romania on 11 February, the South Korean company announced later ...
KSNW Wichita on MSN
Kansas company gets $3 million to develop drones for farmers
The goal is to develop technology that can be used by farmers, ranchers and others to improve crop yields and cut costs.
The spending plan, obtained by Breaking Defense, pumps billions into munitions, missile defense and shipbuilding, among other priorities.
This year Ukraine developed the 4x4 wheeled Zmiy Droid 12.7 ground robot. Weighing about half a ton, the Zmiy chassis is built to survive drone attacks and anti-personnel mines. Zmiy is controlled by ...
Russia’s 800,000-man army invading Ukraine lost its main means of exchanging digital data in mid-February and now Kyiv’s forces are taking advantage of it.
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