Khan BMS - Drone Swarm
How Khan BMS orchestrates true drone swarms — fractal, intent-driven, EW-tolerant — using the Mongol decimal hierarchy.
A drone swarm is not a flock of remote-controlled quadcopters — it is a single composite weapon system whose agents share goals, divide labor, and survive partial loss. Most platforms calling themselves 'swarm software' top out at a few dozen tightly-coupled airframes. Khan BMS was designed from day one to scale past that ceiling.
Khan BMS maps every swarm onto the Mongol Arban–Zuun–Minghan–Tumen decimal hierarchy. Ten drones form an Arban with a local leader; ten Arbans form a Zuun; the pattern is fractal up to a ten-thousand-airframe Tumen. Span of control stays flat at every tier, exactly as it did for Genghis Khan's cavalry.
Integration is by manifest, not by rebuild. Drop a new airframe — military or commercial — into theater, register its capability bundle (sensors, effectors, endurance, signature), and Khan BMS slots it into the swarm. Intent flows down, telemetry gossips back up, and the swarm continues executing the last lawful order even when the uplink is jammed.
Khan BMS is the only commercial BMS that treats the swarm as the unit of command and the human Khan as the only origin of intent.
