NORRISTOWN, PA — Asylon announced a collaboration with NVIDIA to develop AI-powered analytics for autonomous robotic security systems, introducing a new monitoring capability expected to launch in 2026.
The system, called DroneIQ Overwatch, will be integrated into Asylon’s DroneIQ platform and is designed to analyze live video and operational data from robotic security units to identify anomalies and security events.
Asylon said the technology will serve as an initial layer of analysis, flagging potential issues for review by human operators while maintaining human oversight in decision-making.
The company’s robotic security systems are managed through DroneIQ and supported by a 24/7 Robotic Security Operations Center.
Damon Henry, chief executive officer of Asylon, said the system is intended to combine automated analysis with human review.
“The future of security is not humans versus AI — it’s humans augmented by robots and AI,” Henry said. “DroneIQ Overwatch represents our next step toward Physical AI, where intelligent machines operate in the real world while keeping a human in the loop.”
The platform uses NVIDIA computing technology across both onboard systems and cloud infrastructure.
Asylon said its robotic platforms use NVIDIA Jetson modules for on-device processing, while cloud-based GPU systems support data analysis, model management and updates.
The architecture is designed to enable real-time detection on devices while supporting broader analytics across multiple systems.
The collaboration is part of Asylon’s participation in the NVIDIA Inception program.
Asylon said it will present its robotic platforms and discuss DroneIQ Overwatch at the ISC West conference in Las Vegas.
The company provides robotic security services for enterprise, infrastructure and government clients using ground and aerial systems managed through its software platform.
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