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Drone Technology Daily: UAV News & Reviews

Killer Robots Get a Billion Dollar Budget While Your Delivery Drone Brings Toilet Paper From Walmart

3 min16 april 2026
This is you Drone Technology Daily: UAV News & Reviews podcast.

Good morning, listeners. Welcome to Drone Technology Daily. We're tracking three major developments reshaping the unmanned systems landscape this week.

The United States Air Force is making significant moves toward operational deployment of artificial intelligence piloted drone fighters. According to reporting from military procurement sources, the Air Force has requested one billion dollars in procurement funding for Collaborative Combat Aircraft, or CCAs, with plans to begin fielding these systems operationally next year. This represents a major transition from testing to real-world deployment. The service intends to purchase at least one thousand CCA fighter drones, which will initially fly alongside upgraded F-22 Raptors before integrating with F-35s. Two primary platforms are competing for this historic contract. General Atomics has its YFQ-42 Dark Merlin already in operational testing, while Anduril is offering the YFQ-44 Fury, originally designed as an aggressor drone to simulate adversary fighters like China's J-20. The Air Force has indicated it may order both platforms. These drones are expected to cost under twenty-five million dollars per airframe.

In related news, the Department of Defense is advancing autonomous drone swarm capabilities through an initiative called Swarm Forge. DefenseScoop reports the Pentagon plans a major demonstration event in June dubbed the Crucible, where industry will showcase multi-vendor drone swarm technology operating simultaneously. The focus emphasizes heterogeneous swarming, meaning different platforms from different vendors operating under unified command. These swarms must include automatic target recognition and machine learning capabilities while maintaining meaningful human command oversight.

On the international front, the United States Army is standardizing counter-drone technology with allied nations. According to Stars and Stripes, the Pentagon reached an agreement with the United Kingdom to establish common standards for how counter-drone systems share information. This coalition approach will expand to five additional nations in coming weeks, enabling dozens of allies to purchase from a standardized technology pool as early as summer.

Commercial drone operations continue expanding. Wing and Walmart are scaling up drone delivery services, soon reaching forty million Americans, while autonomous cargo drone technology is advancing rapidly with companies like Airev presenting battery-electric platforms.

The convergence of military artificial intelligence integration, international standardization efforts, and expanding commercial operations signals an inflection point for unmanned systems across defense and civilian sectors.

Thank you for tuning in to Drone Technology Daily. Join us next week for more developments in unmanned systems. This has been a Quiet Please production. Check us out at quietplease.ai.


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