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 INDUSTRIES
 
 |  | Drones Steal the Paris Air Show
 
 |  |  |  | Photo via IMAGO/Vincent Isore/IMAGO/IP3press/Newscom
 
 |  | The Paris Air Show has a lot of buzz this year — literally. A  record number of drones are on display at the world’s largest aerospace event. Concluding this weekend, 2,400 exhibitors from 48 countries are showing off planes and other aircraft for 300,000 visitors. And this year, the smallest aircraft on the tarmac made a big impact.
 
 As airlines  placed billions of dollars worth of orders for commercial planes, the defense industry made deals for drones, the small, remotely controlled aircraft that are increasingly important in modern conflicts.
 
 Modern WarfareDrones are defining 21st-century warfighting, with thousands deployed in both the Russia-Ukraine war and the Iran-Israel conflict. Drones have been used in the Russia-Ukraine war to destroy weapons factories, oil refineries and ammunition stores, and they inflict more than 70% of  casualties on both sides, according to The Japan Times. Both countries plan to produce millions of drones this year. Meanwhile, the Israeli military said it has already intercepted hundreds of Iranian drones in its airspace.
 
 As drones become more prevalent, defense companies are eyeing new deals. Drone updates at the Paris Air Show came from:
 
 
 Anduril, which made its debut there, showing off its 17-foot autonomous Fury drone. These “wingmen” drones fly alongside fighter jets to provide support for combat and surveillance. The US Air Force has plans to deploy 1,000 larger drones like the Fury.Germany’s Rheinmetall, which announced at the show that it’ll partner with Anduril to develop versions of the Fury and another drone that can act as a cruise missile, called the Barracuda, for European markets.
  AI-viation Nations: Today’s drones are more than pricey toys or tools to put on light shows. Their military uses are top-of-mind as global tensions rise around the world, and AI is expected to make drones more accurate, deadly and autonomous. At the same time, as drones are developed for the defense sector, the technology is also evolving for non-military uses. At the Paris Air Show, Czech startup FlyinDiamonds showed off its one-pound Mandrake drones (they make a high-pitched noise like the magical plants in “Harry Potter”), which it plans to use to  deliver medical supplies in emergencies. 
 Written by Jamie Wilde
 
 
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 The Paris Air Show has a lot of buzz this year — literally. A  record number of drones are on display at the
 world’s largest aerospace event. Concluding this weekend, 2,400 exhibitors from 48 countries are showing
 off planes and other aircraft for 300,000 visitors. And this year, the smallest aircraft on the tarmac made a
 big impact. As airlines  placed billions of dollars worth of orders for commercial planes, the defense industry
 made deals for drones, the small, remotely controlled aircraft that are increasingly important in modern
 conflicts.
 
 Modern Warfare
 Drones are defining 21st-century warfighting, with thousands deployed in both the Russia-Ukraine war and
 the Iran-Israel conflict. Drones have been used in the Russia-Ukraine war to destroy weapons factories, oil
 refineries and ammunition stores, and they inflict more than 70% of  casualties on both sides, according to
 The Japan Times. Both countries plan to produce millions of drones this year. Meanwhile, the Israeli military
 said it has already intercepted hundreds of Iranian drones in its airspace.
 
 As drones become more prevalent, defense companies are eyeing new deals. Drone updates at the Paris
 Air Show came from:
 
 
 Anduril, which made its debut there, showing off its 17-foot autonomous Fury drone. These “wingmen” drones fly alongside fighter jets to provide support for combat and surveillance. The US Air Force has plans to deploy 1,000 larger drones like the Fury.Germany’s Rheinmetall, which announced at the show that it’ll partner with Anduril to develop versions of the Fury and another drone that can act as a cruise missile, called the Barracuda, for European markets.
  AI-viation Nations: Today’s drones are more than pricey toys or tools to put on light shows. Their military uses are top-of-mind as global tensions rise around the world, and AI is expected to make drones
 more accurate, deadly and autonomous. At the same time, as drones are developed for the defense sector,
 the technology is also evolving for non-military uses. At the Paris Air Show, Czech startup FlyinDiamonds
 showed off its one-pound Mandrake drones (they make a high-pitched noise like the magical plants in
 "Harry Potter”), which it plans to use to  deliver medical supplies in emergencies.
 
 Written by Jamie Wilde
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