Off-Prem

Edge + IoT

Microsoft's metaverse is for training autonomous drones

Project AirSim can allegedly run 'millions of flights in seconds'


Microsoft reckons its flight simulator platform could have autonomous drones trained up and in the sky faster than more traditional methods.

Project AirSim is built to train autonomous drones in real-world scenarios. Microsoft said it "can run through millions of flights in seconds" with drones "learning how to react to countless variables much like they would in the physical world."

Like Nvidia's Omniverse for building digital twins, Project AirSim offers 3D libraries of various environments and real-world locations. Places like New York City are plotted using Bing Maps and "other providers," and pre-trained models in Project AirSim can be used as starting points to build more customized digital drone pilots.

Simulations can be manually controlled by a pilot if required.

Also akin to Omniverse, Microsoft is using Project AirSim to talk up "the power of the industrial metaverse", said Microsoft Corporate VP for Business Incubations in Technology and Research, Gurdeep Pall.

"Autonomous systems will transform many industries and enable many aerial scenarios … But first we must safely train these systems in a realistic, virtualized world," Pall said. 

Microsoft said use cases "are almost limitless," and that Project AirSim can be used to train drones for inspections of infrastructure, mines, farmland, package delivery and even people delivery in flying taxis.

Airtonomy, which builds software that analyzes drone data for inspections, was an early tester of Project AirSim, using it to train drones to inspect wind turbines. Bell also tested Project AirSim, using it to train its drones to land autonomously in less-than-ideal conditions. 

AirSim is dead, long live Project AirSim

Project AirSim isn't Microsoft's first attempt at building a virtual environment for testing autonomous drones: That honor falls to AirSim, launched in 2017

Built in Unreal Engine and later ported to Unity, AirSim is open source and exposes its APIs so developers can interact with simulated vehicles programmatically. Like its successor, AirSim is able to simulate weather conditions and other scenarios to model real-world scenarios.

Microsoft said AirSim was a popular research tool, but one that required a high level of expertise in machine learning and coding. Project AirSim is the end-to-end platform version with added out-of-the-box features that "expand the universe of people who can start training autonomous aircraft," Microsoft said. 

With Project AirSim now in limited preview the original AirSim is being archived, Microsoft said. While still usable, AirSim won't receive any updates, effective immediately. Those interested in Project AirSim can visit its website to sign up for more info or get on the preview waitlist. ®

Send us news
5 Comments

Where does Microsoft's NPU obsession leave Nvidia's AI PC ambitions?

While Microsoft pushes AI PC experiences, Nvidia is busy wooing developers

Microsoft eggheads say AI can never be made secure – after testing Redmond's own products

If you want a picture of the future, imagine your infosec team stamping on software forever

In AI agent push, Microsoft re-orgs to create 'CoreAI – Platform and Tools' team

Nad lad says 30 years of change happening in 3 years ... we're certainly feeling the compression of time

Microsoft tests 45% M365 price hikes in Asia-Pacific to see how much you enjoy AI

Won’t say if other nations will be hit, but will ‘listen, learn, and improve’ as buyers react – so far with anger

AI spending spree continues as Microsoft commits $80B for 2025

With those whopping returns who could argue with the premis... oh wait

UK businesses eye AI as the cheaper, non-whining alternative to actual staff

Rising costs blamed, although any excuse to do more with less

Microsoft sues 'foreign-based' cyber-crooks, seizes sites used to abuse AI

Scumbags stole API keys, then started a hacking-as-a-service biz, it is claimed

How Windows got to version 3 – an illustrated history

With added manga and snark. What's not to like?

Microsoft, PC makers cut prices of Copilot+ gear in Europe, analyst stats confirm

Double-digit reduction only served to 'stimulate some interest'

UK unveils plans to mainline AI into the veins of the nation

Government adopts all 50 venture capitalist recommendations but leaves datacenter energy puzzle unsolved

Additional Microprocessors Decoded: Quick guide to what AMD is flinging out next for AI PCs, gamers, business

Plus: A peek at Nvidia's latest hype

Just as your LLM once again goes off the rails, Cisco, Nvidia are at the door smiling

Some of you have apparently already botched chatbots or allowed ‘shadow AI’ to creep in