
Modular AI-Commanded Drones for Defence
Seeing Systems is building autonomous drone systems that can perceive, navigate, and act intelligently in complex real-world environments.
We're advancing autonomy through monocular vision, sensor fusion, and robust system design — drones that keep working where traditional systems fail, supported by an agentic stack that reduces operator cognitive load.
Our first product is an FPV-class drone built from the ground up with a modular hardware architecture. If we get the first platform right, we can move fast on everything else: larger airframes, longer range, new payloads, and new mission profiles without rebuilding the stack each time.
We were founded by brothers Matthew and Alexander Le Maitre. Matthew is a former Jane Street engineer and Cambridge CS graduate with a background in autonomous systems research. Alexander is a self-taught hardware engineer who has been building unmanned systems and military-grade electronics.
We're an early-stage, fast-moving team working at the intersection of robotics, perception, and real-world deployment. We iterate weekly. We test in real environments.
You'll work alongside our hardware team on the electronics that make our drones fly — schematics, PCB layouts, bring-up, bench testing, and field testing.
This isn't an internship where you'll be reading documentation in a corner. You'll have your own boards, your own scope, and your own bench. The PCBs you design will be populated, brought up, and flown by the team — sometimes in the same week.
You'll work directly with Alex and the wider hardware team on subsystems going into real airframes. You'll learn the full loop from blank schematic to a working board strapped to a drone in the field.
Seeing Systems is a small, NATO-focused defence startup, specialising in development of, and training on small unmanned aircraft systems (sUAS) and AI-enabled embedded swarm systems. We’ve worked with UK Commando Royal Marines, Estonian Military, Luxembourg Army, among others.
We are currently working with a US manufacturer to produce our next-generation one-way effector drone, along with our own control system, breaking the current 1:1 operator-to-drone ratio with a unique usability-first approach, allowing full swarm autonomy for pilots with no prior training or experience.