- NCN | Examine This Environment | Tech + Future of Work
What Neros’ $35M raise reveals about the geopolitics of innovation, the remapping of manufacturing careers, and why Gen-N must shape—not just supply—the next era of defense technology.
NOVELCITY NEWS | Examine Environment
Published: April 21, 2025
By Wesley Phillippe | NOVELCITY News | Tech + Future of Work
In April 2025, El Segundo–based drone startup Neros Inc. closed a $35 million Series A round led by Vy Capital (UAE), with participation from Sequoia, D3, Interlagos, and Zipline’s Keller Rinaudo Cliffton. The company’s calling card? A major contract to supply 6,000 first-person-view (FPV) drones to Ukraine in just six months.
But while headlines focus on wartime deployment and geopolitical urgency, here at NOVELCITY News, we’re zooming out.
What Neros represents is not just a defense contractor story—it's a signal that a new kind of industrial-tech workforce is forming under our feet.
One shaped by open-source culture, geopolitics, automation, and the Gen-N mindset of design-driven equity.
1. FPV Drones Aren’t Just War Machines. They’re System Signals.
FPV drones grew out of maker culture, hobbyist engineering, and open-source collaboration. Now they’re powering military strategy and defense investment.
This transition from garage-builds to government contracts means we need new infrastructure:
Ethical supply chains
Privacy-safe chips
Civic-oriented drone tech (disaster relief, infrastructure inspection, climate monitoring)
Gen-N isn’t here just to power military tech. We’re here to reimagine the frameworks it’s built within—and broaden the vision beyond battlefield application.
From design to fabrication to software to field deployment, Neros is a vertically integrated operation, controlling every piece of the drone supply chain without dependency on foreign components.
This has three key implications:
Workforce Innovation: Building drones in-country means training new engineers, machinists, systems designers, and materials scientists. Gen-N should be building the skills ecosystems that match this new demand.
Post-COVID Supply Chain Strategy: After years of global instability, we're seeing a pivot from "just-in-time" to "just-in-nation"
Tech Sovereignty: Chip independence is no longer optional. Gen-N innovators must prioritize regenerative design, sovereign IP, and non-extractive hardware sourcing.
The drone boom is not just about engineers or venture capitalists. It’s about:
High-precision fabricators in LA
Regenerative supply chain managers in Detroit
Aerospace ethicists in DC
Cyber-physical systems teachers in Atlanta
Decentralized manufacturing hubs in Tulsa, Philly, and Nairobi
Neros—and companies like it—are quietly building the blueprint for a new era of middle-class tech work. The question is: Who gets access?
A few key challenges lie ahead:
Who gets trained to work on these new systems?
Are public school STEM pathways aligned with the needs of firms like Neros? Or are we building talent pipelines that still feed yesterday’s economy?
Who owns the IP—and the upside?
If Gen-N youth from South Central or South Chicago contribute to design, do they ever make it onto the patent, cap table, or royalty stream?
Where is the civilian application strategy?
Every military-use drone should have a dual-use counterpart focused on humanitarian aid, agriculture, disaster response, or conservation.
Launch DroneTech Fellowships
Fund community-based accelerator programs that train youth in drone design, coding, ethics, and deployment.
Create the Open Source Drone Standards Library
Standardize safety, privacy, and interoperability guidelines for open-source drone dev—led by youth researchers and coders.
Build Sovereign Tech Zones
Partner with cities and public universities to build vertically integrated supply chains—offering tax incentives and equity-sharing models for local ownership.
Define Equity Protocols in Defense Innovation
Codify how public investment in defense tech (via grants or contracts) must yield public return—via education, jobs, and community IP access.
Neros’ $35M isn’t just a funding round.
It’s a call to design the systems, skills, and supply chains that will define the next industrial revolution—one that won’t be built in boardrooms alone.
Gen-N is watching. We’re not just reading about drone startups.
We’re asking:
What values do these technologies encode?
Who is invited to the table?
And how can we shape an economy where tech doesn't just fly—it lifts people, too?
Let’s not just break into the aerospace sector.
Let’s build a new altitude for innovation.
Write With Us. Think With Us. Rebuild With Us.
Pitch your take on emerging tech, ethics, and equity:
ncnews@novelcitychamber.com | Subject: NCN Tech Contributor – Examine This
#GenN #DroneTechEquity #FutureOfWork #TechSupplyChain #NextCivInfrastructure #NerosFunding #IndustrialInnovation #NOVELCITYNews
- NOVELCITY NEWS | Education & Tech Trends
Examine This: When Zoom Glitched, It Exposed the Fragility of Our Digital Learning Futures: What a midweek outage says about platform dependency, digital infrastructure, and why Gen-N needs to rethink the architecture of education
NOVELCITY NEWS | Examine Environment
Published: April 16, 2025
By Wesley Phillippe | NOVELCITY News | Future of Education, Science & Technology
Let’s call it what it was:
a digital blackout with educational consequences.
Last Wednesday, Zoom—still one of the core platforms powering online classrooms, remote STEM labs, hybrid universities, and enterprise learning—went dark for several hours. No logins. No access. No explanation.
More than 59,000 people logged issues on DownDetector.
Classes were disrupted. Appointments canceled. Meetings vanished into the digital ether.
And just like that, the entire scaffolding of modern education wobbled.
At NOVELCITY News, we’re not here to panic.
We’re here to examine.
Zoom’s outage isn’t just a tech hiccup. It’s a systems-level signal. And for Gen-N—the builders, educators, technologists, and civic architects reimagining the future of learning—it’s a wake-up call about what happens when our classrooms depend on closed infrastructure we don’t control.
Over a decade into the virtual education revolution, why are we still so vulnerable to a single point of failure?
Imagine an entire public school going dark in a storm without a generator. That’s what happened to thousands of classrooms—except the “storm” was a Zoom server hiccup.
Where’s the redundancy layer for digital learning? Where’s the civic-owned Zoom alternative for public institutions? Where’s the legislation protecting instructional continuity?
Spoiler: it doesn’t exist.
Let’s go deeper: When a platform like Zoom crashes, it doesn’t just halt the tech—it halts the pedagogy.
Because for too many classrooms, Zoom is the curriculum delivery model.
When it fails, the learning doesn’t just pause—it disappears.
This is where Gen-N must lead the conversation:
"We don’t just need better apps. We need **digital education systems that treat learning as infrastructure—not as a feature behind a login screen.”
Let’s be real: when Zoom went down, there was no plan, no apology, no transparent root cause. Just a vague X post: “Service has now been restored.”
Meanwhile, community colleges lost entire lab sessions. Homeschool co-ops scrambled. Rural students already battling bandwidth deserts got pushed further behind.
This isn’t about outages.
This is about the absence of public accountability in private infrastructure.
If Zoom powers the public square of education, should it still get to operate like a private room?
Public schools should not depend on closed-source SaaS to deliver instruction. We need community-owned, interoperable learning environments—with built-in data privacy, offline failover, and equitable access.
We’ve got emergency drills for fires and earthquakes. Where are the protocols for synchronous platform collapse?
School boards need contingency protocols—and students need digital literacy training that teaches them to pivot across tools.
It’s time to treat Zoom, Google Meet, Canvas, and others like utilities, not “vendors.” That means accessibility standards, uptime guarantees, and accountability for every minute of lost classroom time.
This isn’t just about Zoom. It’s about the future architecture of knowledge transmission.
Who gets to build it? Who owns it? And who has the right to access it—even when the servers crash?
Because if education is a right, not a product—
then we can’t afford to outsource its operating system to corporations with no skin in the civic game.
The future of learning isn’t just about content.
It’s about control.
Control over the tools, the platforms, the access points, and the pedagogy.
Zoom going down was a glitch.
But our total dependence on platforms we don’t own?
That’s the real system error.
Let’s fix it—before the next outage takes the future offline again.
Are you building public learning tools, rethinking digital classrooms, or organizing around tech equity in education?
We want your stories.
Submit your pitch or article: ncnews@novelcitychamber.com
Subject line: NCN ARTICLE SUBMISSION – [Your Name] – Examine This
- NOVELCITY NEWS | Tech Trends
We Examined the 2025 Tech Trend Forecasts—Here’s What They’re Still Getting Wrong
Gen-N isn’t impressed by buzzwords. We want to know: Who’s accountable? Who’s included? And who’s brave enough to build beyond the binary?
Published: April 15, 2025 | By Wesley Phillippe | NOVELCITY News | Gen-N Insight Column
2025 is not the year for blind optimism or lazy futurism.
Yes—tech is moving fast. Yes—agentic AI, spatial computing, and ambient intelligence are cool.
But here at NOVELCITY News, especially under our Examine Environment, we’re asking tougher questions:
So, we cracked open Forbes’ “Disruptive Technology Trends to Watch in 2025” and ran it through our Gen-N filter. Spoiler: it’s missing more than just nuance.
1. Agentic AI? Great. But Who’s Holding the Reins?
Autonomous decision-making agents sound dope—until one makes a “goal-aligned” move that harms real people.
For Gen-N, agentic AI doesn’t just need autonomy. It needs alignment with human rights, local governance, and cultural nuance. Otherwise, it’s just automation with ambition.
2. AI Governance Sounds Boring—But It’s the Real Power Play
Forbes calls AI governance a way to “reduce ethical issues.” We call it infrastructure for digital democracy.
Real AI governance doesn’t live in whitepapers—it lives in audit logs, whistleblower protections, open APIs, and community oversight boards.
3. Multifunctional Robots Are Coming. And So Are Labor Displacement Lawsuits.
Don’t get us wrong—we love a good robotic breakthrough.
But when 80% of daily tasks are offloaded by 2030, who’s training the humans to do what’s next?
Where’s the economic transition plan for cashiers, caregivers, and contract workers?
Gen-N innovation means building the tech and the safety net.
4. Spatial Computing: Cool Tech, Real Risk
AR/VR is merging physical and digital worlds. But let’s not pretend it’s all magic.
When the metaverse meets monetization, surveillance, and hyper-personalized manipulation—we better have guardrails before goggles.
Ask yourself: Who designs the spatial economy—and who gets spatially excluded?
5. Post-Quantum Cryptography: The Sleeper Trend That Deserves the Mic
We’ll say it louder: Encryption is civil rights in code form.
Post-quantum crypto isn’t just for protecting state secrets—it’s for protecting your mom’s medical records, your protest group’s messages, and your creative IP from model scraping.
6. Neurological Enhancements: Pause Before We Plug In
We’re not against brain-computer interfaces or cognitive tech.
But before we upgrade minds like smartphones, where are the ethics committees with real teeth?
Gen-N demands policies that protect the body—and the soul—from becoming beta test subjects for billionaires.
7. Energy-Efficient Computing: Good Intentions, Hidden Contradictions
Sure, low-power chips and greener data centers are great.
But are these “sustainability wins” offset by the data deluge of algorithmic overconsumption?
We must ask: Is the energy saved greater than the energy we’re creating through unchecked AI proliferation?
8. Anti-Misinformation Tech Needs to Be Open-Sourced and People-Led
Enterprise-grade disinfo filters can’t be black boxes.
The war on misinformation isn’t just about detection—it’s about media literacy, decentralized validation, and restorative data justice.
We don’t just want tech that tells us what’s false.
We want systems that teach us how to examine truth in the first place.
9. Hybrid Computing Is the Next Infrastructure Layer—So Let’s Build It Right
Quantum + classical integration is legit exciting. But if it’s going to power simulations for climate, health, and national security—it needs to be accessible, auditable, and inclusive.
Because if only five governments and two megacorps own the quantum layer… we’ve just built a smarter monopoly.
10. Ambient Intelligence: Seamless? Yes. Surveillance? Also Yes.
AI that senses and responds without being asked? Welcome to the invisible UX era.
But let’s be real: what’s seamless for some is surveillance for others—especially for Black, Indigenous, undocumented, and low-income communities.
Ambient intelligence can’t be “smart” if it replicates the blind spots of biased systems.
Final Examine: What Gen-N Actually Cares About in 2025 Tech
Forget hype. We’re tracking:
In the Examine Environment, we don’t just report trends.
We interrogate systems, analyze implications, and trace tech all the way to the street level.
We’re Not Just Watching the Future. We’re Vetting It.
If your “disruption” doesn’t include safeguards, strategy, and societal repair—
it’s not innovation.
It’s just an expensive glitch.
#GenN #ExamineEverything #TechWithContext #BeyondTheBuzzwords #JournalismAsInfrastructure #NOVELCITYNews
www.novelcitynews.com/examine
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