Tech’s Most Controversial Startup Now Makes Drone-Killing Robots
Share
[aggregation-styles]
Bloomberg Subscription
Bloomberg Subscription
Jason Levin stood on a craggy hill on a Southern California ranch in late July and prepared to destroy a drone. First he grabbed the controls for an Up Air One, a remote control hobbyist model that retails for about $300, and steered it until it was hovering about 100 feet above the ground. Next he used a laptop to activate a system he’d spent the past several months building.
A second drone roughly the size of the Up Air quadcopter spun into action, buzzing like a mechanical wasp as it ascended to about 20 feet below its target. As it hovered, a crowd of Levin’s colleagues gathered around. A prompt appeared on-screen asking for permission to attack. Levin tapped a button, and the second drone, dubbed the Interceptor, shot upward, striking the Up Air One at 100 mph. The two aircraft somersaulted skyward briefly, then they plummeted back to earth and landed with two satisfying thuds. Levin grinned and explained that he hadn’t been controlling the Interceptor after telling it to attack—it finds targets and steers toward them on its own. If the first collision doesn’t take its quarry down, the drone can circle back and strike a second and third time, all by itself. “It’s a good feeling as an engineer,” he said. “You’ve put in the work, and it knows what to do. It’s like sending your kid off to college.”
A second drone roughly the size of the Up Air quadcopter spun into action, buzzing like a mechanical wasp as it ascended to about 20 feet below its target. As it hovered, a crowd of Levin’s colleagues gathered around. A prompt appeared on-screen asking for permission to attack. Levin tapped a button, and the second drone, dubbed the Interceptor, shot upward, striking the Up Air One at 100 mph. The two aircraft somersaulted skyward briefly, then they plummeted back to earth and landed with two satisfying thuds. Levin grinned and explained that he hadn’t been controlling the Interceptor after telling it to attack—it finds targets and steers toward them on its own. If the first collision doesn’t take its quarry down, the drone can circle back and strike a second and third time, all by itself. “It’s a good feeling as an engineer,” he said. “You’ve put in the work, and it knows what to do. It’s like sending your kid off to college.”
By Joshua Brustein | 3 Oct 2019
RELATED TOPICS:
Caltrans’ Response to Homeless Encampments Is Lagging, Cities Complain
Housing /
4 hours ago
Democrats Seeking California Governorship Strut Their Stuff for Union Leaders
Opinion /
4 hours ago
Republicans Face Internal Disagreements Over Trump Tax Cut Package
Politics /
5 hours ago
Once in Sync, Trump and Netanyahu Now Show Signs of Division
World /
5 hours ago
Has the California Dream Become a Mirage?
Featured /
6 hours ago
Latest
Videos

Business /
2 hours ago
Global Eggs Completes Acquisition in US, Closes New Deal in Europe

Courts /
3 hours ago
‘I Never Said He Called My Son the N-Word.’ Fresno Unified Trustee Thomas Tries to Erase Accusation Against Former Bullard Coach

Housing /
4 hours ago
Caltrans’ Response to Homeless Encampments Is Lagging, Cities Complain

Opinion /
4 hours ago