📌 MAROKO133 Breaking ai: Pentagon’s $1 billion bid to help US build combat power w
On Tuesday, the Pentagon released new details about a sweeping drone acquisition plan that will run through 2027, marking one of the largest efforts yet to rapidly field small attack drones across the U.S. military.
The announcement came through a new Request for Information (RFI) and a dedicated website outlining the Pentagon’s plan to buy more than 200,000 commercial drones by 2027, including 30,000 units scheduled for delivery by July 2026.
New program shaped by recent national policy
The Drone Dominance Program builds on guidance issued this summer by President Donald Trump and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth. Their policy push aims to rebuild the American industrial base for unmanned systems and give the military affordable tools that can be used in large numbers.
These systems are meant to provide quick, lethal effects in environments where small drones have become essential.
Officials emphasize the need for rapid production. In the RFI, defense leaders wrote that “Every warfighter must have access to low-cost/attritable sUAS to conduct [One-Way Attack missions, or] OWA.”
They added that “The Drone Dominance Program (DDP) is designed to help industry organize around the need for low-cost, supply-chain secure sUAS manufacturing at scale, urgently.”
The Pentagon plans to place $1 billion in fixed-price orders using existing authorities for prototype projects. The department expects strong competition as companies develop systems that can be manufactured in high volumes without delays or supply chain vulnerabilities.
“Through the drone dominance program, $1 billion from the Big Beautiful Bill will fund the manufacture of approximately 340,000 small UASs for combat units over the course of two years,” as per the announcement.
Four-phase competition aimed at scaling production
The program will move through four phases. Each phase will begin with a Gauntlet challenge, during which selected drones are flown by military operators and tested in controlled missions. Vendors that perform well will be eligible for orders of one thousand or more drones.
The RFI explained that “Scoring will be primarily related to achievement of two missions, likely to include [a] 10.0KM strike across open territory and a 1.0KM strike in simulated urban territory, both with minimum 2KG dummy payload.”
The number of drones purchased will increase in each phase, while the number of selected vendors will decrease. According to early planning figures, the price per drone is expected to fall after Phase II as manufacturing scales.
The Pentagon noted that “Vendors will bear development and manufacturing risk” and that “Payment for sUAS will be made at each delivery.”
Companies are asked to respond to the RFI by December 10 with details about challenges they expect when producing large numbers of inexpensive one-way attack systems. A separate request for solutions is planned for December 17.
This step will invite companies from the United States and the Five Eyes nations to apply for entry into the first Gauntlet event, scheduled for February.
Warfare trends driving urgent demand for small drones
The program arrives at a time when disposable attack drones are reshaping conflicts around the world. Since 2022, both sides in the war in Ukraine have deployed vast numbers of small drones for strikes, reconnaissance, and battlefield disruption. Armed groups such as the Houthis have also used small unmanned systems to threaten shipping routes in the Red Sea.
Earlier attempts to accelerate drone fielding came through the Replicator initiative started under the Biden administration. However, it remains unclear how that effort influences the new Drone Dominance Program.
Despite increased attention, the U.S. military continues to encounter obstacles as it seeks to deploy affordable drones at scale. Much of the uncertainty focuses on whether the commercial sector can surge production fast enough to meet Pentagon targets.
Industry sees incentives to expand drone manufacturing
The Association for Uncrewed Vehicle Systems International has been closely involved in helping shape the new approach. Its President and CEO, Michael Robbins, said the department is taking practical steps to motivate companies.
He stated that the DDP shows the Pentagon is using “smart, tangible incentives to help American industry deliver capability to our warfighters with speed.”
As reported by DefenseScoop, Robbins added that “By combining fast, pay on delivery contracts with a competitive, merit-based Gauntlet process, the [department] is giving U.S. innovators concrete opportunities to scale production, enhance resiliency in supply chains, accelerate drone delivery to warfighters, and secure America’s drone dominance.”
🔗 Sumber: interestingengineering.com
📌 MAROKO133 Eksklusif ai: AI has redefined the talent game. Here’s how leaders are
Presented by Indeed
As AI continues to reshape how we work, organizations are rethinking what skills they need, how they hire, and how they retain talent. According to Indeed’s 2025 Tech Talent report, tech job postings are still down more than 30% from pre-pandemic highs, yet demand for AI expertise has never been greater. New roles are emerging almost overnight, from prompt engineers to AI operations managers, and leaders are under growing pressure to close skill gaps while supporting their teams through change.
Shibani Ahuja, SVP of enterprise IT strategy at Salesforce; Matt Candy, global managing partner of generative AI strategy and transformation at IBM; and Jessica Hardeman, global head of attraction and engagement at Indeed came together for a recent roundtable conversation about the future of tech talent strategy, from hiring and reskilling to how it's reshaping the workforce.
Strategies for sourcing talent
To find the right candidates, organizations need to be certain their communication is clear from the get-go, and that means beginning with a well-thought-out job description, Hardeman said.
"How clearly are you outlining the skills that are actually required for the role, versus using very high-level or ambiguous language," she said. "Something that I also highly recommend is skill-cluster sourcing. We use that to identify candidates that might be adjacent to these harder-to-find niche skills. That’s something we can upskill people into. For example, skills that are in distributed computing or machine learning frameworks also share other high-value capabilities. Using these clusters can help recruiters identify candidates that may not have that exact skill set you’re looking for, but can quickly upskill into it."
Recruiters should also be upskilled, able to spot that potential in candidates. And once they're hired, companies have to be intentional about how they’re growing talent from the day they step in the door.
"What that means in the near term is focusing on the mentorship, embedding that AI fluency into their onboarding experience, into their growth, into their development," she said. "That means offering upskilling that teaches not just the tools they’ll need, but how to think with those tools and alongside those. The new early career sweet spot is where technical skills meet our human strengths. Curiosity. Communication. Data judgment. Workflow design. Those are the things that AI cannot replicate or replace. We have to create mentorship and sponsorship opportunities. Well-being and culture are critical components to ensuring that we’re creating good places for that early-in-career talent to land."
How work will evolve along AI
As AI becomes embedded into daily technical work, organizations are rethinking what it means to be a developer, designer, or engineer. Instead of automating roles end to end, companies are increasingly building AI agents that act as teammates, supporting workers across the entire software development lifecycle.
Candy explained that IBM is already seeing this shift in action through its Consulting Advantage platform, which serves as a unified AI experience layer for consultants and technical teams.
“This is a platform that every one of our consultants works with,” he said. “It’s supported by every piece of AI technology and model out there. It’s the place where our consultants can access thousands of agents that help them in each job role and activity they’re doing.”
These aren’t just prebuilt tools — teams can create and publish their own agents into an internal marketplace. That has sparked a systematic effort to map every task across traditional tech roles and build agents to enhance them.
“If I think about your traditional designer, DevOps engineer, AI Ops engineer — what are all the different agents that are supporting them in those activities?” Candy said. “It’s far more than just coding. Tools like Cursor, Windsurf, and GitHub Copilot accelerate coding, but that’s only one part of delivering software end to end. We’re building agents to support people at every stage of that journey.”
Candy said this shift leads toward a workplace where AI becomes a collaborative partner rather than a replacement, something that enables tech workers to spend more time on creative, strategic, and human-centered tasks.
"This future where employees have agents working alongside them, taking care of some of these repetitive activities, focusing on higher-value strategic work where human skills are innately important, I think becomes right at the heart of that,” he explained. “You have to unleash the organization to be able to think and rethink in that way."
A lot of that depends on the mindset of company leaders, Ahuja said.
"I can see the difference between leaders that look at AI as cost-cutting, reduction — it’s a bottom-line activity,” she said. “And then there are organizations that are starting to shift their mindset to say, no, the goal is not about replacing people. It’s about reimagining the work to make us humans more human, ironically. For some leaders that’s the story their PR teams have told them to say. But for those that actually believe that AI is about helping us become more human, it’s interesting how they’re bringing that to life and bridging this gap between humanity and digital labor."
Shifting the culture toward AI
The companies that are most successful at navigating the obstacles around successful AI implementation and culture change make employees their first priority, Ahuja added. They prioritize use cases that solve the most boring problems that are burdening their teams, demonstrating how AI will help, as opposed to looking at what the maximum number of jobs automation can replace.
"They’re thinking of it as preserving human accountability, so in high-stakes moments, people will still make that final call," she said. "Looking at where AI is going to excel at scale and speed with pattern recognition, leaving that space for humans to bring their judgement, their ethics, and their emotional intelligence. It seems like a very subtle shift, but it’s pretty big in terms of where it starts at the beginning of an organization and how it trickles down."
It's also important to build a level of comfort in using AI in employees’ day-to-day work. Salesforce created a Slack chat called Bite-Sized AI in which they encourage every colleague, including company leaders, to talk about where they're using AI and why, and what hacks they've found.
"That’s creating a safe space," Ahuja explained. "It’s creating that psychological safety — that this isn’t just a buzzword. We’re trying to encourage it through behavior."
"This is all about how you ignite, especially in big enterprises, the kind of passion and fire inside everyone’s belly," Candy added. "Storytelling, showing examples of what great looks like. The expression is 'demos, not memos'. Stop writing PowerPoint slides explaining what we're going to do and actually getting into the tools to show it in real life.”
AI makes that continuous learning a non-negotiable, Hardeman added, with companies training employees in understanding how to use the AI tools they're provided, and that goes a long way toward building that AI culture.
"We view upskilling as a retention lever and a performance driver," she said. "It creates that confidence, it reduces the fear around AI adoption. It helps people see a future for themselves as the technology evolves. AI didn’t just raise the bar on skills. It raised the bar on how we’re trying to support…
Konten dipersingkat otomatis.
🔗 Sumber: venturebeat.com
🤖 Catatan MAROKO133
Artikel ini adalah rangkuman otomatis dari beberapa sumber terpercaya. Kami pilih topik yang sedang tren agar kamu selalu update tanpa ketinggalan.
✅ Update berikutnya dalam 30 menit — tema random menanti!
