AI Isn’t the Real Bottleneck in Autonomy; Wireless Is
Autonomous drones and robots are stalling not because of AI failures but due to unreliable wireless links in congested, contested, or degraded environments. Reliable…
Coverage of drones moves quickly, and the details that matter — who is involved, how large the figures are and when changes take effect — are rarely clear from a headline alone.
The recurring vocabulary of drones reporting — 5G, Artificial Intelligence, Autonomous Systems, Drones and Robotics — is a useful early indicator of which angle is gaining momentum.
Numbers like 100,000 — surfaced from coverage by EE Times — are useful for a quick read of scale, but the precise basis behind any figure belongs to the source article.
The most recent coverage of drones is collected here, ordered with the newest items first. Each report links back to its original source, so the freshest developments — and the dates attached to them — are easy to follow.
These names and themes keep appearing alongside each other, which usually means they are part of the same wider story. Following them as a group — rather than one headline at a time — gives an earlier read on where drones coverage is heading.
Figures such as 100,000 reflect what a particular report stated, which can be preliminary or later revised. Treat them as a guide to magnitude and check the source for updates before relying on any single number.
Every item links to the outlet that published it, which remains the reference for exact figures and quotes. For anything consequential, comparing two or more independent reports is the most reliable way to confirm what actually happened.