“When you combine performance capture that is autonomously driven with a lot of this biodata, it is going to change the way athletes train. It’s going to change the way that the military trains and operates, and it is going to change the way that we interact with the world,” said Todd Richmond, director of Advanced Prototype Development at the University of Southern California Institute for Creative Technologies.
Read the full article on i-HLS.com.
U.S. Military Looks to Solve Old Problems with New Solutions
Published: October 26, 2017
Category: News