The company received a contract from the Pentagon for the integration of systems against unmanned aerial vehicles and unified software to control UAVs.
Anduril Industries has introduced software that simplifies the management of multiple drones and robots. According to Defense News, the devices should free up human resources for other tasks and help coordinate military operations more clearly and fully. The software, called Lattice for Mission Autonomy, is the result of at least four years of work by the company.
Anduril was awarded a $1 billion contract last year by the US Special Operations Command to lead efforts to integrate anti-drone systems. Anduril CEO Brian Schimpf said Lattice for Mission Autonomy provides “the brains and glue that connects everything to run all these systems.”
The Pentagon wants to get combat swarms of drones that will act as support for warplanes and robots that need to assist in mine clearance and ammunition delivery during military operations. All this will have to be managed from a single center.
Currently, the company is working to connect drones and robots from various manufacturers into a single control center. This will simplify the tasks of coordinating unmanned units over large distances in ever-changing combat conditions. The implementation of a unified control system will help to quickly organize and plan combat missions, as well as synchronize actions between army units.
Previously Focus He reported that AIM-260 missiles will shoot down Russian planes: Details of a secret development have emerged.
Source: Focus
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