logo
VentureOne, Adasi team up to integrate autonomous flight tech

VentureOne, Adasi team up to integrate autonomous flight tech

Trade Arabia23-02-2025
As dual-use technologies increasingly drive economies of scale worldwide, Adasi, a leader in UAV system manufacturing, has announced their adoption of two advanced autonomous flight technologies by Abu Dhabi's VentureOne: Perceptra, a new cutting-edge GPS-less navigation technology, and Saluki, a high-security flight control technology for autonomous systems.
These technologies, both developed by the Technology Innovation Institute, are designed to deliver secure, resilient operations in the most challenging environments.
They have been optimized for UAV manufacturers, offering enhanced resilience, precision, and security for autonomous aerial operations, it stated.
The agreement between VentureOne, Adasi, and TII was formalized at IDEX 2025, the Middle East's largest defense exhibition, at which Saluki and Perceptra were unveiled.
Global Positioning System (GPS) technology has long been a fundamental pillar of navigation, supporting applications from everyday smartphone use to critical defense and military operations.
However, this widespread reliance on GPS has exposed vulnerabilities that can be exploited through techniques like jamming and spoofing. Jamming occurs when signals on the same frequency overwhelm GPS receivers, preventing accurate location tracking, while spoofing involves transmitting counterfeit signals to deceive receivers into calculating incorrect positions or times.
These vulnerabilities pose significant risks across sectors that depend on precise navigation, including autonomous drones, commercial aviation, and military aircraft.
In defence and security, compromised GPS signals can impact mission success and personnel safety, while in aviation, navigation errors may cause flight path deviations and operational disruptions – reports of which have the aviation industry and international regulators such as IATA and European regulator EASA seeking urgent solutions for GPS interference, according to one Reuters report in 2024.
For autonomous systems like drones and self-driving vehicles, the inability to maintain accurate positioning can create safety hazards, particularly in dynamic or high-risk environments, from aviation to defence.
As the use of GPS-dependent systems continues to grow, the need for resilient, alternative navigation solutions has become increasingly critical. Perceptra and Saluki overcome many of today's numerous challenges with advanced vision-based navigation, delivering reliable, resilient performance.
Dr Najwa Aaraj, CEO of TII, said: "Perceptra, with its GPS-less capabilities, and Saluki, with its sophisticated Zero Trust architecture, represent a significant leap in autonomous navigation with the potential to transform multiple sectors."
"From supporting safe travel in commercial flights, search-and-rescue missions with precise navigation, to enabling efficient urban drone logistics for deliveries in densely populated cities, these technologies have broad real-world applications," noted Aaraj.
"Their adaptability also makes them invaluable in defense, ensuring secure and resilient operations in even the most challenging environments. This collaboration reflects our commitment to developing advanced, dual-use technologies that serve both civilian and defense needs while positioning the UAE as a leader in next-generation autonomous systems," he added.
Perceptra is a vision-based system that ensures reliable navigation without GPS, allowing aerial platforms to operate in GNSS-denied environments.
It features visual relocking, low navigation errors, and easy integration across platforms for intelligence, surveillance, reconnaissance, and electronic warfare.
Saluki is a secure, high-performance flight controller and mission computer with Zero Trust architecture. With PX4 compatibility, Gen AI capabilities, and 300 TOPS compute power, it supports multi-vehicle management for mission-critical defense applications.
"At Adasi, we integrate only the most advanced, field-proven technologies to ensure our UAVs operate with unmatched precision, resilience, and security, even in the most contested environments," remarked its CEO Juma Al Kaabi.
"Perceptra and Saluki provide exactly what next-generation UAVs require: secure, GPS-independent navigation and AI-powered mission control," he added.
Reda Nidhakou, the Acting CEO of VentureOne, said: "We are dedicated to ensuring that cutting-edge research becomes reality to make a positive impact and transform industries."
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Iran Plans To Abandon GPS & Replace
Iran Plans To Abandon GPS & Replace

Gulf Insider

time2 days ago

  • Gulf Insider

Iran Plans To Abandon GPS & Replace

Recent reports in Mideast regional media say that Iran is actively exploring abandoning GPS technology and instead adopting China's main navigation satellite system, BeiDou. Such a drastic change can't be accomplished overnight, however, as the world's dominant system (GPS) has long been embedded in Iranian industries and technology. US-based and Western technology firms dominate such telecoms and mapping tech infrastructure, and the June 12-day conflict saw Iranian vessels in the Persian Gulf experience repeated disruptions of GPS signal – and it's believed the system was utilized by Israel and the US to track and target Iranian officials. Iranian officials were already worried about reliance on GPS even before the war, but the conflict has only heightened existing concerns – enough to race for alternatives. After all, the Global Positioning System (GPS) was literally an invention of the US Department of Defense in the 1970s and is currently run under the Space Force. 'At times, disruptions are created on this [GPS] system by internal systems, and this very issue has pushed us toward alternative options like BeiDou,' Ehsan Chitsaz, deputy communications minister, told state media earlier this month. He confirmed that the government is working on a plan switch transportation, agriculture and the internet from GPS to China's BeiDou, according to Al Jazeera . The same report emphasizes that 'Since 2013, whistleblowers and media investigations have revealed how various Western technologies and schemes have enabled illicit surveillance and data gathering on a global scale – something that has worried governments around the world.' It's also only a natural trajectory that Iran would become increasingly more trusting of tech based out of China, India, or Russia – as opposed to that of the United States and Israel's close Western allies. Russia, for its part, hopes its national or regional satellite navigation system GLONASS can spread, especially among allied populations. As for BeiDou, it's seen as going hand and hand as a major tech tool with President Xi's ambitious Belt & Road Initiative (BRI) which has been making inroads across Asia and Africa. Al Jazeera aptly concludes in its report that 'Iran's possible shift to BeiDou sends a clear message to other nations grappling with the delicate balance between technological convenience and strategic self-defence: The era of blind, naive dependence on US-controlled infrastructure is rapidly coming to an end.' 'Nations can no longer afford to have their military capabilities and vital digital sovereignty tied to the satellite grid of a superpower they cannot trust,' the report adds. Indeed the Edward Snowden NSA leaks of many years ago also confirmed that this trend has been a problem for decades, and more recently Israeli companies have also made huge leaps in developing hidden spyware embedded in what's presented as civilian products and software. Also read: UN Watchdog Chief Believes Inspectors Will Return To Iran This Year After Europe Meeting

84% of GPS workforce is Bahraini
84% of GPS workforce is Bahraini

Daily Tribune

time23-04-2025

  • Daily Tribune

84% of GPS workforce is Bahraini

Bahrainis now make up 84 per cent of the workforce at Global Payment Services (GPS), according to the company's chairman Yousif Ali Mirza. He shared the figure during a visit by His Highness Shaikh Khalifa bin Salman bin Mohammed Al Khalifa, Undersecretary at the Ministry of Labour, who toured the firm and reviewed its approach to hiring local staff. Mirza praised the skills and dependability of Bahraini employees and credited the Ministry with helping prepare jobseekers for work in a wide range of fields. The visit formed part of a wider effort to build closer ties with private firms that support national employment schemes. Global Payment Services, which provides e-payment systems and works with financial institutions, was recognised for taking part in these efforts. During the visit, HH Shaikh Khalifa met with senior staff and was shown how Bahrainis had been recruited across different departments. He welcomed the company's decision to rely on national workers, calling them a driving force in the country's development.

AI Drone Defeats Human Pilots in $1M Abu Dhabi Racing League Showdown
AI Drone Defeats Human Pilots in $1M Abu Dhabi Racing League Showdown

Daily Tribune

time18-04-2025

  • Daily Tribune

AI Drone Defeats Human Pilots in $1M Abu Dhabi Racing League Showdown

In a groundbreaking moment for artificial intelligence and robotics, an AI-powered drone has defeated elite human pilots at the Abu Dhabi Autonomous Racing League (A2RL), marking a new era in autonomous flight. Hosted at ADNEC Marina Hall in collaboration with the Drone Champions League (DCL), the event showcased the world's most advanced autonomous aerial racing technology. A total of 14 teams from countries including the UAE, Netherlands, Austria, South Korea, China, and the US competed across multiple challenges for a $1 million prize pool. 🔸 Dutch Innovation Soars The standout performer of the tournament was MavLab from Delft University of Technology, Netherlands, which claimed victory in three out of four categories. Most notably, the team's AI-powered drone completed two laps of a 170-metre course in just 17 seconds, winning the AI Grand Challenge. In a historic AI vs. Human showdown, MavLab's drone edged out three champion human pilots from DCL in head-to-head races. This marked the first time an autonomous system has decisively outperformed professional human pilots in competitive drone racing. 'Winning three top titles is a huge milestone for our team,' said Christophe De Wagter, team principal at MavLab. 'I always wondered when AI would be able to compete with human drone racing pilots in real competitions. I'm extremely proud that we've made it happen this year.' 🔸 UAE's TII Claims a Victory of Its Own The Technology Innovation Institute (TII) of Abu Dhabi also left a strong mark by winning the multi-autonomous drone AI race, which tested coordination, real-time navigation, and collision avoidance. TII's win highlighted the region's growing influence in advanced AI and robotics research. 🔸 A Test of Pure Autonomy Each team raced standardised drones with zero human input — guided solely by onboard AI algorithms. These drones, equipped with a compact computing module, a forward-facing camera, and an inertial measurement unit, navigated a complex course at speeds exceeding 150 km/h. Challenging lighting, sparse visual markers, and the use of rolling shutter cameras further pushed the limits of real-time AI performance, making this the most demanding autonomous drone race ever held globally. 🔸 What's Next? This competition, part of a broader initiative by Abu Dhabi's Advanced Technology Research Council (ATRC), not only set a new benchmark in AI racing but also demonstrated the growing capabilities of autonomous systems in real-world conditions. As AI continues to evolve, such achievements underscore its ability to outperform humans in fields once thought impossible — and drone racing may just be the beginning.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store