Ultimately, its request to the market shows, Sentech hopes to create fleet of drones that can take off by themselves, figure out the details of their own flight path, communicate with one another and sensor towers on the ground, and alert human operators to anomalies that could mean an attempted illegal crossing or other incursion.
Meanwhile, back in a control room, operators would have access to live, high-definition video of what is going on, possibly augmented with data from sensors using everything from lasers to radar to create a detailed view of any event. "The system should assist with identifying threats faster and allow operating personnel to instantly spot potential threats with confidence," says Sentech, with tracking of humans, cars, and"other objects".
Lexmurungu BISouthAfrica Thats bullshit ....that will not work
ZN_Sphe BISouthAfrica It must arrest them not to shout at them then I'll say is productive.