T-Mobile Trains Own Pilot to Inspect Cell Towers
Telecom provider T-Mobile will now use Aerialtronics Unmanned Aerial Systems as it becomes the first European provider to use drones to inspect 5,000 antennas in Holland.
Telecom provider T-Mobile will now use Aerialtronics Unmanned Aerial Systems as it becomes the first European provider to use drones to inspect 5,000 antennas in Holland.
The package includes a mix of long-range strike drones, intelligence and reconnaissance systems, logistics drones and maritime capabilities, with deliveries already underway this month
The drones are to be manufactured by Ukrainian enterprises, for which memoranda have already been signed on the potential establishment of joint Ukrainian‑German ventures.
They are production-rate munitions designed for contested, GPS-denied environments, built on combat-tested Ukrainian airframes and powered by Auterion’s combat-tested AI guidance, autonomous navigation, and electronic warfare resilience software.
Talon Avionics of Boise, Idaho developed the SECTR autonomous C-UAS system, featuring AI-driven acoustic targeting. SECTR detects threats acoustically at up to 100 meters, engages targets within one second, and achieves a stated hit probability of 95% or greater against drones weighing up to 1 kg.