In WW1, it was the tank, needed to break the stalemate of trenches and barbed wire; Britain developed them faster, and won.
No question we have the first war not a "come as you are" war, for the first time since WW2. Weapons not invented when it started will be crucial to it, and the fastest drone-inventors and builders will have huge advantage.
In WW1, it was the tank, needed to break the stalemate of trenches and barbed wire; Britain developed them faster, and won.
No question we have the first war not a "come as you are" war, for the first time since WW2. Weapons not invented when it started will be crucial to it, and the fastest drone-inventors and builders will have huge advantage.
I should have my feature (increasingly looking like a tome) on how Ukraine's drone industry is innovating at breakneck speeds out in WIRED this week. I previewed a few of the pieces in the newsletter the other week, but I think you'll find it *very* interesting. The comparison to the Mark I is pretty apt, I think.
In WW1, it was the tank, needed to break the stalemate of trenches and barbed wire; Britain developed them faster, and won.
No question we have the first war not a "come as you are" war, for the first time since WW2. Weapons not invented when it started will be crucial to it, and the fastest drone-inventors and builders will have huge advantage.
I should have my feature (increasingly looking like a tome) on how Ukraine's drone industry is innovating at breakneck speeds out in WIRED this week. I previewed a few of the pieces in the newsletter the other week, but I think you'll find it *very* interesting. The comparison to the Mark I is pretty apt, I think.