Ukraine gave its drone-killer system an “app store”—with one rule no add-on can break

Engineers can add almost anything, but nothing is allowed to fire a weapon by itself.
ukraine gave its drone-killer system app store—with one rule add-on can break · post screen ukraine's i-see anti-drone new add-ons menu open db_image_1339 news ukrainian reports
The screen of Ukraine’s I-SEE anti-drone system, with its new add-ons menu open. Screenshot: Defence Blog
Ukraine gave its drone-killer system an “app store”—with one rule no add-on can break

A Ukrainian company that builds a system for shooting down enemy drones has opened it up so outside engineers can upgrade it themselves, a change that could let battlefield defenses keep pace with fast-changing threats, Defence Blog reported. The system, called I-SEE, now comes with open software tools that let outsiders bolt on new weapons and features. Until now, only its maker could change it.

Russia continues to fire long-range drones at Ukrainian residential areas and civilian infrastructure every night. This pushed Ukraine to build cheap, fast-scaling defenses and to keep changing them as the threat shifts. 

A system that spots and stops drones

The I-SEE platform finds, tracks, and shoots down drones, with a central program that picks targets and decides when to fire, Defence Blog reported. Right now, it uses net guns. A net gun fires a weighted net that tangles a drone's blades and brings it down. The company is testing gun turrets and signal jammers in the lab. It says small interceptor drones — which ram or blow up enemy drones — are coming soon. Before this, only I-SEE's own team could add anything new.

A Volna Kupol Garant system burns.
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Three ways outsiders can build on it

The system opens up in three ways, Defence Blog said. First, a data connection lets other software pull what I-SEE sees — where drones are, what they are, and live video — into the maps and command screens a unit already uses. Second, a starter kit makes hooking in so simple that one engineer can do it in an evening. Third, and most important, outsiders can write a small add-on and drop it in. It might add a new screen, mark up the video, or run a brand-new weapon.

A Ukrainian soldier is loading a ground robotic system. Source: The General Staff
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Ukraine built 90% of its newly authorized weapons itself. Year ago, it was 70%

The machine keeps the trigger

Spotting drones, picking targets, and deciding to fire all stay inside a protected core. Every add-on runs in a sealed-off space with limited reach. An add-on that controls a weapon can aim and fire that weapon on command. It cannot override a targeting choice or shoot on its own. If an add-on crashes, it fails alone, and the rest keeps running.

Why it matters on the front

Drones change faster than armies can buy new gear. A system that reached the front half a year ago can already meet drones that nobody expected. I-SEE's bet is to let units, integrators, or hired engineers build the fix in days, not months. Ukraine has raced to field cheap drone-killers, from net guns to automated turrets and interceptor drones.

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