James Ryseff
Everyone is hunting for the next “killer app” for AI.
In defense, that label won’t go to a clever chatbot or a personalized recommendation engine. It will belong to systems that help commanders and operators make better informed decisions faster than an adversary, under uncertainty and at scale. The payoff is not novelty; it’s compressing the time from sensing to understanding to action while raising the quality of each choice.
Modern battle networks are drowning in information. Proliferated sensors produce continuous streams of imagery, telemetry and signals. Human sources add their own object sightings, reports and analysis. Meanwhile, enterprise software applications generate their own logs, events, alerts and data sets that flood analysts faster than they can interpret them.
For example, Ukraine’s Delta situational awareness platform ingests over 600,000 new reports of enemy objects uploaded by human soldiers every month.
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