Soldiers are using U.S.-Mexico border deployments as a chance to try out new technology, including a reworked version of IVAS headsets.
The U.S. Army has awarded contracts with a combined total of $354 million to Anduril Industries and Rivet Industries to ...
According to a Breaking Defense report, the U.S. Army has chosen defense startups Anduril and Rivet to compete against one ...
The U.S. Army has selected two industry teams -- one led by Anduril Industries in partnership with Meta Platforms ...
The Army on Monday said it has selected Anduril Industries-led team and startup company Rivet for the Soldier Borne Mission Command (SBMC) program, the ...
The U.S. Army is fully replacing Microsoft in its multi-billion dollar AR headset program, tapping an Anduril-Meta team and ...
The US Army awarded contracts to a partnership of Anduril Industries Inc. and Meta Platforms Inc., and another led by Rivet Industries, to produce competing prototypes of a new combat goggle.
The US Army's troubled attempt at outfitting soldiers with mixed-reality headsets is getting a $354 million boost and a new pair of lead contractors as part of a second attempt to make the kit stick ...
Despite spending billions of dollars to make it happen, Meta CEO Oculus founder Palmer Luckey were never able to make virtual ...
If the 120,000 IVAS systems are upgraded with the '674 and '873 patented technologies, Soldiers could have immediate skilled interaction with complex military equipment, even equipment the Soldier has ...
Soldiers deployed to the U.S.-Mexico border are using the Integrated Visual Augmentation System, or IVAS headset system among other high tech systems to spot and report migrants. The headset has ...
Currently, the Integrated Visual Augmentation System (IVAS) enables the Soldier to interact with holograms using hand gestures, such as finger tap maneuvers. A limitation of the hand gesture is the ...