In theory, the company Luxor One could secure a military base with unmanned programmed drones with its Atlas software platform. Simon Vervisch, manager of Luxor One: “The biggest obstacle at the moment is air legislation. The legislation is hopelessly behind schedule. If you want to carry out unmanned flights where people have no view of the drone, it can take up to eight months before your application is approved.”
These young entrepreneurs, based on the Sanapolis campus in Damme, can use AI to track movements and count objects. “The drone can actually automatically analyze images with our software and detect whether there are intruders. The drone becomes so intelligent that it can detect the threats itself and act based on what it detects.”
