The Army plans to grant upstart weapons maker Anduril control of one of its highest-profile and long-troubled projects known ...
Anduril Industries will take control of Microsoft’s multibillion-dollar augmented reality headset program for the U.S. Army.
Microsoft has officially ended its work in the VR hardware space by handing off its HoloLens project with the Department of ...
Microsoft Corp. and Anduril Industries, a leader in defense technology, today announced an expanded partnership to drive the next phase of the U.S. Army’s Integrated Visual Augmentation System (IVAS) ...
Through this partnership agreement, and pending Department of Defense approval, Anduril will assume oversight of production, ...
Microsoft plans to quit developing augmented-reality headsets for the US Army and have Oculus founder Palmer Luckey's Anduril ...
Technology giant Microsoft (MSFT) is transferring its $22-billion-dollar augmented reality headset program with the U.S. Army ...
"Whatever you are imagining, however crazy you imagine I am, multiply it by ten and then do it again," Luckey said.
If the deal is approved by the Defense Department, Microsoft will become a preferred provider of cloud computing for IVAS and other Anduril AI efforts, the companies said. Microsoft’s IVAS team ...
Microsoft will continue to support IVAS functionality with "advanced cloud infrastructure and AI capabilities," but it's out ...
Phil Spencer said HoloLens could have a bright future for gaming, and now it's being used to make Army soldiers more ...
Anduril Takes Over Microsoft's $22 Billion US Army Headset Program (Reuters) - Palmer Luckey-founded defense tech startup ...