Iván Hernández Dalas: Drones & Robotics AI Summit 2026: Entering the quantum era of autonomy
Heven AeroTech has developed the Z1 hydrogen drone for the defense industry. Source: IonQ Ghost Robotics’ crouching mechanical dog kicked off The Drones & Robotics AI Summit last month at Pillsbury’s New York offices. Watching CEO Gavin Kenneally present the company ‘s Vision 60 system and hearing about its hundreds of deployments with the U.S. military, everyone in the packed house buzzed with excitement. Physical AI has finally come of age. According to most estimates, venture and private equity investments in the space have exceeded $30 billion in the past 12 months, more than double last year’s activity. A lot has changed in the year since hosting the last summit: humanoid buzz, OpenClaw, and now autonomous weapons are reshaping warfare across the Middle East and Europe. The opportunities will only be amplified with advances in generative AI and the promise of quantum computing. Gavin Kenneally, CEO of Ghost Robotics, demonstrated the Vision 60 robotic dog at The Dr...