Anduril's new EagleEye MR helmet sees Palmer Luckey return to his VR roots | TechCrunch
Briefly

Anduril's new EagleEye MR helmet sees Palmer Luckey return to his VR roots | TechCrunch
"In the latest bid by a Silicon Valley defense firm to assert its own solution for the Army's mixed-reality ambitions, Anduril Industries on Monday unveiled "EagleEye," a helmeted computing system that seeks to turn soldiers into AI-augmented warfighters. The launch is notable given that the initiative is led by Anduri's co-founder Palmer Luckey, who previously started the pioneering VR company, Oculus, which was acquired by Meta."
"Anduril describes EagleEye as a modular "family of systems" built atop its Lattice software that puts command-and-control tools, sensor feeds, and AI directly into a soldier's field of vision. The company claims the system can integrate live video feeds; features rear- and side-sensors to alert operators to threats; and can track teammates in real-time. EagleEye variations include a helmet, visor and glasses."
Anduril unveiled EagleEye, a modular helmeted computing family built on Lattice software to place command-and-control tools, sensor feeds, and AI directly into soldiers' fields of vision. Variants include helmet, visor, and glasses that integrate live video feeds, rear- and side-facing sensors for threat alerts, and real-time teammate tracking. The program is led by Palmer Luckey, founder of Oculus, and follows Anduril's partnership with Meta on extended reality devices. The U.S. Army shifted control of the $22 billion IVAS program to Anduril and awarded a $159 million prototype contract for Soldier Borne Mission Command.
Read at TechCrunch
Unable to calculate read time
[
|
]