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Kongsberg Geospatial Announces New Tactical UAS Sensor Data Management Solution
by Staff Writers
Ottawa, Canada (SPX) Dec 14, 2020

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Kongsberg Geospatial has announced the release of the Modular ISR Data Analysis and Storage (MIDAS) solution. MIDAS was developed to provide a rapid capability for the exploitation and further distribution of drone sensor data.

Kongsberg Geospatial's MIDAS addresses the "lack of standards" problem that the vast majority of Tactical UAVs encounter - no standards-compliant PED capability for their organic sensor data.

MIDAS provides a fully standards-compliant system that allows intelligence analysts to exploit sensor data in near real-time, from where the drone is being operated - without having to wait for post mission analysis from headquarters.

Kongsberg MIDAS is derived from leading-edge technologies delivered for the NATO Alliance Ground Surveillance (AGS) project which required the storage and retrieval of vast amounts of intelligence data for Intelligence Analysts.

MIDAS has packaged these strategic capabilities into a tactical and portable form factor to enables those same strategic PED capabilities to be deployed and given to the front-line warfighter to increase his/her situational awareness.

MIDAS enables the monitoring of the current mission sensor feeds and permits comparative analysis against legacy sensor feeds from the same search area. Providing this capability at the tactical level will reduce the current connectivity reliance and wait times associated with higher-level headquarters decisions. This ability will dramatically shorten the sensor-to-shooter decision-action cycle.

Tactical UAV operators in the field create vast quantities of sensor data that require analysis but typically suffer from bandwidth limitations to share this data with "enterprise" resources needed to create intelligence products.

Additionally, due to lack of standards and tools for sensor analysis, a large percentage of tactical Full-Motion Video (FMV) and other sensor data is unexploited and unrecorded.

"Tactical UAVs don't fly for the sake of flying, they are tasked to collect sensor data and we're proud to be part of the critical role of rapid intelligence creation using that data," said Ranald McGillis, President, Kongsberg Geospatial.

"Our MIDAS system draws on our technical legacy with NATO projects to create a world leading capability to exploit drone sensor data," added McGillis.


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Navy creates program for specialists to operate MQ-25 Stingray drone
Washington DC (UPI) Dec 09, 2020
A U.S. Navy warrant officer specialty for Aerial Vehicle Operators was announced this week, with plans to train about 450 personnel for the designation. The AVO warrant officer will be charged with operating MQ-25 Stingray unmanned aerial vehicles, which are typically launched from maritime vessels. The aircraft will be included aboard fleet carrier airwings in 2024, the Navy said Wednesday in a statement. The new AVOs will be trained, over the next six to 10 years, at the Navy's ... read more

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