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CREATOR: YouTube_"OneMinuteHistoryLessons" & "OneMinuteTravel" & LinkedIn_'Drones/Robotics' ImmersiveTechTransformation. Consultant & Value Chain Creator. Aerospace/NASA/ESA-Medical-Robotics QMS/RA/ISO Coach/Mentor

So Silicon Valley (my old stamping ground!) is getting into battlefiedl UAV/Drones with a vengeance! Suspect we might see more of this type of UAV technology/invention coming from the Bay Area? "UAV/Drones have changed war. Small, cheap, and deadly robots buzz in the skies high above the world’s battlefields, taking pictures and dropping explosives. They’re hard to counter. ZeroMark, a defense startup based in the United States, thinks it has a solution. It wants to turn the rifles of frontline soldiers into “handheld Iron Domes.” "The idea is simple: Make it easier to shoot a drone out of the sky with a bullet. The problem is that drones are fast and maneuverable, making them hard for even a skilled marksman to hit. ZeroMark’s system would add aim assistance to existing rifles, ostensibly helping soldiers put a bullet in just the right place." “We’re mostly a software company,” ZeroMark CEO Joel Anderson tells WIRED. He says that the way it works is by placing a sensor on the rail mount at the front of a rifle, the same place you might put a scope. The sensor interacts with an actuator either in the stock or the foregrip of the rifle that makes adjustments to the soldier’s aim while they’re pointing the rifle at a target." "A soldier beset by a drone would point their rifle at the target, turn on the system, and let the actuators solidify their aim before pulling the trigger. “So there’s a machine perception, computer vision component. We use lidar and electro-optical sensors to detect drones, classify them, and determine what they’re doing,” Anderson says. “The part that is ballistics is actually quite trivial … It’s numerical regression, it’s ballistic physics.” "According to Anderson, ZeroMarks’ system is able to do things a human can’t. “For them to be able to calculate things like the bullet drop and trajectory and windage … It’s a very difficult thing to do for a person, but for a computer, it’s pretty easy,” he says. “And so we predetermined where the shot needs to land so that when they pull the trigger, it’s going to have a high likelihood of intersecting the path of the drone.” #uavdronetechnology #uavdronedefense #militaryuavdrones https://lnkd.in/ekYHNq9V

The Lords of Silicon Valley Are Thrilled to Present a ‘Handheld Iron Dome’

The Lords of Silicon Valley Are Thrilled to Present a ‘Handheld Iron Dome’

wired.com

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