With IVAS, “there are scenarios where those soldiers need to communicate with the tactical edge to send data, to receive data, to task autonomous systems, and that’s a place where the Klas technology can help,” Tom Keane, SVP of Engineering, said at a press conference. “Klas has already been supplying technology to IVAS for several years in that context. So we expect to do more there.”
Beyond Anduril’s military objectives, there are a host of other computer vision situations that are not practical until more powerful edge computing becomes available. This ranges from automotive to industrial — or even areas like pollution monitoring.
While Anduril is clearly focusing on military and related fields like law enforcement — with all the rhetoric that implies — should it solve the edge computing issue for IVAS, there are at least as many commercial possibilities for the tech. Anduril hasn’t ruled out one day pursuing those as well.
“The technology and products from Klas have many use cases: military, national security, law enforcement, autonomy and more. Anduril, together with our partners, will continue to support customers [with] a wide array of use cases,” Keane told TechCrunch.