Integer in the News

Inside Unmanned Systems
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Predictive Autonomy and the Physics of Decision

In the evolving world of autonomous systems, one phrase is beginning to define the next chapter: predictive autonomy. It is the ability of a system not only to react to a situation but to anticipate future states, understand potential deviations, and guide decision-making accordingly. And at the leading edge of this development is Integer Technologies,

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In South Carolina The AI Revolution Isn’t Coming – It’s Already Underway

The green and brown cotton fields of Clarendon County may seem like a strange place for artificial intelligence, but that’s something Joe Maja is working to change. The South Carolina State University researcher is exploring ways that AI can help small farmers in the Palmetto State save time and money — through mechanisms like automated

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50 Fastest Growing Companies: No. 1, Integer Technologies

Columbia Business Monthly (Nov. 1, 2024) –The future of defense tech is being built right here in South Carolina. Integer Technologies, founded in 2021, identifies technology gaps within the U.S. Department of Defense, then works with university partners to quickly transition solutions from university labs into the hands of servicemen. The company is No. 1

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Tech Gumbo Podcast Features LSU and Integer Technologies Partnership

Check out the latest Tech Gumbo podcast to hear Greg Trahan, Director of Economic Development at LSU, and Duke Hartman, CEO of Integer Techologies, discuss the partnership between LSU and Integer Technologies LLC putting the latest research on autonomous vehicles into action to solve national security and industry challenges. “We’re trying to coordinate a fleet

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Where Are They Now? Integer Technologies

RICHLAND COUNTY, S.C. (July 30, 2024) – In a walk down Main Street in Columbia, South Carolina, you can take in the atmosphere of a thriving downtown community, ripe with cultural and lifestyle attractions, and the comingling of college student and business professional energies. But what you may not suspect is the impressive scale of

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U.S. Marine Corps Vet and USC alum tackles new frontiers with Integer Technologies

Semper Fi means always faithful. For 10 years, Midlands native Tristan Kyzer faithfully served his nation as an enlisted man in the U.S. Marine Corps. After leaving the Corps, he used the G.I. Bill to earn a bachelor’s and master’s degree in mechanical engineering from the University of South Carolina College of Engineering and Computing.

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$10 million research program aims to digitally replicate U.S. naval power and energy systems

The doomed Apollo 13 space mission was one of the first instances where the public understood that performing experiments in a simulation model could save a system. The three astronauts on board would never have survived if not for engineers who ran simulations and predicted a course of action that rescued the mission. Carolina Distinguished

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Two CEC professors awarded significant funding from the Office of Naval Research

College of Engineering and Computing faculty Roger Dougal and Yi Wang have been awarded a combined $14.75 million in funding from the U.S. Office of Naval Research (ONR) for their respective research. Both awards are for three years, and Columbia-based Integer Technologies will serve as subcontractor for both research projects. “Receiving funding from ONR is

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U.S. Navy-sponsored research aims to improve perception autonomous surface vessels

The goal of the research is to perform as well or better than a trained human captain in detecting and recognizing a wide variety of objects, obstacles and ships in all weather conditions, such as in the above labeled image at nearby Lake Murray. There is an increased need for unmanned and autonomous systems across

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