Palantir tech has been credited with helping the U.S. military
detect roadside bombs in Afghanistan as well as helping create a controversial license plate database for the State of California.
Directed and supported plans and initiatives that successfully apprehended several known criminals in Iraq Collaborative strategies that rapidly
detected roadside bombs and several IEDs, saving hundreds of lives.
Not exact matches
A former Army
bomb disposal officer and business development executive, Crossman has been instrumental in the development of numerous life - saving technologies, including the
bomb suit featured in the Oscar - winning movie, The Hurt Locker, Advanced Combat Helmet impact pads,
roadside bomb jammers used by the United States Marine Corp, and, most recently, helmet impact sensors used by U.S. Army and USMC to help
detect traumatic brain injury (TBI) in deployed soldiers and Marines.
These include unpiloted planes such as the MQ - 9 Reaper and its more famous predecessor, the MQ - 1 Predator, as well as ground vehicles such as the unmanned minitank Talon SWORDS (Special Weapons Observation Reconnaissance Detection System) and the multipurpose PackBot, which has been widely used to defuse
roadside bombs in Iraq and which can also gather intelligence and
detect snipers.