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Hosted on MSNAnduril is taking over Microsoft's $22 billion IVAS projectShould Anduril Industries founder Palmer Luckey have his way, the U.S. Army's effort to arm troops with futuristic, ...
Anduril has seized the lead on the Army’s IVAS headset program, putting the eight-year-old company in charge of one of the military’s most important soldier-enhancement programs, and poising ...
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Microsoft Research on MSNAnduril and Microsoft partner to advance Integrated Visual Augmentation System (IVAS) program for the U.S. ArmyCorp. and Anduril Industries, a leader in defense technology, today announced an expanded partnership to drive the next phase ...
Microsoft will continue to support IVAS functionality with "advanced cloud infrastructure and AI capabilities," but it's out ...
Through this partnership agreement, and pending Department of Defense approval, Anduril will assume oversight of production, ...
The Army plans to grant upstart weapons maker Anduril control of one of its highest-profile and long-troubled projects known ...
Anduril, headed by notorious tech bro Palmer Luckey, will now work with the DoD on the project, officially known as the ...
The Register on MSN10d
Microsoft wants to quit building Army VR goggles, hand contract to AndurilMicrosoft plans to quit developing augmented-reality headsets for the US Army and have Oculus founder Palmer Luckey's Anduril ...
Anduril announced on Tuesday that it's taking over Microsoft's 10-year contract to make mixed-reality goggles for soldiers.
Anduril Industries will take control of Microsoft’s multibillion-dollar augmented reality headset program for the U.S. Army.
The company is also turning to a new partner, defense technology firm Anduril Industries, to continue its HoloLens contract ...
Anduril has seized the lead on the Army’s IVAS headset program, putting the eight-year-old company in charge of one of the ...
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