European forces depend on growing and disrupting technologies to improve their performance, to protect themselves and to weaken the enemy.
One of the most important of these technologies is artificial intelligence, which is capable of analyzing wide data packages to expect threats and allow for a quick decision. Another trusted field is robotics, with the development of autonomous systems such as traffic robots and above all. Hyperzonic weapons, advanced materials and quantum technologies are also opening the best opportunities.
Our correspondent went to Poland to Poland, and he prioritized security during the Rotary President of the EU. Like many member states, the country is exploring the potential of developing technologies used.
In Warza, the latest “Haqatan” has united around 200 developers across Europe and designed 24 -hour technology projects on security.
Benjamin Wolpa, co -founder of the European Technology Center network, explains, “We are creating an innovation network in protection to encourage young people to work in solutions to save life and address emergency security challenges,” the gorgnizer of the event.
“Europe must wake up; we must have ways to defend us,” he emphasizes.
Among the projects offered by multinational groups, a radio -based system defined by the software to detect enemies, or an initiative that connects Bengodo therapy with AI to quickly treat antibiotic -recessed infections in soldiers.
Ukrainian students created an autonomous spherical robot for the attack, as well as the guided ammunition for the enemy’s positions.
“Europe should return to autonomous organizations because they are the future,” says Ilita, a computer vision expert. “Such is the case to save lives during the war. The struggling people will be robots, not people.”
As for these young engineers, the challenge is just beyond the technical achievement. Jono, a member of a Portuguese group that came up with a navigation method that uses artificial intelligence to find drones without GPS, “we have experience in systemic engineering, navigation and computer vision, but, after all, this effort echoes our values. “We struggle to believe: our freedom of being Europeans.”
Technology advances and new challenges are: Cyber Attacks, Energy Infrastructure and Space Extraordinary threats have already been fulfilled that European Security Organization’s Innovation President Federica Valentine says. To overcome these dangers, Europe needs to accelerate these technologies, ”he says.
You have to restore the time you lost at the financial level. He explains that the fragmentation of inter -member states, the continuous gap between civil and military technologies and the lack of capital for new security companies are some obstacles. Valentine concludes that “we need to integrate and channel towards innovative activities in the security sector.”