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ABR was granted a US patent 5987011<ref>{{citation |title="A Routing Method for Ad Hoc Mobile Networks" |url=https://www.google.com/patents/US5987011}}</ref> and the assignee being [[King's College Cambridge]], UK. ABR was subsequently licensed to a US defense corporation.
Tactical Mobile Ad Hoc Networks bloom with US defense spending<ref>{{cite |title="US Defense Spending Outlook" |url=https://cit.com/thought-leadership/us-defense-spending-industry-outlook/?cmp=paidsearch&gclid=Cj0KEQiAperBBRDfuMf72sr56fIBEiQAPFXszXJSUmhVzQx8nvTO-_D_DomeLEkW4rqNBnL09JQb8l4aAuaU8P8HAQ&jcpid=8a8ae4cd56581431015659d1200a185b&jsf=790d9e37-8253-492c-9760-301ebc6d7513:35584}}</ref> over $2 Billion in programs and research by [[DARPA]], DoD, Air Force, Coast Guards, and US Navy.<ref>{{citation |title="Naval Communications" |url=https://www.nap.edu/read/11605/chapter/8#153}}</ref>
In October 2013, the '''Storm Disaster Sandy''' hit the USA, and US Coast Guards used mobile ad hoc
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