Sunday, 19 July 2026

I'm a mom of 2 kids. Sending voice memos to Claude helps me organize my life.

Erin Kee is pictured.
Erin Kee says voice memos to Claude has helped her as a working mom.
  • Erin Kee is a mom of two kids under four. She sends at least one long voice memo to Claude a day.
  • "I don't think moms need any more information," Kee said. "We actually need a system."
  • Kee uses Claude to manage her schedule and aggregate parenting advice.

This as-told-to essay is based on a conversation with Erin Kee, the 38-year-old founder of Kee To Wellness and writer of The Mental Load Memo. She also works in tech sales and lives in Austin. It's been edited for length and clarity.

I have a 3.5-year-old daughter named Claire and 1.5-year-old son named Liam.

We're in the thick of things right now. We're transitioning to a new school in the fall, as her old school is closing. It's summer, so we're doing swim lessons. My husband just started a new job. There's a lot of stuff happening in the calendar that needs to be managed.

I didn't realize that going from one to two kids felt like going from one to four. We had to get a lot more granular on how we were going to be managing our week.

Being able to link that into an AI automation has been really helpful. I'm not trying to spend my whole weekend doing logistics. I actually want to enjoy myself as a working mom.

I feel like every single week I'm finding a new way to use it.

In the beginning, I was messing around with ChatGPT and learning what I could do there. About a year ago, I started leaning more into Claude, which I think has way more functionality with the projects and automations.

One of the things I love the most that I've set up is an automated Sunday briefing. Every Sunday morning, it scours all of my calendars: from work, from my personal Gmail, from my wellness email. It gives me a briefing of what I can expect for the week and if anything is overlapping or needs to be rescheduled.

Erin Kee is pictured.
Kee has Claude send her a Sunday briefing with her week's schedule.

It gets things I didn't realize, like a birthday party I need to get a present for. It'll even read those birthday invites and be like: "This is for a 4-year-old boy, here are some Amazon ideas that would be delivered by that day."

I also have a family briefing that gets sent to my husband and me. That includes our meal plans for the week. I have it connected to my Skylight recipe box, and it'll build a grocery list for me.

Why I send Claude multi-minute voice notes

I'm a big voice-noter. My friends and I voice note all day long. It's helpful when you have something more detailed to say.

I do a long voice note into Claude at least once a day. If I have a lot of feedback, or I have an idea and I need to get it out, I feel like it's easier than typing.

Most of the time, I'm doing voice-to-text, so I can go in and edit some of the words to make sure everything is correct. I can talk to it for three to five minutes sometimes. It depends on what I'm building.

There was a weird rash on my son. I'll open Claude up, sometimes add photos, and use voice-to-text. I'll be at my desk, I'll be walking around, I'll be in my car. If it hits my brain, I'm like: "I've got to get it out right now."

Sometimes, my daughter is like, "Who are you talking to?" She's aware of FaceTime. My mom, stepdad, and brothers all live up in Dallas. I think she thinks if I'm talking into my phone, it's FaceTime, and she gets to talk to Meemaw.

Sometimes she gets confused, and I have to let her know: "We're not on FaceTime, no one's here, I'm just talking to my phone."

Erin Kee is pictured.
Kee's daughter sometimes misinterprets voice memos to Claude as FaceTime calls with relatives.

I'm struggling with getting her to sleep in her room at the moment. We've been trying to figure out different ways to get her to sleep up there.

I gave Claude: "She's starting a new school in August, and we have these different trips coming up." It said: "It's summer, she's going to bed later, so this makes sense. Over the next six weeks leading up to school, here are some ways you can optimize it. Maybe try: 'You can sleep in our bed during school nights, but on Friday night, you need to sleep in your own bed.'"

I told Claude to research a bunch of parenting experts like Dr. Becky and pull in tips on what people are doing in similar situations. We have a transition plan: "Mom will sleep in your bed one night, Dad will sleep in your bed the next night, and then moving forward, you're going to sleep in your own bed all the time."

There's so much information out there. I don't think moms need any more information. We don't need more things on our to-do list. Every time I get on the internet, it's: I need to be doing this with my kid, I need to be doing gentle parenting, I need to be building resilient children.

We actually need a system. How do we build and optimize a system that is taking things off their plate, and not adding more? That's what I'm thinking about as I automate.

Read the original article on Business Insider


from Business Insider https://ift.tt/7f5DPjw

Saturday, 18 July 2026

A data center bathhouse? Architects are rethinking what AI infrastructure owes its neighbors.

A concept design of a pink data center that also acts as a bathhouse.
Forma's "Pink Thermal Baths" imagines an underground data center that transfers the heat it emits to a public bathhouse above ground.
  • Generative AI has sparked a race among hyperscalers to build large data centers at high speed.
  • Some facilities are being built near communities, attracting opposition from concerned residents.
  • Architects are designing data centers that could benefit local neighborhoods.

A data center goes up in the middle of a California desert oasis, and in return, a nearby community gets a 32,000-square-foot bathhouse where people lounge in pools warmed by subterranean servers.

Forma, a New York-based architecture studio, designed the "Pink Thermal Baths" concept in 2021, before generative AI ignited a race to build computing facilities across America.

Miroslava Brooks, a founding partner of Forma, told Business Insider the concept wasn't meant to be a blueprint for turning hyperscale AI campuses into spas. Instead, it asks a question that has become more urgent as computing complexes pop up near residential neighborhoods: What can a data center give back to the place that hosts it?

"I really think that the first question is, what does this building give back? And that has to go beyond just energy and the data," Brooks said.

The cloud is getting harder to ignore

Data centers aren't new. Before frontier AI model labs, they've supported banks, websites, streaming services, and cloud storage.

Thomas McGoldrick, a managing director at Gensler who has designed data centers for about 20 years, remembers when they were treated as "back-of-house" facilities supporting individual businesses.

"Now, the transfer of data becomes more and more important," he said. "It's become part of our strategic infrastructure."

A Business Insider analysis found that by the end of 2025, more than 1,400 data centers had been built or approved across the US.

An aerial view showing homes next to a data center.
Virginia has become a hotbed of data centers, with some facilities being built near residential communities.

Some data centers are being developed near homes. A 2024 Virginia study found that 29% of operational data center properties were within 200 feet of residentially zoned land and said neighborhood impacts could increase as suitable land grows scarcer.

Residents have raised issues about constant noise, water use, and pressure on electricity bills.

A March Gallup poll found 71% of US adults opposed building an AI data center in their local area, including 48% who "strongly oppose" one.

The scale of data centers and the opposition around them have pushed architects into a debate over whether design can reduce those burdens or merely camouflage them.

Making gray boxes fit in

Gensler, a San Francisco-based architecture firm, has multiple hyperscaler clients, including Microsoft, and works with developers building for major cloud companies.

McGoldrick said those clients prioritize speed to market, scale, access to power, and buildings that can adapt as computing equipment changes.

"They're all trying to get their product out there as fast as they can to make their business grow as best they can," he said.

Within those constraints, Gensler tries to make data centers more than blank, industrial boxes. One approach, McGoldrick said, is to treat them like an "office building that houses computers."

For one complex, Gensler repurposed an old call center campus into a 1 million-square-foot computing facility.

Data center building
Gensler designed a Corten-steel data center that blends in with the local environment.

The firm used Corten steel to complement the earthy textures of the local landscape and, through efficient planning, added a one-acre public park.

McGoldrick said the firm often starts with a repeatable prototype, then adjusts the materials and layout for each site.

Beyond aesthetics, data centers have faced increased scrutiny from communities for their energy use and noise. McGoldrick said there are limits to what architects can address.

"There are only so many things that we could control in that environment," McGoldrick said. "So we're openly honest about what we are doing and what we're seeing in other communities."

A data center that gives back

Arup, a UK-based architecture and engineering firm, is exploring how the standardized data center box could change when brought into a city.

Rachel Atthis, an Arup director, said the traditionally long, low building may need a smaller footprint and more height, scaling multiple stories. Bringing a data center into town, she said, means architects have to "turn it on its end."

Arup associate director Marco Mugnai said acoustic screens, landscaped buffers, and changes in site topography can address noise issues.

The firm has also imagined data centers that repurpose structures, such as redundant offshore oil rigs, or pair with tomato farms that use their waste heat.

Concept image of a data center from the future.
Arup imagines data centers that can contribute to local farming.

"I suppose it's about giving back," Atthis said. "I think every building in some way should do that."

Some of the ideas require participation from local governments and developers to build supporting infrastructure, such as district heating networks. Security and backup-power requirements also mean some of Arup's more ambitious concepts may remain years away, Atthis said.

Forma's Pink Thermal Baths makes a similar proposition. Rather than a linear system, in which electricity enters and heat is expelled, Brooks, the Forma founding partner, imagines a "circular model" that turns excess heat into a public use.

A pool built above a data center.
Forma's "Pink Thermal Baths" imagines an underground data center that heats a public bathhouse above.

"A successful data center," she said, would operate across "the ecology, the infrastructure, and the culture or civicness."

When design isn't enough

Marina Otero Verzier, an architect and Harvard Graduate School of Design lecturer, has explored another use for server heat.

Her "Computational Compost" project channels heat generated from a computer into a vermicomposting system, where worms and microorganisms thrive, creating fertile compost for a local garden.

Otero cautioned that reusing heat is not a complete solution.

"I don't think it's enough just to reuse the heat, because the heat is already a waste product," she said.

Parks, lower-carbon materials, and shared heating systems can improve data centers, Otero said, but "it's just not enough."

Fertile soil
"Computational Compost" proposes a computer that provides heat for fertile soil.

She proposed challenging the data center blueprint itself, raising questions about whether every type of data must be immediately available, whether it requires round-the-clock operations, and whether companies' competitive demands should determine how community resources are expended.

This could mean designing facilities for different "ecologies of data," she said — hot, cold, private, temporary — rather than defaulting to the same high-security, always-on model. It could also mean starting with what a community needs, rather than reorganizing housing, energy, and other local infrastructure around a data center.

"The needs of OpenAI, Google, Meta are not the needs of the majority of the world," Otero said. "They are the needs of those companies and their owners."

Read the original article on Business Insider


from Business Insider https://ift.tt/6rQ1OAj

Friday, 17 July 2026

Asia's chip darlings are getting crushed after a blockbuster run

Stock market information displayed at the Taiwan Stock Exchange Corp. headquarters in Taipei, Taiwan.
Asia's biggest AI chip winners are tumbling as a once-relentless rally shows signs of cracking.
  • Asia's AI chip rally is unraveling as investors balk at sky-high valuations and rising market volatility.
  • Japan's Kioxia has lost half its value since peaking after a blockbuster AI-fueled stock surge.
  • South Korea is cracking down on speculative trading after AI chip stocks fueled a market frenzy.

Asia's chip makers have been on a monster AI-fueled rally this year.

But after months of relentless gains, some of the region's biggest winners are tumbling as investors question lofty valuations and South Korea moves to rein in speculative trading in one of this year's hottest stock markets.

Nowhere is the reversal more striking than at Japan's Kioxia.

The memory chipmaker was the second-best-performing non-US stock in the MSCI All Country World Investable Market Index in the first half of the year, soaring 631%. Last month, it became Japan's most valuable listed company.

That momentum has unraveled quickly.

Kioxia shares plunged 16% on Friday following an overnight sell-off in US-listed memory stocks. The stock has halved since its June peak, wiping about 30 trillion yen, or roughly $185 billion, off its market value.

The sell-off spread across the region on Friday.

Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co., the world's largest contract chipmaker, fell over 5% despite reporting blockbuster second-quarter earnings on Thursday, with profits surging 77% from a year earlier.

South Korea's market was closed on Friday, but Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix have already fallen roughly one-third from their peaks this year. SK Hynix's Nasdaq-listed shares closed 14% lower on Thursday.

The weakness followed South Korea's decision to tighten rules on single-stock leveraged exchange-traded funds after weeks of sharp market swings. Regulators said the measures were aimed at cooling excessive speculation.

South Korea had been one of the world's hottest equity markets this year, with the rally fueled in part by heavy retail participation and leveraged bets concentrated in AI-related names.

Top economist and former PIMCO CEO Mohamed El-Erian said South Korean authorities face a delicate balancing act: tackling inflation while heading off excessive financial volatility that could trigger "disorderly deleveraging."

"How this plays out over the coming weeks is worth watching: It's not an easy mix to manage, and the latter, if mismanaged, could have some cross-border spillovers," he wrote on X on Thursday.

Read the original article on Business Insider


from Business Insider https://ift.tt/IamKkSt

Thursday, 16 July 2026

Figma's design lead says this is what candidates should do to keep his attention during hiring interviews

Noah Levin from Figma
Figma's product design VP, Noah Levin, said he expects more from candidates in the AI era.
  • Figma's product design VP said there's one key difference in how he hires designers at the company now.
  • Noah Levin wants potential hires to use AI tools to produce several realistic, interactive prototypes.
  • But that doesn't mean they can just "AI slop a bunch of prototypes," Levin said.

Figma's design boss said product design candidates need to do more to keep him interested during interviews.

Noah Levin told Business Insider on Thursday that AI tools now allow product designers to create polished, interactive prototypes, and that it's raised the bar for what he expects from potential hires. Levin has been the vice president of product design at the San Francisco-based tech company for more than eight years.

He said that a decade ago, it was hard to find designers who could "produce an idea that really felt like the real product," largely because of their lack of technical know-how. Before AI, it would have taken designers too much effort to produce 10 interactive, working design prototypes, and the effort would not have been worth their time.

"What's changed a lot is that AI has made it possible to prototype your ideas in record time without technical knowledge and detail," Levin said.

So he now expects every job candidate to be able to express their designs in the "highest fidelity possible." Fidelity in user interface and experience refers to the level of detail and accuracy in design prototypes.

Levin said he wants to see design candidates be up to date with the latest AI tools, saying, "We like to see that people have experimented with new tools and that they're not lagging behind in how they work."

That does not mean that they can simply "AI slop a bunch of prototypes" and showcase them in the interview process, he said. The role of a designer — to solve user problems and have good craft — has not changed, so he said he needs to see candidates bring themselves into their work and "not just rely on the default outputs."

In fact, he likes it when his potential hires show him product prototypes that failed and were discarded.

"The first idea you put out, you might get lucky, maybe that was the right one," he said. "But the reality is behind every configuration launch this year that we showed, there were hundreds of discarded ideas, prototypes, and mock-ups. And so I think people don't show that enough."

Before joining the team at Figma, Levin led the UX team at ClassPass and worked as a designer at Google.

Levin's comments come as the emergence of several AI platforms has made it easy for amateurs to design websites and products. Vibe coding platforms like Lovable, Base44, and Emergent are easy to use and deliver polished-looking products in minutes with simple prompts.

Other, more traditional design platforms, like Canva and Wix, have also introduced AI-powered tools to make design more accessible to the masses.

Figma's leadership has said on multiple occasions that AI-generated design will not diminish the value of designers. Figma CEO and cofounder Dylan Field said in June that AI designs can largely be considered "average," and now is a great time for designers to test boundaries and be creative.

He said in October last year that his company's tools won't replace the work of a world-class designer, but will help remove the "drudgery" of the design process.

Read the original article on Business Insider


from Business Insider https://ift.tt/LE3Yip9

Wednesday, 15 July 2026

Welcome to the era of rewards cards relationship gaps

Wedding cake topper on a credit card

Louis Fawcett's wife doesn't love the credit card points game like he does, though she does enjoy the perks — when she actually uses them. They make most of their purchases with two elite American Airlines cards to build up loyalty points and status. Whenever it comes time to do something points-related, Fawcett's wife just hands him her phone. "She's a more laid-back person," Fawcett, 53, says.

She'll join him in American's Admirals Club, which she jokingly calls the "poor people's lounge," but she skips out on the "rich people's" Centurion Lounge, which Fawcett can now access thanks to a recently acquired Amex Platinum card. (The reluctance is partly due to the $50 guest fee.) She doesn't always take advantage of the American benefits, either — a few years ago, Fawcett upgraded to first class on a family trip from South Carolina to Hawaii. His wife opted to sit in the main cabin with the kids. "'That's your choice,' I said, 'but don't tell me I'm snooty because I'm in first class when you have to walk past me to go back in the tiny seats,'" he says.

As rewards credit cards have become more lucrative — not to mention more expensive and complicated — these kinds of inter-relationship divides are increasingly common. Consumers have become amateur point strategists in an attempt to maximize bonuses, accumulate points, and jump on every opportunity to make their premium plastic worth it. Taking full advantage can require spreadsheets and deep dives into the fine print to identify exactly which purchase should go on which card and make sure no rewards-related stone is left unturned.

This has created a new financial dynamic in many households, where one partner effectively becomes the points point person while the other opts out (or opts for a different approach). This mismatch can reveal stark differences in how couples think about money and require some delicate negotiations over how to spend or save.

Fawcett's wife has been the one to bend on his rewards obsession. On a recent trip to the Dominican Republic, she joined him in the lap of first-class luxury, while the kids were left to fight it out with the riffraff in coach.


People tend to seek out partners who are their financial opposites, explains Scott Rick, an associate professor of marketing at the University of Michigan and the author of "Tightwads and Spendthrifts: Navigating the Money Minefield in Real Relationships." Big spenders are attracted to penny-pinchers, money maximizers who want to constantly comparison shop to satisficers who are generally fine with good enough.

"If you encounter someone with your problem, I think it can really be a turnoff, because it just really reminds you of your own stuff," Rick says. "The mismatch, at first, can be really intoxicating and intriguing."

If one partner really wants to maximize points, is it about the points or is it about feeling like you have enough for the future?

Couples wind up with what Rick and other researchers coined a "fatal (fiscal) attraction," a reference to the 1987 film. Once people settle into relationships and real life begins, the exhilaration of a partner's novel approach to money can wear off and the cracks start to show. It's one thing when the free spirit in the equation is spending a bit too much on Amazon when a pair first starts dating, it's another thing when finances are intertwined, and the cheapskate starts worrying that shopping habit could make it hard to keep up on the mortgage.

"The stakes can sort of ratchet up on you," Rick says.

Misalignment on rewards cards isn't nearly as grave as, say, one partner thinking another's spending is a terrible influence on their kids, but it can point to underlying issues or bigger differences.

"A lot of times, these asymmetries or this tension between partners isn't about the money, it's more about what it represents," says Jenny Olson, an assistant marketing professor at Indiana University's Kelley School of Business. Perhaps for one person, money represents freedom and fun, and to another, it's more about security and stability. These conflicting goals and values can raise deeper emotional questions. "If one partner really wants to maximize points, is it about the points or is it about feeling like you have enough for the future?" she says.

My Business Insider colleague, Jane Zhang, confesses she's a points fanatic — she's got a notes app cheat sheet on which cards she should use for which purchases. Her husband's not so convinced these gymnastics are worth it. If it were up to him, they'd probably have one card. They've found common ground where they can. He doesn't put up a fuss if she takes a beat to decide which card to use when they're out. She recognizes that it's OK for him not to be rewards-maximizing every little thing. "I just trust that it's worth it, whereas he's like, 'I don't trust that it's worth every inconvenience,'" she says.

Even two points enthusiasts can find themselves at odds — especially when it comes to where loyalty lies. That's the case for Matthew Williams and his husband in San Francisco. Williams, who's originally from Arizona, and his family have long been dedicated to Southwest Airlines, and he's had a card from them for years. His husband is a "big points guy," but also a "United guy." After the pair met in 2018, they were so attached to their respective airlines and rewards setups that they flew separately to the same destinations.

The scheme worked until it didn't: In December 2022, Williams got ensnared in Southwest's operational meltdown on a visit to his parents. He had to sprint across the airport to get their apartment keys to his husband after his Southwest flight was canceled. "After that, I was like, 'This really is not a great system,'" he says. "We ended that after that fiasco."

He still has the Southwest card, but he also got a Chase Sapphire card that's less restrictive, so he can book whatever — including United, which his husband is still sticking with.


When couples find themselves in a bit of a rewards card standoff, they should interrogate the "why," says Megan McCoy, a financial therapist and associate professor at Kansas State University. It might be a personality difference — one person is more detail-oriented, or maybe one side thinks the gamification aspect is fun.

"If someone's anxious, then the partner can have empathy around that anxiety," she says. "If it's from a gamification, I love to win, I want to beat the credit card company, maybe there's other outlets for it."

Get to a point that you can win over someone's heart in the game.

As with many things in a relationship, simply talking can go a long way. Many people assume that any money-related conversations will be negative, so they come into them angry and anxious or put them off until there's a problem.

"Couples expect talking about money to be worse than it is," Olson says.

People don't need to know everything about their partners' financial habits, Rick warns. They don't need to be combing through financial statements to scrutinize each line item and make sure every point and card was used to perfection. It is good to have a sense of the broad strokes, though. "It's more about maintaining this balance between the economics and a functioning relationship," he says.

Chris Hutchins, the creator and host of the "All the Hacks" podcast, tells me he hears "all the time" about rewards card-related relationship conflicts, including in his own household. Like many savvy optimizers, he sometimes opens up credit cards in his wife's name to take advantage of sign-up and referral bonuses. One time, he forgot to keep her in the loop (or she at least says he did), and she was surprised to find out about a new card in her name. "Now, I make sure there's an actual conversation," he says.

Hutchins also notes that disputes can arise not only when accumulating rewards points but also when using them. One person wants to stay at a certain hotel or fly a certain airline to use points, while the other would rather do the thing they want to do, regardless of what their memberships dictate.

"One of the things that points does that is frustrating is that it locks you into thinking that you can only travel in a certain way," he says. The family really wants to go to Hawaii, but they've only got the points to go to Phoenix for free.

Credit card companies have done a very good job of convincing us that racking up points and gaming the system are worth it, and so rewards cards are yet another relationship battlefield. The best way to approach it is for people to communicate— and for the superfan to take responsibility for keeping everything straight. Hutchins also suggests a novel way to convince the skeptics: take them on a lavish, points-paid trip.

"Get to a point that you can win over someone's heart in the game," he says.


Emily Stewart is a senior correspondent at Business Insider, writing about business and the economy.

Read the original article on Business Insider


from Business Insider https://ift.tt/qa3dnth

Tuesday, 14 July 2026

AI data centers are rising across America. Are you one of the workers building them?

Data Center under construction.
Data centers are rapidly cropping up across the US.
  • AI is fueling a massive data center construction boom across the United States and beyond.
  • Tech giants like Meta and Google are investing billions in these facilities to power AI.
  • If you are someone working to build an AI data center, or recently did, Business Insider wants to hear from you.

Artificial intelligence is driving an unprecedented data center construction boom.

Tech giants like Meta, Microsoft, Google, and Amazon are investing billions in new data centers across the US and around the world to power the next generation of AI technologies.

The rapid expansion has also turned AI data centers into a hot-button issue, with critics raising concerns about energy demand, water consumption, and the strain on local infrastructure.

At the same time, the buildout of AI data centers has also created thousands of blue-collar jobs for construction workers and other skilled tradespeople who are helping to bring these massive facilities to life.

Business Insider is reporting on what it's like to build these data centers — and wants to hear from the workers making it happen.

Whether you're a construction worker, engineer, electrician, pipefitter, plumber, ironworker, HVAC technician, welder, or another skilled tradesperson helping build — or who has recently helped build — AI data centers, Business Insider wants to hear from you.

Fill out the survey to share your experience:

Read the original article on Business Insider


from Business Insider https://ift.tt/o5wqAPF

Russia said Ukrainians used balloons, trailers, and drones to sneak AI attack quadcopters deep into its country

A Ukrainian soldier looks up at an FPV drone.
A Ukrainian soldier flies a first-person-view drone in November 2025.
  • The FSB said on Monday that Ukraine sneaked drones deep into Russia to bombard two airfields.
  • The drones were sent in via balloon and larger drones, then transported by trailer, the FSB said.
  • The Russian intelligence service said it seized 24 AI-enhanced attack drones and two ground stations.

Russian intelligence said on Monday that it stopped two major Ukrainian drone attacks on its airfields, describing a clandestine smuggling operation involving trailers, balloons, and fixed-wing drones.

State media outlet TASS reported that the Federal Security Service, or FSB, said the targets of the Ukrainian operation were the Ukrainka military airfield in the Amur region and the Shagol airfield in Chelyabinsk.

Both airfields are hundreds of miles away from Ukrainian territory; Amur is in the Far East and borders China, while Chelyabinsk is in the Urals.

Per TASS, the FSB said the Ukrainian operation began with fixed-wing drones and balloons dropping off first-person-view attack drones in Bryansk, a region bordering Ukraine.

Russian intelligence said the smaller drones were smuggled deeper into the country via car-towed trailers with false bottoms, loaded with household appliances as a ruse.

The drones were then prepared for attack in garages near the airfields, the FSB added.

The agency told TASS that it seized two ground control stations and 24 first-person-view drones equipped with Western-manufactured "neural control modules," which essentially provide onboard artificial intelligence.

Each attack drone was equipped with 1 kilogram of explosives, and the ground control stations were also "equipped with self-destruct devices continuing 250 grams of explosives each," the FSB said.

TASS reported that the first-person-view drones were equipped with small fragmentation balls on their sides, as well as a mix of incendiary, anti-armor, and high-explosive payloads.

Ukraine's GUR intelligence service and defense ministry did not immediately respond to requests for comment sent outside regular business hours by Business Insider.

The details reported by Russia echo those of Operation Spiderweb, a shock Ukrainian drone attack last June that saw Kyiv's forces using trucks to smuggle dozens of small drones near four Russian airfields.

The strikes drew global attention for demonstrating the vulnerability of airfields to drone attacks. Ukraine said it destroyed or damaged over 40 warplanes, including Russia's hard-to-replace strategic bombers.

Artificial intelligence has also emerged as a key feature on Ukrainian and Russian war drones. Onboard AI algorithms allow a drone to identify targets and, in some cases, decide to engage them.

When combined with the ability to guide the drone to its target, that AI could essentially form the foundation for a group of drones to operate autonomously as a swarm.

It would also allow the drone to continue attacking while its radio signal to the human operator is jammed.

The FSB referred on Monday to the Ukrainian drones as part of a plan for "swarm drone attacks."

It also said that it confiscated communications devices used by the suspects transporting the drones to contact "Ukrainian handlers."

Ukraine's drone attack last year, Operation Spiderweb, involved several Russian drivers who delivered the uncrewed aircraft to the airfields. Kyiv said the drivers were unaware of the cargo they were carrying.

Read the original article on Business Insider


from Business Insider https://ift.tt/1gkzJvL

I'm a mom of 2 kids. Sending voice memos to Claude helps me organize my life.

Erin Kee says voice memos to Claude has helped her as a working mom. Erin Kee Erin Kee is a mom of two kids under four. She sends at least o...