Palmer Luckey, the billionaire founder of Oculus VR and Anduril Industries, is bringing his software to the US Army.
The partnership marks a return to the VR headset space for Luckey, having sold Oculus to Meta for $2 billion in 2014. Luckey ...
Luckey's Anduril Industries has landed a lucrative new contract with the DoD that will bring automated headsets to America's ...
A defence technology start-up led by 32-year-old billionaire and Republican Party donor Palmer Luckey has signed a deal with ...
Anduril Industries, the defense tech company founded by Oculus founder Palmer Luckey, announced it’s partnering with ...
These headsets will warn soldiers of autonomously-detected airborne threats, enhancing survivability in complex, contested ...
Need of transformation in traditional military capabilities for the new era The Integrated Visual Augmentation System deals with enhancing military prowess by advanced augmented reality and ...
The Army’s Integrated Visual Augmentation System program is “designed to ingest data from a host of sensors, ...
unanticipated costs under fixed-price service and system integration engagements, changes in the market for microcap stocks regardless of growth and value and various other factors beyond our ...
When Palmer Luckey was hacking together virtual reality headsets at his startup Oculus VR in the mid-2010s, he would ...