The Army's New Approach to Buying AI, Drones, and Robotics
During the Association for the United States Army (AUSA) 2025 annual meeting and exhibition, Secretary of the Army Dan Driscoll's opening keynote presentation provided a reality check on the type of technologies their soldiers are using on a daily basis.
While AUSA's annual exhibition featured some of the most advanced ground vehicles, drones, and weapons systems available on the market, Driscoll said that most of the technologies the Army uses on a daily basis were developed 30 years ago. According to Driscoll, "if small arms defined the 20th century, drones will define the 21st."
Listen to this episode of the Aerospace & Defense Technology podcast to hear selected portions from Driscoll’s AUSA 2025 opening keynote . In his keynote, Driscoll discusses the Army’s transition to a drone-centric future and an acquisition paradigm reshaped by Silicon Valley principles. He details how the service will contract with startups, accelerate AI/robotics/drone prototyping, and shift from multi-year procurements to lean, iterative delivery in months and thousands rather than years and billions.
Subscribe to the Aerospace & Defense Technology podcast on Apple Podcasts or Spotify .
Sponsored by: Siemens and PTC Arena

Top Stories
INSIDERRF & Microwave Electronics
FAA to Replace Aging Network of Ground-Based Radars
PodcastsDefense
A New Additive Manufacturing Accelerator for the U.S. Navy in Guam
NewsSoftware
Rewriting the Engineer’s Playbook: What OEMs Must Do to Spin the AI Flywheel
Road ReadyPower
2026 Toyota RAV4 Review: All Hybrid, All the Time
INSIDERDefense
F-22 Pilot Controls Drone With Tablet
INSIDERRF & Microwave Electronics
L3Harris Starts Low Rate Production Of New F-16 Viper Shield
Webcasts
Energy
Hydrogen Engines Are Heating Up for Heavy Duty
Energy
SAE Automotive Podcast: Solid-State Batteries
Power
SAE Automotive Engineering Podcast: Additive Manufacturing
Aerospace
A New Approach to Manufacturing Machine Connectivity for the Air Force
Software
Optimizing Production Processes with the Virtual Twin



