Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Emerging Tech
  3. Business
  4. News

Intel shows it’s serious about drones with Ascending Technologies acquisition

Add as a preferred source on Google

Intel said Monday it’s reached a deal to acquire German drone firm Ascending Technologies. The Bavaria-based company, makers of flying machines such as the Firefly and Falcon 8, specializes in professional-grade unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) capable of sensing and responding to their flying environment.

Coming six months after Intel invested $60 million in Shanghai drone-maker Yuneec, this latest deal – the cost of which has not been revealed – represents the chip giant’s growing interest in a technology set for huge growth in the coming years.

Recommended Videos

“With practical applications ranging from disaster response, to infrastructure inspection, to delivery of goods, UAVs offer an incredible opportunity for innovation across a multitude of industries,” Intel said in a release announcing the deal.

The company added that it’s keen to position itself “at the forefront of this opportunity to increasingly integrate the computing, communications, sensor and cloud technology required to make drones smarter and more connected.”

Intel and Ascending Technologies aren’t new to one another – the pair have already partnered to combine Ascending Technologies’ sense-and-avoid algorithms with the American company’s RealSense technology that offers real-time depth-sensing capabilities. Working together, the technologies can, for example, improve drone safety by enabling remotely controlled flying machines to automatically avoid obstacles that are both stationary and moving.

The current plans is for Ascending Technologies to continue supporting their existing customers while also working with Intel’s Perceptual Computing team “to develop UAV technology that can help drones fly with more awareness of their environments,” Intel said in its release.

Intel CEO Brian Krzanich said last year his company “believes in a smart and connected world, and one of the best ways to bring that smart and connected world to everyone and everywhere has been drones,” adding, “We’ve got drones on our road map that are going to truly change the world and revolutionize the drone industry.”

The sophistication of obstacle-avoidance systems like those developed by Ascending Technologies is likely to have an impact on how the Federal Aviation Administration develops regulations for commercial drone use – its first set of rules is expected to be announced some time this year and will likely pave the way for widespread use of the technology by a range of industries.

With this in mind, Intel is keen to be at the forefront of drone development and avoid missing out as it did with smartphones when its failure to recognize the importance of the expanding sector allowed rivals such as Qualcomm to dominate the market.

Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
Amazon is full of unfamiliar brands. This Chrome extension lets you ignore them.
Advertisement, Poster, Text

Shopping on Amazon used to be simple. You searched for a product, compared a few familiar brands, and checked out. These days, it often feels like you're scrolling through an endless parade of names that look like someone leaned on a keyboard before hitting publish. That's exactly the problem Knockoff is trying to solve.

Created by developer Josh Pigford, the Chrome extension doesn't promise to expose counterfeit products or magically tell you what's good. Instead, it tackles something arguably more annoying: the flood of unfamiliar, mass-produced brands that dominate Amazon search results.

Read more
AI agent reportedly carried out an entire ransomware attack on its own
AI didn't just write malware. It apparently clocked in for work.
Cybersecurity

Cybersecurity researchers say they have documented what could be the first ransomware attack carried out almost entirely by an autonomous AI agent, marking a significant shift in how cyberattacks could be conducted in the future. According to cloud security firm Sysdig, they have uncovered a ransomware operation dubbed JadePuffer that appears to have relied on a large language model (LLM) agent to perform nearly every stage of the attack without continuous human intervention.

If confirmed, the incident suggests AI is moving beyond writing malicious code and into actively planning, adapting, and executing cyberattacks in real time.

Read more
The Washington Post predicted how tech will advance 50 years ago and the success rate is humbling
The Washington Post predicted 2026 tech in 1976. It got a lot right.
Representative Image

Fifty years ago, when floppy disks were cutting-edge and the personal computer revolution had barely begun, The Washington Post attempted a remarkably ambitious exercise: predict what life in 2026 would look like. Some of those predictions now read like science fiction. Others feel surprisingly ordinary because they have become part of everyday life.

In a retrospective published for America's 250th anniversary, the newspaper revisited science editor Thomas O'Toole's 1976 article Inventing the Future, comparing its forecasts with today's technological reality. The results reveal that while predicting exact timelines is nearly impossible, identifying long-term scientific trends can be remarkably accurate.

Read more