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This week we discuss the end of the DJI Phantom, proposed regulations in Texas, drone deliveries in Kansas, and much more.
In this episode of "Your Drone Questions Answered," David Young, founder of Drone Launch Academy, sits down with Nate Howard, Survey Manager at Kiewit, to dive deep into the use of drones in construction and surveying. David and Nate discuss how drones are transforming the way construction sites are surveyed, monitored, and managed.Nate introduces Kiewit, a top-ranked contractor and engineering firm, and shares insights from his extensive experience in the construction world. He explains how Kiewit first incorporated drones using a DJI Phantom 4 to photograph job sites, and quickly realized the potential for using drone photogrammetry to produce detailed 3D maps. Nate highlights the massive efficiency gains, with drones completing work in 45 minutes that previously required multiple crews working over several days.David and Nate cover a variety of applications for drones on construction sites, including tracking weekly progress, calculating earthwork quantities, enhancing public relations by providing visuals for owners and the public, and ensuring safety by checking slope compliance in excavations. Nate provides real-world examples of these applications and shares the challenges and benefits of integrating drone technology into construction workflows.Tune in to learn how drones are revolutionizing the construction industry and get expert advice on leveraging drone technology for surveying and mapping.
In this episode of "Your Drone Questions. Answered.", our host John discusses the use of drones in agriculture with Grant Puckrin, founder and head pilot of 19th UAS Precision. They explore the benefits of using drones for mapping, crop health analysis, stand counts, and spraying, and how they can reduce costs and increase yield. Grant shares his experience using DJI Phantom 4 RTK for crop health analysis and DJI T30 for spraying. They also discuss the potential of AI in agriculture and how it can be incorporated into ground sprayers. Overall, the episode provides valuable insights into the benefits of using drones in agriculture and their potential for the future.
We go over our first impressions of the DJI Mavic 3 Enterprise. We cover the features and specs. Is this the DJI Phantom 4 RTK killer? Subscribe to Drones Down Under Podcast for the latest news and products, from the people that work in the Australian drone industry at https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCEAiO2pWihna98dJB20fM-w For all your DJI needs visit D1 Store at https://www.d1store.com.au/categories/dji-enterprise If you are new to drones and want to know more about Australian laws and where you can fly sign up to the Drone Safety Awareness Course https://airinspectstore.com.au/shop/training/dronesafetyawareness/(Use Discount Code: "DDUP" to SAVE 15%) Linked-In https://www.linkedin.com/company/drones-down-under-podcast/ Facebook https://www.facebook.com/dronesdownunderpodcast Instagram https://www.instagram.com/dronesdownunderpodcast/ You Tube https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCyj4IfRgTYORrhCg5V5U9qw/videos #m3e #dji #mavic3enterprise #dronesforgood #dronesdownunder #newrelease #droneoftheday #phantom4rtk #mavic3 #droneoftheday #newrelease #m2e
It's no secret DJI have wanted to move away from the Phantom 4 frame. The Phantom 4 RTK have been in the market since 2018. The Mavic 3 frame is likely to be frame carried to its enterprise siblings in the Mavic 3 Enterprise. We walk-through our Wishlist of features we like to see in the Mavic 3 Enterprise. Credits - DroneXL Subscribe to Drones Down Under Podcast for the latest news and products, from the people that work in the Australian drone industry at https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCEAiO2pWihna98dJB20fM-w If you are new to drones and want to know more about Australian laws and where you can fly sign up to the Drone Safety Awareness Course https://airinspectstore.com.au/shop/training/dronesafetyawareness/(Use Discount Code: "DDUP" to SAVE 15%) Linked-In https://www.linkedin.com/company/drones-down-under-podcast/ Facebook https://www.facebook.com/dronesdownunderpodcast Instagram https://www.instagram.com/dronesdownunderpodcast/ You Tube https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCyj4IfRgTYORrhCg5V5U9qw/videos
Episode 87 of "The Total Podcast! with Phil Scott" features news from Autoblog about the 2022 Ford F150 Lightning Pickup Truck's Electric Range - How Far will it go on a single charge? Also: A Superb Historical DJI Phantom Drone YouTube Video by Captain Drone, and KFC Popcorn Chicken: How does it taste, and the outrageous nutritional information about it! Links: https://www.autoblog.com/2022/03/17/2022-ford-f150-lightning-range-epa-leaked/ https://www.ford.com/trucks/f150/f150-lightning/2022/?gnav=header-trucks-vhp https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Kwxr3wMj8B8 https://www.calorieking.com/us/en/foods/f/calories-in-menu-items-popcorn-chicken-nuggets-large/eZW6yTmORxW4Ld0NXWQO0w https://www.kfc.com/menu/tenders/popcorn-nuggets-combo Phil Scott: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCryKrc7UsGuj3_EVRgAldzg/videos https://www.instagram.com/podcastphil/?hl=en --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
En este episodio te cuento los problemas que tuve durante mi viaje por el sur para volar el drone y por qué mi DJI Phantom 4 se quedo con ganas de sumar horas de vuelo. Te gustó este episodio? Nos darías una mano si te tomas unos segundos y lo compartes en tus redes, en tus grupos o si simplemente se lo comentas a algún amigo que le guste la fotografía. Suscríbete gratis a nuestro boletín de Novedades del Mundo Fotográfico, cada jueves noticias interesantes y curiosidades en tu email. Síguenos en las redes: Instagram: @aprendo_fotografia Twitter: @aprendofoto Web: https://www.aprendofotografia.com Nos escuchamos en el proximo episodio!
If you're looking to make the jump from sporadic revenue to scalable and consistent growth in your drone business, TDT Pro is for you! Check out The Drone Trainer Pro right here! Aaron McKay is a drone pilot from Sydney Australia who has been flying since 2017. He's been a photographer for 20 years, and in this episode describes his journey from pro photographer to full time drone pilot. Aaron is flying a wide range of drones including the DJI Phantom, Mavic, Inspire, Air, and FPV drones, and really dives deep into his construcion progress process. The detail that Aaron provides is absolute gold, so this is an episode that you don't want to miss! Where to find Aaron: Website: Aus Aerial Media Facebook YouTube Instagram Twitter LinkedIn
Parker Deuel is a commercial drone pilot and solutions engineer at Drone Deploy. He's bene flying for 6 years, and started off with the original DJI Phantom! We get into the nitty gritty of how to land recurring construction contracts, as well as what the best kind of deliverables are. In addition, we also discuss his role at Drone Deploy and tips and tricks for how to get the absolute best out of your mapping and modelling. PS, If you're looking to make the jump from sporadic revenue to scalable and consistent growth, TDT Pro is for you! Check out The Drone Trainer Pro right here! Where to find Parker: LinkedIn
Drone Flight Time Comparison - Phantom 4 Pro vs. Inspire 2 vs. Mavic Enterprise On today's show we do a flight time comparison between some popular drones like Phantom 4 Pro, Inspire 2, and Mavic Enterprise. Our caller for today, Carl is considering the Phantom 4 Pro, Inspire 2, and Mavic Enterprise for drone mapping missions. But he is not sure if these drones can give him a long enough flight time to conclude his job. And understandably, he is also worried about running out of battery mid-flight. This is a great question that has not been asked before on Ask Drone U. To help Carl out, we do an in-depth flight time comparison between these popular DJI drones. Additionally, on today's show, you will also learn: How to restart a mission after changing batteries mid-flight Are the drones intelligent enough to mitigate risk in case of low battery voltage? Apps to help you operate seamlessly in the above scenarios... Thanks for the great question, Carl. Fly Safe! Get Your Biggest and Most Common Drone Certificate Questions Answered by Downloading this FREE Part 107 PDF Make sure to get yourself the all-new Drone U landing pad! Get your questions answered: https://thedroneu.com/. If you enjoy the show, the #1 thing you can do to help us out is to subscribe to it on iTunes. Can we ask you to do that for us real quick? While you're there, leave us a 5-star review, if you're inclined to do so. Thanks! https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/ask-drone-u/id967352832. Become a Drone U Member. Access to over 30 courses, great resources, and our incredible community. Follow Us Site – https://thedroneu.com/ Facebook – https://www.facebook.com/droneu Instagram – https://instagram.com/thedroneu/ Twitter – https://twitter.com/thedroneu YouTube – https://www.youtube.com/c/droneu Timestamps [00:54] On today's show, we do a drone flight time comparison [05:42] Our question for today [07:10] What flight time can you expect from a Phantom 4 Pro and an Inspire 2? [07:40] DJI Phantom vs. Inspire - why the Phantom 4 Pro remains a perennial favorite [08:54] Why the Mavic 2 Enterprise is NOT the right drone for mapping [13:05] Are the drones of today smart enough to fly back home in case of low battery? [13:34] Apps that allow drone pilots to resume their mission after changing batteries mid-flight [14:04] Wrap up - Paul shares some parting wisdom to help Carl out
Drone Flight Time Comparison - Phantom 4 Pro vs. Inspire 2 vs. Mavic Enterprise On today's show we do a flight time comparison between some popular drones like Phantom 4 Pro, Inspire 2, and Mavic Enterprise. Our caller for today, Carl is considering the Phantom 4 Pro, Inspire 2, and Mavic Enterprise for drone mapping missions. But he is not sure if these drones can give him a long enough flight time to conclude his job. And understandably, he is also worried about running out of battery mid-flight. This is a great question that has not been asked before on Ask Drone U. To help Carl out, we do an in-depth flight time comparison between these popular DJI drones. Additionally, on today's show, you will also learn: How to restart a mission after changing batteries mid-flight Are the drones intelligent enough to mitigate risk in case of low battery voltage? Apps to help you operate seamlessly in the above scenarios... Thanks for the great question, Carl. Fly Safe! Get Your Biggest and Most Common Drone Certificate Questions Answered by Downloading this FREE Part 107 PDF Make sure to get yourself the all-new Drone U landing pad! Get your questions answered: https://thedroneu.com/. If you enjoy the show, the #1 thing you can do to help us out is to subscribe to it on iTunes. Can we ask you to do that for us real quick? While you're there, leave us a 5-star review, if you're inclined to do so. Thanks! https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/ask-drone-u/id967352832. Become a Drone U Member. Access to over 30 courses, great resources, and our incredible community. Follow Us Site – https://thedroneu.com/ Facebook – https://www.facebook.com/droneu Instagram – https://instagram.com/thedroneu/ Twitter – https://twitter.com/thedroneu YouTube – https://www.youtube.com/c/droneu Timestamps On today's show, we do a drone flight time comparison Our question for today What flight time can you expect from a Phantom 4 Pro and an Inspire 2? DJI Phantom vs. Inspire - why the Phantom 4 Pro remains a perennial favorite Why the Mavic 2 Enterprise is NOT the right drone for mapping Are the drones of today smart enough to fly back home in case of low battery? Apps that allow drone pilots to resume their mission after changing batteries mid-flight Wrap up - Paul shares some parting wisdom to help Carl out
Bryan is confused as to why we are still wearing masks and he shares that confusion. The TCB fan base is communicating in droves and giving Bryan more deranged content ideas. The gang shares an update on the $500 giveaway and then they dig into the extraordinarily dangerous world of Highlining. LINKS:Win $500 from TCBtv-(minus) by following Instagram or subscribing on YouTube and leaving a comment on your favorite episode in the month of June.Watch this episode on YoutubeTCBTV-minusSponsorEarBuds Podcast NewsletterSquadCast Podcast Remote Audio / Video RecordingHello Fresh: Use Code TCB12Apostrophe: Dinner Table Dermatology. $15 off your online appointment.Use The Code COMMERCIALSubscribe to The Commercial Break Podcast Youtube ChannelJoin The Comedy Podcasts Club on ClubHouseNew Episodes on Tuesdays and now Fridays everywhere!Text or leave us a message: +1 (470) 584.8449FOLLOW US:Instagram: @thecommercialbreak @bryangcomedy @tcbkrissyClubHouse: @bryangreen @tcbkrissyClubHouse: The Commercial Break Club on Clubhouse! (home of live recordings)Twitter: tcbbryanFacebook: The Commercial Break PodcastYouTube: Youtube.com/TheCommercialBreakEmail: info@tcbpodcast.comA Chartable Top 100 Comedy Podcast#1 Trending Comedy Podcast Worldwide! (Chartable)#1 Trending Comedy Podcast U.S.(Chartable)An Apple Top 100 Comedy Podcast Top 1% Downloaded Podcasts, Worldwide (ListenNotes)A Hot 50 Podcast (Podcast Magazine)
Initially released in the spring of 2016, DJI's Phantom 4 is the next evolution in their professional mid-tier lineup and the official replacement to the previously released Phantom 3. DJI's Phantom series are among the most popular drones around. https://photographypx.com/dji-phantom-4-review/ Video https://youtu.be/LwMN62-bzvI
Don Wiley is a drone pilot from Florida, who has created a very successful niche drone business. Rather than focusing on massive construction progress jobs, he is working on individual residential home builds. In addition to residential construction progress, he's also creating YouTube videos that cover a specific topic (such as golf cart parades for the recent US Election featuring Donald Trump and Joe Biden). Through those videos and simply via the power of the YouTube algorithm, he adds several hundred dollars a month to his bottom line. Don is also a member of The Drone Trainer Pro. If you're looking to make the jump from sporadic revenue to scalable and consistent growth, TDT Pro is for you! Check out The Drone Trainer Pro right here! Where to find Don: Gold Wingnut Productions (Website) Twitter Facebook YouTube Mentions in this episode: Going 4ward with DJI Go 4: The complete guide to configuring and using the DJI Go 4 flying app. (Don's Book!) CyberLink PowerDirector Availability of the DJI Phantom 4 Chinese New Year Edition.
Chris is the owner of Chris Dantonio Drone Photography Introduction: Chris says he got in a “little late” and “by accident”, because he started about four years ago at 43 years old. His parents bought him a little toy drone that had a small camera. He flew it for a week, broke it and knew he needed something better. He then bought a $100 drone and broke that in about a month. The DJI Phantom 3 Standard was his first real drone. He started taking pictures around Philadelphia just as a hobby, and really enjoyed it because he’d grown up around photography. His father, a photograph teacher at the local high school, would set up backgrounds to do portraits in the living room. “Photography has always been a part of my life and to be able to do it with a drone and be able to show people things in the city, especially that you didn't even know were there, is nice.” He could show people things that are very rarely seen from the ground level, which intrigued him more. He started an Instagram account, which has been a godsend, Chris says, because it's free. It doesn't cost any money and, with good work and hard work, you get followers. Chris just hit 10,000 followers a couple of months ago. After that, Chris knew he had to get licensed in order to sell pictures. Sure enough, he bought a study guide, studied for six months and took the test. “It's because of the study guide, I did really well. For those of you wondering ‘Should I get a study guide?’ I’d highly recommended it...” Then the business started, almost by accident. David: What year did you get your first Phantom and when did you say, ‘let’s get rolling on this’ and decide to get your Part 107? Do you do drones as a full-time gig or do you have a full-time job or some other supplemental income to go along with your drone business? I got the Phantom in 2016, started studying in 2017 and took the test in early 2018. This is a part time thing for me. Leaving my day job is really far off. I’m also an executive chef for an elite school outside of Philadelphia, so I have a job that allows me to do the drone thing, since nights and weekends are perfect for drone work. David: It's nice to have something that covers your bills and provides the freedom to experiment and pursue things without pressure to make immediate income. There’s pressure to get it going, but you don't want so much overwhelming stress that you're just going to crumble. Chris agrees that it adds stress to a day job—in addition to family and everything else going in in his life, but it’s also nice to pick and choose what jobs you want to do because your next mortgage payment isn't relying on that. Chris hasn't bought a drone with his own money for two years; the business has paid for all of the equipment. In early 2018, Chris got an email from an Instagram follower who worked for American Idol who was from Philadelphia and had seen Chris’ work. That was his first real big job. He had to join ICG Local 600 to shoot as a contractor for the show, which he pays dues for, but found out how beneficial it would be down the road for future work. The show was high stress, they worked all day, but got a very high reward. The third shot of the opening of American Idol was their shot. When subsequent clients came, it helped because they knew that we had already worked for a popular show. David: With American Idol were you just shooting content and handing it over and their guys were editing it? For all his major jobs, Chris gave them raw footage and they had somebody in their organization that handled all of the editing, cutting and doing everything with it. This was the case for Comcast, American Idol, and NFL films. David: What happened next? How did your next client find you? The next person to call was Comcast who wanted to purchase rights to footage for unlimited use. Chris says every job they've had—big or small—has all found them through Instagram. Chris says, “it's a smart business tool that doesn't cost money...the key is getting reposted to get your name out there.” With Comcast, a higher-up had been following him for a while, seeing Chris post shots of cool and different angles of the city. He has never really done any outbound sales activities to pursue clients. “I would be out there shooting regardless. If I had a thousand followers or less, I would still be out there shooting that much because I love it, which makes it easier. if you do what you love, you'll never work a day in your life.” David: One of the things people love on this podcast is specifics and numbers. It inspires people to know what's possible. Can you tell us what you make? His daily rate early on (for American Idol) was $1500 for an all-day shoot. Comcast wanted five photographs and five 15 to 30 second videos. He quoted $500 per still/$1000 per video. He said he’d give them the whole package for $6,000—they didn't bat an eyelash and wrote the check. To come up with those numbers, Chris researched what rights he was giving up for unlimited use. If it had been exclusive—where he was never allowed to use that footage—the number would have doubled because he’d lose all future profit from that footage. He did a lot of research as to what Getty images charges for a single image and then cut the deal. Chris says, “It's extremely important to go online and research things, as well as talk to friends in the photography industry, who you will meet through Instagram. They will help you figure out what your service is worth to you.” Later, a photography director for NFL films reached out, asking for footage of the NFL films building for the opening of a new show. He shot all kinds of things for three hours, getting paid $1500. He got to work with cameramen who’d shot some of the most important sporting events of our time. They knew exactly what they wanted, which made it so much easier on Chris to be directed in that way. David: It sounds like you're getting pretty good pricing per gig. How many jobs are you flying per month and what are you getting paid these days? Chris tends to average two or three jobs a month, but sometimes those jobs have multiple flights. His pricing has increased a little bit—his hourly rate is now $300/hr; his daily rate is $2000. David: One of the biggest questions is ‘How do I find clients?’, ‘How do I find work?’ For Chris, many commercial projects have come from family members or people he knew in high school. He got a Land Rover Jaguar job from a high school friend who is now the sales manager there. He knew Chris was into this because he posted on Facebook constantly. It was all about getting the word out that that he’s “the drone guy” on social media. David: Obviously, it pays to have really good photos that are worth sharing...Do you have any strategies when you're posting on Instagram? Are you also posting to Facebook or doing them independently? Chris does not post to Facebook every time because he has a separate Facebook account just for the drone business. Philly Drone Shots is the only Instagram account he has, and it’s listed as a business. He usually posts directly and separately to Facebook. Chris’ advice is, “When posting to Instagram, hashtagging and tagging are how you get seen with little followers. If you're just starting out on Instagram, hashtag and tag large accounts in the city you live in with things like #gameofdrones, #photooftheday, #dronephotography. When people look at those hashtags, they see your photos, whether they follow you or not. That's how you build your followers.” He got 500 followers just from a repost from a local news organization that has 213,000 followers. Last words from Chris... “If you keep working at it, they WILL come. They will find you and they will see you.” Connect with Chris: Website: Chris Dantonio Drone Photography Philly Facebook: Chris Dantonio Drone Photography Instagram: @phillydroneshots Have a Drone Business? Want to be Interviewed for Season 3? Complete this questionnaire: Drone to 1K Business Owner Application Training from Drone Launch Academy Part 107 Exam Prep Course ($50 off) Aerial Photo Pro Course ($50 off) Aerial Video A to Z Course ($100 off) Aerial Roof Inspection Pro Course ($100 off) Drones 101 Course ($20 off) Other Places to Listen iTunes Stitcher Google Play Spotify TuneIn
DJI to release an all-new Mavic Mini 2, DJI Pushes Back Release Date for the Mavic 3, Learn About the Osmo Action 2 and Osmo Pocket 2, Drone News, DJI News, DJI Rumors Our biggest story this week is about the DJI Mavic Mini 2. The original sub-250 gram DJI Mavi Mini is an engineering marvel that was quite well received by the drone community. The compact nature of this drone coupled with great affordability has certainly contributed to the success of this drone. However, one sore point was the absence of 4K capabiliies. Taking this feedback into account, DJI is all set to release a new and improved DJI Mavic Mini 2. Tune in to this segment of the show for more details about this new DJI drone. We also have some interesting updates about the DJI Mavic 3. The latest iteration of DJI's flagship drone was initially to be launched in early 2020. However, the onset of COVID and the lack of any real market competition has caused DJI to delay the release of this much-awaited drone. If you are waiting to get your hands on this drone, listening to this segment of the show will particularly interest you. Other topics discussed in today's show include DJI Ronin RS2 and RSC2, DJI's new FPV drone, and Walmart making drone delivery test flights in Vegas. We hope you enjoy this show! Whether you are just getting started or looking to increase your revenue stream, our drone service providers are ready to help you achieve your most ambitious goals. Check out all our classes for 2020 by going here - http://bit.ly/mapclass2020 Recently crashed your drone? Unable to find trained technicians who can repair your drone quickly and at a reasonable rate? Don't fret. The cool folks at Fortress UAV can help you get your drone back up in the air in as little as 7 days! Use Promo Code “DroneU” to get 25% off. Drone U Members get an extra 5% off on total repair costs. Check them out now! Get Your Biggest and Most Common Drone Certificate Questions Answered by Downloading this FREE Part 107 PDF Make sure to get yourself the all-new Drone U landing pad! Get your questions answered: https://thedroneu.com/. If you enjoy the show, the #1 thing you can do to help us out is to subscribe to it on iTunes. Can we ask you to do that for us real quick? While you're there, leave us a 5-star review, if you're inclined to do so. Thanks! https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/ask-drone-u/id967352832. Become a Drone U Member. Access to over 30 courses, great resources, and our incredible community.Follow us:Site - https://thedroneu.com/Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/droneuInstagram - https://instagram.com/thedroneu/Twitter - https://twitter.com/thedroneuYouTube - https://www.youtube.com/c/droneu Timestamps [01:29] DJI Ronin RS2 and Ronin RSC2 to hit the markets by end of the October [02:13] DJI to release an all-new Mavic Mini 2 with 4K capabilities [03:25] DJI Mavic 3 Rumors - Can we expect DJI to release a new version of their flagship drone in 2020? [04:24] DJI's new FPV drone to come in two variants [04:49] DJI to release Osmo Action 2 and Osmo Pocket 2 to release before Christmas? [06:07] And now a smart controller for the DJI Mavic Air 2 and DJI Phantom [08:18] Amazon files patent for a simulation system to program their autonomous drones [09:46] Walmart ties up with drone delivery service provider, DroneUp for some test flights in Vegas [13:57] Is DJI planning on releasing any other new drones other than the Mavic Mini 2 in 2020?
Hi! This one is about the drone I got when I was in America. HOPE YOU LIKE IT.!
Hi! This one is about the drone I got when I was in America. HOPE YOU LIKE IT.!
Initially released in the spring of 2016, DJI's Phantom 4 is the next evolution in their professional mid-tier lineup and the official replacement to the previously released Phantom 3. DJI's Phantom series are among the most popular drones around. https://photographypx.com/dji-phantom-4-review/
Initially released in the spring of 2016, DJI's Phantom 4 is the next evolution in their professional mid-tier lineup and the official replacement to the previously released Phantom 3. DJI's Phantom series are among the most popular drones around. https://photographypx.com/dji-phantom-4-review/
In questo video (che è anche una puntata del podcast di 3DMetrica) Gianlua Palmieri ci racconta come usa il drone DJI Phantom 4 RTK per rilievi aerofotogrammetri di vaste aree fluviali, finalizzati alla ricostruzione di modelli del terreno da usare per la progettazione di piani di escavazione (quinquennali).Gianluca era un utilizzatore della versione Pro del DJI Phantom 4 e poi è passato al modello RTK sfruttando le potenzialità del ricevitore GNSS, L1/L2.Quello che fa in campo ed in ufficio Gianluca è lavorare in PPK con i dati registrati dal ricevitore a bordo del drone, piuttosto con in RTK.Spero che la sua esperienza possa esserti utile.L'utilizzo delle tecnologie disponibili deve comunque sempre confrontarsi con le tue esigenze ed i risultati a cui vuoi arrivare.Quello che può essere un vantaggio per me potrebbe non esserlo per te.E viceversa.Credo che l'importante sia sapere che cosa offre il mercato ora e come funzionano le cose.Poi sta a noi scegliere che cosa usare e come farlo.Il racconto delle esperienze dirette e del punto di vista soggettivo è sempre arricchente sotto questo aspetto.Grazie Gianluca!Questo è il suo profilo Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/gianpalmieri75E qui c'è il link alla struttura con cui collabora - Monitor the Planet - https://www.monitortheplanet.com/Puoi vedere il video della chiacchierata a questo link: https://youtu.be/A6-dt7kSMvkSe hai una storia o un'esperienza da raccontare, o se vuoi segnalarmi qualcuno da contattare, puoi scrivermi su Telegram: t.me/paolocorradeghiniSe ti va, puoi iscriverti al canale Telegram di 3DMetrica: t.me/tredimetricaE se pensi che quello che condivido ha un valore per puoi scegliere di supportarmi e diventare un finanziatore di 3DMetrica: www.3dmetrica.it/supportaIn questa puntata ho inserito queste musiche:"V" by Weary Eyes from Fugue;"Once the clouds lift" by Weary Eyes from Fugue;"Your battles are over" by Weary Eyes from Fugue.
JavaScript Remote Conf 2020 May 13th to 15th - register now! Despite JavaScript being a single-threaded language, you can now leverage multi-threaded computing thanks to modern browser features such as web workers, workouts and service workers. In this show, Majid explains how these features work and what problems they solve. We also discuss the strategies you can use to introduce them to production codebases and give your users a much more enjoyable experience on your web app. Panel Paige Niedringhaus Carl Mungazi Charles Max Wood TJ VanToll Guest Majid Hajian Sponsors G2i | Enjoy the luxuries of freelancing "The MaxCoders Guide to Finding Your Dream Developer Job" by Charles Max Wood is now available on Amazon. Get Your Copy Today! Links Comlink makes WebWorkers enjoyable Workbox Figma The AssemblyScript Book Houdini: Demystifying CSS Picks Majid Hajian: Follow Majid on Twitter > @mhadaily Deep Work - Cal Newport Carl Mungazi: Off the Main Thread | The Web Platform Podcast Charles Max Wood: Natural Goat Milk Soaps for Healthy Skin — Goat Milk Stuff Flip Timer & stopwatch on the App Store Desktop tripod Devchat.tv Remote meetups Devchat.tv Remote Conferences Paige Niedringhaus: DJI Phantom 4 Drone Ozark show on Netflix TJ VanToll: Goat-2-Meeting — Sweet Farm Follow React Round Up on Twitter > @reactroundup
JavaScript Remote Conf 2020 May 13th to 15th - register now! Despite JavaScript being a single-threaded language, you can now leverage multi-threaded computing thanks to modern browser features such as web workers, workouts and service workers. In this show, Majid explains how these features work and what problems they solve. We also discuss the strategies you can use to introduce them to production codebases and give your users a much more enjoyable experience on your web app. Panel Paige Niedringhaus Carl Mungazi Charles Max Wood TJ VanToll Guest Majid Hajian Sponsors G2i | Enjoy the luxuries of freelancing "The MaxCoders Guide to Finding Your Dream Developer Job" by Charles Max Wood is now available on Amazon. Get Your Copy Today! Links Comlink makes WebWorkers enjoyable Workbox Figma The AssemblyScript Book Houdini: Demystifying CSS Picks Majid Hajian: Follow Majid on Twitter > @mhadaily Deep Work - Cal Newport Carl Mungazi: Off the Main Thread | The Web Platform Podcast Charles Max Wood: Natural Goat Milk Soaps for Healthy Skin — Goat Milk Stuff Flip Timer & stopwatch on the App Store Desktop tripod Devchat.tv Remote meetups Devchat.tv Remote Conferences Paige Niedringhaus: DJI Phantom 4 Drone Ozark show on Netflix TJ VanToll: Goat-2-Meeting — Sweet Farm Follow React Round Up on Twitter > @reactroundup
A surprising development in the city's fight against billboard barges — The company floating the LED billboards in the waters around Manhattan has thrown in the towel after new state regulations pushed them back 1,500 feet from the shoreline. The advertising company promoting the billboard boats has now settled with the city and agreed to be subject to a $100,000 fine if they operate within New York waters. The barge will be relocated to Florida, where the company set up a similar barge along the Miami shoreline in 2016. The agreement with the city ends both the company's six-month fight with the city and the challenge they raised to the state law. As of October 11th, the company's website has been replaced with a generic image saying the site is down for maintenance. According to a presentation acquired by Digiday in January 2019, the company was touting their Hudson River and East River coverage to advertisers at the rate of $55,000 for a 30 second looping at on the banner boats, and they referenced the city's plan to continue developing the shoreline and the city's ferry system as reasons to advertise on LED billboard barges. 86 years ago on October 10, 1933 — A United Air Lines Boeing 247 from Newark, NJ exploded in what is believed to have been the first sabotage bombing of a commercial aircraft 56 years ago on October 14, 1963 — A New York Airways helicopter crashes just after takeoff from Idlewild (JFK) Airport, killing all six people aboard Double-check your speed if you're on the West Side Highway after October 12th — The city is dropping speeds from 35 to 30 mph on the West Side south of 59th Street beginning Saturday. The move comes as part of Vision Zero, a set of plans adopted by cities worldwide and introduced to New York by Mayor de Blasio in 2014. Vision Zero aims to eliminate pedestrian injuries and fatalities from vehicles, and the reduction in speed on the West Side Highway is meant to reduce the severity of vehicle impacts in areas south of 59th where the highway becomes street-level and pedestrians and cyclists frequently have to cross highway traffic at intersections, including busy areas like the Intrepid museum, Chelsea Piers, and Battery Park City. While drivers may rarely even have the opportunity to top 30 mph in rush hour traffic, the DOT will catch any drivers speeding using new speed cameras along the highway. If the area south of 59th Street sounds familiar, it's because it's the same area targeted by the upcoming congestion pricing plan, where a system of cameras will collect tolls on cars entering the area south of 61st Street. While vehicles staying on the FDR or West Side Highway will be exempt from congestion pricing, vehicles would also be monitored by cameras used for collecting tolls on vehicles exiting the West Side Highway once it reaches street level and begins exiting into the central business district south of 61st. The speed limits on all small streets within the city were dropped to 25 mph in November 2014. If you can't enjoy a low-speed drive on the West Side Highway and don't want to pay a congestion toll, consider a ride along the new 14th Street busway, which was finally able to open on October 3rd, and has been going swimmingly ever since. The street has been cleared of cars, leaving the buses to freely glide from stop to stop along 14th Street from Third Avenue to Ninth Avenue. Even though the implementation was delayed by three months by community groups, the first week of the busway seems to have had no noticeable impact on the surrounding streets. Bus riders on social media showed quiet, peaceful, and efficient rides during multiple times of day, with just a sparse few delivery trucks parked along the curb. It remains to be seen if the city's experiment with a busway can indeed increase the average speeds of buses on 14th Street while also not slowing down the surrounding area, but for right now, the first attempt at reorganizing 14th Street seems to be a success. I'll bring you the full Department of Transportation report once the trial period for the busway is complete. 16 years ago on October 15, 2003 — A Staten Island ferry strikes a pier at St. George Terminal, S.I., killing 11 people and injuring 165 of the 1,500 passengers In A Great Big City history: We're currently watching the MTA's new busway on 14th Street, but 3 years ago the MTA Sends Test Trains Along the New Second Avenue Subway. Train aficionado DJ Hammers on Youtube caught a glimpse of empty subway cars through a stairway at 63rd and Lex that were being run on the new Second Avenue line. The test cars were loaded with large boxes, presumably to simulate the weight of a fully-loaded train. The Second Avenue line would open three months later in January 2017. 8 years ago we were looking at the Rockefeller Center and Bryant Park Preparing Their Skating Rinks, and both rinks are on schedule this year as well! Rockefeller Center's rink opens on Saturday, October 12th, with regular admission being $25 for adults and $15 for children under 11 years old, and the Bryant Park rink will open as part of their Winter Village on October 31st, with free admission. 2 years ago, the NTSB was working to track down the drone pilot who was responsible for a drone colliding with an Army helicopter. The Blackhawk helicopter was hovering at about 300 feet near Midland Beach in Staten Island when a DJI Phantom drone struck the helicopter's blade and window frame, which obliterated the drone but did lodge a piece of debris in the helicopter that the NTSB would use to identify the owner of the drone. When interviewed by the NTSB, the drone operator admitted that he was flying the drone outside of his visual range and was unaware of the helicopter's flight path. Data from the drone operator's controller showed the drone's flight from Dyker Beach Park out over the water, along the Coney Island shore, and then looping back over open water toward Staten Island. It was at that point that the drone hit the helicopter. — Drone Pilot Interviewed After Collision with Army Helicopter A Great Big City has been running a 24-hour newsfeed since 2010, but the AGBC News podcast is just getting started, and we need your support. A Great Big City is built on a dedication to explaining what is happening and how it fits into the larger history of New York, which means thoroughly researching every topic and avoiding clickbait headlines to provide a straightforward, honest, and factual explanation of the news. Individuals can make a monthly or one-time contribution at agreatbigcity.com/support and local businesses can have a lasting impact by supporting local news while promoting products or services directly to interested customers listening to this podcast. Visit agreatbigcity.com/advertising to learn more. AGBC is more than just a news website: Our fireworks page monitors the city's announcements of upcoming fireworks, lists them on our site, and automatically sends out a notification just before the fireworks begin, so that you can watch the show or prepare your pet for the upcoming sounds of explosions. Visit agreatbigcity.com/fireworks to see the full calendar and follow @agreatbigcity on social media to receive the alerts Park of the day Corporal Fischer Park — Highbridge, Nelson Avenue at West 170th Street — This park honors a New Yorker who enlisted in the United States Army and served in the 75th Joint Assault Signal Company of the Army Air Corps during World War II (1939-1945), Corporal Irwin A. Fischer. The park land is undeveloped and appears to be inaccessible due to a fence around the property, but it adds a nice bit of green to the corner. Nearby Corporal Irwin Fischer Place was previously known as Highbridge Street, Hennessy Place, and briefly James R. Murphy Place. Parks Events Pumpkin-picking at Decker Farm in Historic Richmond Town on Staten Island — Admission: $6, Saturdays and Sundays through October 26th from 11am to 5pm. Featuring hayrides, a hay maze, apple cider, s'mores, and of course a variety of pumpkins to choose from! The farm may be 200 years old, but it even features pumpkin chunkin with a huge bungee slingshot! Visit the link in the show notes to historicrichmondtown.org for directions and more info. Concert Calendar Here's the AGBC Concert Calendar for the upcoming week: Wilco is playing Brooklyn Steel in Greenpoint on Sunday, October 13th at 7pm. Sara Bareilles with Emily King is playing Madison Square Garden in Midtown West / Chelsea / Hudson Yards on Sunday, October 13th at 8pm. Post Malone with Swae Lee is playing Madison Square Garden in Midtown West / Chelsea / Hudson Yards on Monday, October 14th at 8pm. The Black Keys with Modest Mouse is playing Barclays Center in Boerum Hill on Tuesday, October 15th at 7pm. Post Malone is playing Madison Square Garden in Midtown West / Chelsea / Hudson Yards on Tuesday, October 15th at 8pm. Steely Dan is playing Beacon Theatre on the Upper West Side on Tuesday, October 15th at 8pm. Kacey Musgraves with Lucius is playing Radio City Music Hall in Midtown on Wednesday, October 16th at 8pm. Steely Dan is playing Beacon Theatre on the Upper West Side on Wednesday, October 16th at 8pm. The Chainsmokers with 5 Seconds of Summer is playing Barclays Center in Boerum Hill on Thursday, October 17th at 7pm. Steely Dan is playing Beacon Theatre on the Upper West Side on Friday, October 18th at 8pm. Moon Boots with Quantic is playing Brooklyn Steel in Greenpoint on Friday, October 18th at 8pm. Mahalia with Jvck James is playing Music Hall of Williamsburg in Williamsburg on Friday, October 18th at 9pm. The Misfits with Rancid and The Damned are playing Madison Square Garden in Midtown West / Chelsea / Hudson Yards on Saturday, October 19th at 7pm. Mana is playing Barclays Center in Boerum Hill on Saturday, October 19th at 8pm. Steely Dan is playing Beacon Theatre on the Upper West Side on Saturday, October 19th at 8pm. Benin International Musical is playing Carnegie Hall - Stern Auditorium in Hell's Kitchen / Midtown on Saturday, October 19th at 9pm. Find more fun things to do at agreatbigcity.com/events. Learn about New York Here's something you may not have known about New York: Those silver Water Sampling boxes along the sidewalk are used to monitor the quality of NYC's water — There are 965 sampling stations citywide and more than 1,300 samples are collected each month Weather The extreme highs and lows for this week in weather history: Record High: 90°F on October 17, 1938 Record Low: 32°F on October 15, 1876 Weather for the week ahead: Rain on Sunday through Wednesday, with high temperatures peaking at 73°F on Monday. Thanks for listening to A Great Big City. Follow along 24 hours a day on social media @agreatbigcity or email contact@agreatbigcity.com with any news, feedback, or topic suggestions. Subscribe to AGBC News wherever you listen to podcasts: iTunes, Google Play, or Overcast, Podcast Addict, Player FM, or listen to each episode on the podcast pages at agreatbigcity.com/podcast. If you enjoy the show, subscribe and leave a review wherever you're listening and visit our podcast site to see show notes and extra links for each episode. Intro and outro music: 'Start the Day' by Lee Rosevere — Concert Calendar music from Jukedeck.com
Drones are great. But they are also flying machines that can do lots of stupid and dangerous things. Like, for instance, fly over a major league baseball game packed with spectators. It happened at Fenway Park last night, and the FAA is not happy. The illegal flight took place last night during a Red Sox-Blue Jays game at Fenway; the drone, a conspicuously white DJI Phantom, reportedly first showed up around 9:30 PM, coming and going over the next hour.
Confuscius once said, "Find a job that makes you happy and you'll never work a day of your life again" and Aviv is one of those people. Aviv is a video storyteller and he has acquired recognition from the movies he has produced with his drones. In this episode we discuss what career choices have lead Aviv to video storytelling, what it takes to run your own company and of course, surfing! If there is anything to take from the episode, it's the fact that you have to keep on learning, trying, and sometimes fail to find your passion. All experience (good or bad) is worth it. Shownotes: Aviv Ben Or is the CEO of Hexa Air Cinema. The company he created leverages his expertise in drone filmmaking, editing and storytelling. A few months ago he gained attention thanks to this brilliant surf movie he produced Aviv is from Israel, so he shares his story of growing up as a surfer in the Mediterranean. Aviv shares his experience in being his own boss, travelling the world and how all his experiences have brought him to his career today. Aviv gives his expert advice on the kind of gear you can start with, to produce your first drone movie and he gives us insight on the editing process. The drones mentioned in this episode are DJI Phantom 4 Pro and DJI Inspire 2 that Aviv is using professionally. He mentions 2 other drone models that beginners can start with for great value : DJI Spark and DJI Mavic To get in touch with Aviv, you can contact him via instagram and you can also check out his work on www.hexa.site, on youtube and on Vimeo. Aviv has generously created a board on Unsplash.com (if you don't know Unsplash, you must have a look : there are tons of royalty free photos to pick from), so if you fancy downloading a beautiful photo for your social media feeds or computer wallpaper, then take a look at his profile on Unsplash. Massive thanks to Aviv Ben Or for being part of this project! Until next episode, take care, have fun and enjoy the waves! Ciao Imi
The man flying the drone didn't know he was violating a temporary restriction on flights around New York City (the president was in town for the 2017 United Nations General Assembly). He didn't know he had just two minutes to land before he violated the prohibition on nighttime flights. And he didn't know his DJI Phantom 4—300 feet up, 2.5 miles away from him, and well beyond his line of sight—was flying dangerously close to an Army Black Hawk helicopter.
You can get a drone in a wide range of sizes. Some of them fit in your palm (like the Syma X20) while others are quite large. But have you noticed anything about the flying time? Many of the super small drones have flight times that are less than five minutes. The larger drones (like the DJI Phantom 4) have a maximum flight time of closer to a half hour.
It's easy to get lost in the great pantheon of consumer drones. Even just looking at industry leader DJI's options, there are enough choices to set your head spinning faster than a quadcopter blade. Today we'll focus on one choice: the DJI Phantom 4 Pro+. Coming in at a cool $1,800, this marks the top end of what could be considered DJI's consumer line, with the next level up being the $3,000 pro-level Inspire 2.
Erik and Bob continue with your questions. We discuss the pitfalls of using some “free” streaming media services. Getting the DJI Phantom 3 drone to work with Windows 10, and finding the proper USB drivers for Windows 10. A listener asks which drone is the best model to buy from DGI. Fixing graphics display problems with games after upgrading to Windows 10. We discuss why you should not apply the Windows 10 “Creators Update” manually—at least not yet. Microsoft takes six months to fix a security issue with their Microsoft Office product. Bad Webroot antivirus update temporarily cripples millions of computers. Unroll.me inbox cleanup service hit with lawsuit over privacy of users’ data. A business user dependent on “cloud” services asks about the best backup solution available.
What's made eBay's list of the hottest tech toys for Christmas, the alarming privacy breach affecting more the 700 million Android devices, Australia has become one of the leading countries for OLED TV adoption, we take a look at the new DJI Phantom 4 Pro drone, the Radar Pace smart eyewear by Oakley and Intel that's also your virtual coach, the Microsoft Wireless Display Adapter and the Tech Guide Help Desk. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
The FAA quickly grants some Part 107 exemptions, drought-stricken agriculture embraces UAS, the Facebook Aquila drone is meeting with some success, and a robot pilot offers to make existing aircraft unmanned. Photokite Pro tethered flying camera system for professional use cases and live broadcasting News CNN Wins FAA Waiver To Fly Newsgathering Drones Over People CNN received a Part 107 waiver from the FAA to fly UAS in the U.S. over people. Previously, CNN had only flown only over unpopulated areas. The newsgathering duties are performed with a small Fotokite Pro tethered quadcopter. Earlier this month CNN announced its Aerial Imagery and Reporting (CNN AIR) unit with two full-time UAS operators. In a first, FAA allows PrecisionHawk to fly drones where pilots can't see them The Federal Aviation Administration has also given PrecisionHawk an exemption to fly in the U.S. beyond visual line of sight (BVLOS). The exemption came on August 29, when Part 107 became effective. PrecisionHawk Executive VP Thomas Haun said, “In agriculture, now that we have an exemption to fly beyond the visual line of sight, we can fly an entire farm, not just one field, efficiently.” The FAA issued 76 waivers on that day, most of them applying to night flying. Virginia Woman Blasts Drone 'to Smithereens' with Shotgun In June, Jennifer Youngman was at home cleaning her shotguns. Two men arrived nearby and began flying a drone in the area. Ms. Youngman happens to be a neighbor of actor/director Robert Duvall. When the drone ultimately flew over her property at a height of 25 or 30 feet, she discharged one of her newly cleaned shotguns, much to the distress of the drone. Mark Zuckerberg meets Pope Francis, gives him a drone On his tour of Italy following the recent earthquake which killed hundreds, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg met with Pope Francis. Zuckerberg presented the Pope with a model of the solar-powered Facebook Aquila drone designed to provide Internet access to regions without connectivity. Feds turn to space experts NASA for small-drone traffic plan Actually, NASA also has aeronautics experts, and those are the ones working on the UTM, the UAS Traffic Management project. NASA has two “A”s. In drought, drones help California farmers save every drop The severe California drought continues, with dire consequences for farmers growing food. One farmer with a 2,400-acre tomato crop estimates his drones that detect irrigation leaks could save enough water for over 550 families of four for a year. He also started using a thermal camera to show moisture variations in soil, and even established a drone management position at his company. AUVSI (Association for Unmanned Vehicle Systems International) says about 2,100 companies and individuals have FAA permission to fly drones for farming. Flight fantastic: Instead of rewiring planes to fly themselves, why not give them android pilots? Instead of designing new planes to be unmanned aircraft, Shim Hyunchul and his colleagues at KAIST (the Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology) have a different idea: Put a robot in the pilot's seat. The PIBOT (short for pilot robot) is a humanoid robot with a head, torso, arms and legs. Cameras act as eyes while arms and legs operate the controls like a human pilot. Videos of the Week This is Why Drones and Balloons Don't Like to Play Together White helium balloons were released as part of a celebration, but the wind changed and carried the balloons into a DJI Phantom. The string from one balloon caught the propellor and down came the drone. Facebook Tests Internet-Beaming Plane Facebook just announced the first flight of its unmanned, high-altitude Aquila unmanned aircraft. First drone footage of Uluru released: Video The first drone to operate under permit inside Australia's Uluru-Kata Tjuta National Park captured the spectacular 600 million-year-old monolith.
Drones and law enforcement, Disney and Google drone patents, a call for anti-drone systems, and a drone that looks and flys like a drone. The Bionic Bird News Modesto Police Unveil New Crime-Fighting Drones The Modesto, California police department has a DJI Phantom painted like a patrol car and recently they used it to track a suspected robber. Three officer pilots will use the drones for official police work only. Fox News reports: “The Modesto Police Department said their drone footage is subject to the same rules as their officers' body cameras.” Cops get eyes in the sky as N.J. county deputizes drones A New Jersey county has an exemption to operate drones for emergency response missions. Initially, there was just one pilot - a police officer with a fixed-wing pilot's license. But now, other public officials can fly drones after taking an aviation ground school class at a local college. They have used drones to search for a homicide suspect, a missing person, and a berm breach. 1st-ever civilian drone death? Woman killed in police pursuit after UAV spotted over prison Police received a report of a drone flying over Wandsworth prison in England. Officers chased a car seen leaving the scene, which crashed and the driver, a woman in her 20s, was pronounced dead at the scene. She may be the first person to die in a non-military drone-related incident. Disney Might Be Building Drones To Use In Its Theme Parks Disney applied for three drone-related patents: Aerial Display System with Floating Pixels, which contemplates using drones as floating pixels (or flixels) that could replace fireworks. Aerial Display System with Floating Projection Screens, which describes drones that can carry a full-sized projector and a screen for images and video. Aerial Display System with Marionettes Articulated and Supported by Airborne Devices, which explains a swarm of multicopter drones operating marionettes and puppets. Google wants to have drones buzzing around offices, projecting our faces at meetings Google was awarded a patent (Unmanned Aerial Vehicle for Collaboration) for a small drone fitted with a projector and optionally a small screen that can be used as a mobile telepresence system in an office environment. Interior Ministry announces tender for drone-killer system Czech police don't have a way to bring rogue drones down, so the Czech Interior Ministry has announced a public tender for an anti-drone system. It would be used to take down drones in no-fly zones and other restricted areas. This Startup Wants to Build a Drone-Proof Fence to Protect Your Property The founder of Drone Go Home believes that the proliferation of inexpensive consumer drones will lead to the need for electronic perimeter fences around properties, such as prisons, power grids, and backyards. The company has a video, Drone Go Home Proof of Concept Demonstration. Video of the Week This drone looks and flies just like a bird The Bionic Bird is a drone designed to look and fly just like a real bird. The drone can fly up to 12 miles per hour for 10 minutes at a time. A patented control system uses wing bending, enabling fast and instantaneous maneuvers.
The MQ-25 Stingray UAS, Star Wars drones, an Amazon patent for sUAS flight decks, Customs and Border Protection solicitation for small drone studies, how drones might make the future of aviation brighter, an arrest for a drone flight, new geofencing firmware, and Facebook laser drones. News Amazon patents special drone housing in the sky Amazon was awarded U.S. patent number 9387928 for sUAS docking stations that can be attached to structures such as telephone poles or street lamps. Amazon proposes that these multi-use UAV docking stations can be networked and provide package handling facilities, and act as a final destination or a delivery hub. The docking stations could recharge or refuel UAVs, become navigational aids, and provide routing information from a central control system. USN carries out MQ-25 aerial refuelling surrogate testing The UAS that had been called the Carrier Based Aerial Refueling System (CBARS) will be now known as MQ-25 Stingray. Developed from the X-47B, it will use the current Navy refueling pod as its equipment. The system is being tested using a Gulfstream jet as a surrogate and the RFP for the MQ-25 prototypes requests a flyoff in 2017. Star Wars Drones You Can Battle With Propel is making X-wing, Millennium Falcon, TIE Interceptor, and Speederbike quadcopters with clear props to give the illusion of flight. The drones are outfitted with lasers that allow game playing similar to laser tag. Border Patrol calls on Silicon Valley for advice on small drones The U.S. Department of Homeland Security is looking for new ways that Customs and Border Protection could use UAVs and has published an Other Transaction Solicitation (OTS) to fund studies. The OTS Call on Small Unmanned Aircraft Systems (Word doc) offers grants of $50,000 to $200,000, and describes three objectives: User interfaces for effective communication and enhanced immediacy for reaction. Sensors to improve situational awareness and the ability to track multiple targets. Platform security improvement for UAS self-defense capabilities. Why Drones May Save Aviation This opinion piece describes how sUAS might be a pathway to bring people into aviation. California makes first arrest for drone flight over wildfire A man charged with hampering firefighting efforts was caught after he posted his videos on YouTube. He faces FAA fines of up to $27,500 and possible jail time. DJI drones will now get real-time wildfire alerts New software updates bring geofencing to temporarily restricted areas. Report claims small UAV ruling places USA ahead of Europe Aerospace and defense industry researcher Teal Group says the United States is now ahead of Europe after developing sUAS regulations. The U.S. is “putting pressure on Europe to come up with its own set of regulations.” Facebook wants to use fluorescence to make its laser drones work better Facebook and Internet.org have been developing the Project Aquila fixed-wing drones to provide internet access to remote locations using lasers to transmit data. However, light sent through the atmosphere can produce an undesirable “twinkling” effect. The Facebook team has a solution that uses a structure covered with wavelength shifting dyes that re-emit the light at a different wavelength and reduce the twinkling effect. Video of the Week Drone helps in rescue of stranded boaters near Algona Listener Todd pointed us to this video that documents a DJI Phantom 4 used to locate a man and his 10-year-old granddaughter who stranded in their boat.
Crowdsourcing designs for cargo drones, UAS for higher education, US Air Force training enlisted RPA operators, NASA detect and avoid tests, delivering vaccine by drone, a woman freed by a Phantom, and drones interfering with wildfires. The ZELATOR by Alexey Medvedev from Omsk, Russia News Airbus reveals cargo UAV challenge winners The Airbus Cargo Drone Challenge was created by Local Motors and Airbus Group to crowdsource the design of a commercial-grade package delivery drone for medical supplies and other types of cargo. Local Motors reports in Airbus Cargo Drone Challenge winners announced that 425 submissions were received, and assessed on mission performance, weight and balance, and preliminary flight performance. Video: Winners Revealed in the Airbus Cargo Drone Challenge by Local Motors. Early Days for Drone Use in Higher Education Drones in the academic environment offer the opportunity to focus on design and development and also using them for academic instruction and research. The Higher Education UAS Modernization Act would let students and educators operate UAVs without FAA approval if certain conditions are met. Air Force plans 100 enlisted drone pilots by 2020 The Air Force expects to graduate the first class of enlisted airmen in 2017 for remotely piloted aircraft, specifically unarmed RQ-4 Global Hawks used for high-altitude reconnaissance missions. The graduates would become the first Air Force enlisted pilots since World War II. NASA Concludes UAS NAS Integration Flight Tests NASA has completed a two-month series of flight tests at Armstrong Flight Research Center in Edwards, California. NASA tested technologies for Detect-and-Avoid (DAA) algorithms developed by NASA, General Atomics Aeronautical Systems, Inc., Honeywell, and other partners. The tests included more than 260 scripted encounters between the Ikhana UAS and manned “intruder” aircraft. The algorithms successfully alerted the pilot on the ground. Drones to unleash vaccine-laced pellets in bid to save endangered ferrets The endangered black-footed ferrets in Montana eat prairie dogs, and both are susceptible to the sylvatic plague transmitted by fleas. The United States Fish and Wildlife Service wants to help the animals by dispensing vaccine-laden pellets from drones. Note: The article originally reported that the drones would shoot vaccine-laced M&Ms. Video shows man use drone to save person trapped in bathroom A woman in a bathroom was unable to unlock the door from the inside. A DJI Phantom trailing a string was flown over the bathroom window and the woman then tied the door key to the string. With the key in hand, those outside could unlock the door and free the woman. Authorities in Utah can now legally disable or destroy drones near wildfires Lawmakers approved a bill that would allow firefighters or law enforcement to shoot down or disable drones interfering with efforts to contain wildfires. The bill also provides for a maximum penalty of 15 years in prison and a $15,000 fine if a drone causes a firefighting aircraft to crash. Video of the Week Engineers Hack Pokemon Go by Using a Drone Thanks to @ProfVanderhoof's sister Marianne for bringing this to our attention. http://youtu.be/-bpEgmUkr7w
The Aurora Flight Sciences unmanned VTOL X-plane, shore-to-ship package delivery, Senate FAA reauthorization bill impacts UAS, more proposed local drone legislation, a new DJI Phantom, and high-altitude sUAS flying. News Aurora Wins Darpa Contract to Build Novel Drone Demonstrator The U.S. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) awarded second- and third-phase contract awards to Aurora Flight Sciences for the “LightningStrike” technology demonstrator. Aurora plans to start flight testing the vertical takeoff and landing experimental plane (VTOL X-Plane) in 2018. The LightningStrike features two large rear wings and two smaller front canards. The same Rolls-Royce AE 1107C turboshaft engine used in V-22 Osprey tiltrotor is mounted in the fuselage and powers three Honeywell generators which drive 24 ducted fans on the wings and canards. The wings and canards rotate to direct the fan thrust for hovering, transition, and forward flight. Aurora's LightningStrike VTOL X-Plane http://youtu.be/LylpcttuQ_U Maersk Tankers Claims First Drone Delivery to Ship at Sea A French Xamen Technologies drone dropped a small package onto a Maersk tanker in Denmark as a test to see if drones could be used to deliver spare parts, mail, or medicine to a ship. Compared to traditional means of delivery, the potential cost savings is significant. Bipartisan Senate FAA bill shuns Shuster's ATC proposal The U.S. Senate Commerce, Science and Transportation Committee has introduced a bipartisan FAA reauthorization bill that does not include any proposal for air traffic control privatization. However, under the Senate bill, the US National Institute of Standards (NIST) and the FAA would “develop risk-based, consensus industry standards on [UAV] aircraft safety.” “The FAA would also establish a process for the airworthiness approval of small [UAVs] based on the consensus standards, in lieu of the more cumbersome certification process used for the approval of other aircraft. These standards … approved by FAA would ultimately improve safety by prescribing which safety technologies would be built into unmanned aircraft systems sold in the United States.” Drone-Mounted Handgun, Flamethrower Reignite Lawmaker Debate Reacting to the well-publicised drone weaponization exploits of a Connecticut teen, state legislators have conducted public hearings and proposed legislation to outlaw certain activity. One bill would make it a class C felony, punishable by one to ten years in prison, to use a drone to release tear gas or other substances, or to control a deadly weapon or explosive device. Another bill would also limit how law enforcement and state agencies can use drones. But Peter Sachs, author of the Drone Law Journal, says one version of the bill exempts police from the ban on weaponized drones. Proposed Utah legislation would allow cops to shoot down drones Utah is not fooling around when it comes to drones. The recently introduced Senate Bill 210 would designate certain drone activity as aerial trespassing, and create guidelines for enforcement, including an option for police to shoot down rogue UAVs. State Senator Wayne Harper wants to address three issues: privacy, non-interference with airports and aircraft, and non-interference with emergency situations. The bill would ban drones within 500 feet of correctional institutions or within three miles of a wildfire, and make it illegal to use a drone in the surveillance of large crowds or for stalking someone in a voyeuristic way. Violating drones could be neutralized by first responders or law enforcement officers. DJI's New Phantom 4 Drone Is Smarter, More Expensive and Available From Apple DJI introduced the Phantom 4 which can dodge obstacles and track humans. The Phantom 4 features two sensors that allow it to react to and avoid obstacles in its path. The TapFly mode lets you tap on the live view on your smart device screen to direct the Phantom 4 in that direction.
Conversation with drone lawyer Jonathan Rupprecht, a NASA and Verizon UAS tracking system, the Google Internet HALE drone crashes, and Boeing patents a drone charging concept. Guest In December 2014, Jonathan Rupprecht formed Rupprecht Law, a firm providing legal services for operators of unmanned aerial vehicles. Jonathan authored a book on the law in the United States pertaining to unmanned aircraft called Drones: Their Many Civilian Uses and the U.S. Laws Surrounding Them. He later was an advisor for one of the amicus briefs for the Huerta v. Pirker case. We talk with Jonathan about the state of drone law, areas that need to be figured out (like export control, frequency allocation, federal versus local jurisdiction), and what lawyers can offer (such as support for building the business plan.) Jonathan discusses how issues like privacy might already be covered under existing laws, the open issue of navigable airspace, and the notice and comment process. We also consider building safety awareness among the general drone-flying public. Jonathan Rupprecht is a commercial pilot for single and multi-engine aircraft ratings and also a flight instructor for airplanes and instruments. He obtained a Bachelor of Science in Professional Aeronautics from Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University, Magna Cum Laude, and a Juris Doctor from Florida International University School of Law. The first book led into him being requested to be a co-author on an American Bar Association book called Unmanned Aircraft in the National Airspace: Critical Issues, Technology, and the Law. Jonathan wrote on administrative law, the FAA rule making process, and the special rule on unmanned aircraft. News NASA Developing Unmanned Aerial System Traffic Management NASA and Verizon plan to monitor US drone network from phone towers The NASA Unmanned Aerial System Traffic Management system, or UTM, is a cloud-based concept to manage air traffic operated beyond visual line of sight at low altitudes. UTM Principal Investigator Dr. Parimal Kopardekar says, “We need a way to organize the UAS traffic, whether that's by crisscrossing or with a bike lane or HOV lane kind of construct. The system can make these things happen based on demand. UTM is a virtual system.” To learn more, the Guardian filed a Freedom of Information Act request for documents and learned that last year telecom company Verizon signed an agreement with NASA “to jointly explore whether cell towers … could support communications and surveillance of unmanned aerial systems (UAS) at low altitudes.” Google's High-Flying Internet Drone Crashed in New Mexico Weeks Ago The Solara 50 drone built by Google-owned Titan Aerospace crashed shortly after takeoff. The solar powered, 50 foot wingspan drone is designed to linger at 65,000 feet and provide Internet connectivity. The NTSB is investigating. Boeing patents system for airborne drone charging The Boeing patent is titled, “Autonomous aircraft with disconnectable tether” and describes a system where drones drop tethers to ground-based charging stations. Video of the Week Sky Pixel LA - SBC Flooding Part 1 Listener Heath sent in the link to this video showing some of the flooding around the Shreveport, Louisiana area. It's a very artistic portrayal of a very serious situation. Part 2 is more of a look at the effect of the flooding on people. Mentioned Here and There June 3, 2015 Max Flight Max appeared on the KSFR 101.1FM, Santa Fe Public Radio show, Here and There with journalism pro Dave Marash. They talked about drones, applications, regulatory issues, privacy, and more. Enrique Iglesias Undergoes Hand Surgery After Drone Accident Singer Enrique Iglesias catches a quadcopter with his hand in his act. Things didn't go so well for Iglesias in the Tijuana performance. Extreme Sandbox Extreme Sandbox in Hastings, Minnesota opened an extreme adventure attraction called RC Adventure where visitors can operate DJI Phantom 2 d...
News from the 2015 AUVSI Conference, including the Pathfinder Program where the FAA partners with industry to develop commercial UAS technology. AUVSI Unmanned Systems 2015 Conference The Association for Unmanned Vehicle Systems International (AUVSI) held its Unmanned Systems 2015 Conference May 4-7 in Atlanta, Georgia. At the Conference, the FAA announced the “Pathfinder Program” which it called “a partnership with industry to explore the next steps in unmanned aircraft operations beyond the type of operations the agency proposed in the draft small unmanned aircraft systems rule it published in February.” Speech – "UAS Pathfinder Program Announcement Press Conference" Press Release – FAA-Industry Initiative Will Expand Small UAS Horizons In his speech, FAA Administrator Michael Huerta said, “We're partnering with three leading U.S. companies who have committed extensive resources to perform research that will help us determine if and how we can safely expand unmanned aircraft operations in the United States. These companies reached out to the FAA to work with us on exploring three key types of unmanned operations.” The industry partners and three focus areas are: Visual line-of-sight operations in urban areas. CNN will look at how UAS might be safely used for newsgathering in populated areas. Extended visual line-of-sight operations in rural areas. This concept involves UAS flights outside the pilot's direct vision. UAS manufacturer PrecisionHawk will explore how this might allow greater UAS use for crop monitoring in precision agriculture operations. Beyond visual line-of-sight in rural/isolated areas. BNSF Railway will explore command-and-control challenges of using UAS to inspect rail system infrastructure. Huerta said, “We anticipate receiving valuable data from each of these trials that could result in FAA-approved operations in the next few years. They will also give insight into how unmanned aircraft can be used to transform the way certain industries do business – whether that means making sure trains run on time, checking on the health of crops, or reporting on a natural disaster.” On the NPRM, Huerta commented on the number of public comments received, noting that it will take time to address them and finalize the rule. The Pathfinder Program is designed to expand expand the use of unmanned aircraft in the meantime. PrecisionHawk to work with FAA on UAV extended line-of-sight safety PrecisionHawk will formulate a framework for fixed wing and multirotor UAVs for missions in agriculture, forestry, and other rural industries. PrecisionHawk will also test its LATAS (Low Altitude Tracking & Avoidance System) traffic management system. AUVSI: New tethered UAV for CNN CNN announced that it will become the launch customer for the Drone Aviation Corp WATT UAV. This tethered drone that can take power from the tether and simultaneously transmit data back to the ground. The electric quadrotor is activated with a mobile tablet and can hover at up to 300 feet for 8 hours. Tim Trott Interview with Jay Willmott At the AUVSI Conference, Tim Trott from Southern Helicam caught up with Jay Willmott, Founder and President of unmanned technology consultancy Nexutech. Vortex UAS A conversation with Vince Donahue, the Founder and President of Vortex UAS. Vortex provides tailored solutions for businesses utilizing UAS, including pilot training, consulting, and other services. This is a condensed version of the full interview originally published in Episode 347 of the Airplane Geeks podcast. Videos of the Week Surf the world's most extraordinary waves with drone videos Shot by photographer Eric Sterman with a GoPro on a Phantom 2 during two days at the “Jaws” surf break on the North shore of Maui. Good Morning, San Diego! The scenes in this video were captured around sunrise over a period of four months. Shot using a GoPro HERO3 Black Edition camera mounted on a DJI Phantom 2 Quadcopter with ...
DJI and 3D Robotics introduce new quadcopters, more FAA exemptions, EASA looking at RPAS regulations, and export control implications for drones. News The World's Largest Drone Company Unveils Newest Product DJI Phantom 3 DJI introduced the Phantom 3 in two models, the Professional at $1259 and the Advanced at $999. The Professional offers a 1080P 4K camera. Both come with the Lightbridge Technology offering real-time HD Video from up to a mile away. The DJI app now includes a flight simulator. 3D Robotics teases stylish drone with pro features 3D Robotics released a teaser video for a new quadcopter to be introduced April 13th. It looks like the styling team took a page from the DJI Phantom book. Engadget believes it will have first person view out of the box, a pre-programmable flying route, perhaps follow-me settings, and a new gimbal design. 3D Robotics Launches DroneKit, Its API For Building Drone Apps A few weeks ago, 3D Robotics launched “DroneKit,” an open-source API for writing drone apps. It works with any drone that uses its APM autopilot. With the API, developers can write web-based and mobile apps, as well as apps written in Python that run on the drone itself. FAA Grants 30 New Commercial UAS Exemptions The FAA approved 30 more commercial UAS exemptions, including exemptions for insurance companies USAA and AIG. In a press release (FAA Approves Drone Petition), USAA says, “The Federal Aviation Administration approved USAA's petition on April 2 to conduct research and development on its new unmanned aircraft system (UAS) program to better serve members, especially after catastrophes.” The FAA approved USAA's use of a PrecisionHawk drone for daytime, line-of-sight flights under 400 feet with a trained pilot. USAA will work with PrecisionHawk to develop best practices, safety and privacy protocols, and procedures for future operational use. In another press release (It's Wheels Up with ‘Transformative Technology') written before the petition was submitted, USAA provides some examples of the applications they have in mind: “We're constantly seeking ways to better serve our members, especially during catastrophes, when getting into neighborhoods immediately after can be dangerous to human life, and applying new technologies is one way we can do that,” says Alan Krapf, president, USAA property and casualty insurance group. USAA has teamed up with Texas A&M University to research and develop how to effectively put UAS to work for its members. This is being conducted with the University's Roboticists Without Borders and Center for Robot-Assisted Search and Rescue (CRASAR). Also granted exemptions were AeroVironment for agriculture, aerial survey, and patrol applications, and senseFly for precision agriculture. The total number of approved exemptions is now 99. The FAA has received 700 applications. EASA Presents its Vision for the Future of the Aviation Regulatory System EASA (the European Aviation Safety Agency) published an ‘EASA Opinion' with proposals for the future of the aviation regulatory system. They include proposals for Remotely Piloted Aircraft Systems (RPASs). As part of implementing a General Aviation Road Map, EASA proposes to amend existing regulations to introduce, “...the necessary flexibility for small, low-risk GA as well as for Remotely Piloted Aircraft Systems (RPASs) by introducing provisions which will allow possible deviations from existing requirements, where appropriate.” US policy on the export of Unmanned Aerial Systems (UAS): a detailed look and analysis The U.S. Department of State conducted a UAS policy review and has issued a new policy that governs the export and subsequent use of commercial and military unmanned systems. The new policy could allow export of weaponized UAS to U.S. allies, under certain circumstances and uses. The policy also could also allow export of more types of commercial UAS to other countries,
The FAA tells law enforcement what their role is in policing UAS usage, CNN signs an agreement with the FAA to share drone journalism research results, and drones are big at the Consumer Electronics Show. News FAA Issues UAS Guidance for Law Enforcement This isn't guidance on how law enforcement can use UAS. It's guidance on how law enforcement plays a vital role in “deterring, detecting and investigating unsafe operations.” Specifically, FAA looks to law enforcement for: Witness Identification and Interviews Identification of Operators Viewing and Recording the Location of the Event Identifying Sensitive Locations, Events, or Activities Notifying FAA of incident, accident or other suspected violation Evidence Collection The guidance document Law Enforcement Guidance for Suspected Unauthorized UAS Operations is available as a PDF. CNN strikes drone deal with FAA In June 2014, CNN and the Georgia Institute of Technology announced they would jointly study how to operate UAVs safely and effectively. At that time, they said they wanted to share the data from the study with the FAA. CNN has now signed a Cooperative Research and Development Agreement with the FAA that allows it to share the research data with the FAA. CNN Senior Vice President David Vigilante said, "Our aim is to get beyond hobby-grade equipment and to establish what options are available and workable to produce high quality video journalism using various types of UAVs and camera setups.” International Consumer Electronics Show Coverage The giant, annual International Consumer Electronics Show (CES) gives the industry a chance to display products that are available to buy now, and concepts that you may or may not be able to buy later. As you'd expect, there were a lot of drones at CES: Drones fly high at CES The AirDog auto-follow drone is available for pre-order ($1,295) and is envisioned for recording extreme sports. The GoPro-ready RTF Ghost Drone ($600) can be operated by a Smartphone app. CES 2015: Unleash the Drones! In a CES first, there was an Unmanned Systems Marketplace on the show floor with over a dozen companies exhibiting. The FAA was close by promoting “Know before You Fly” and handing out fliers. The Trace FLYR1 (available for pre-order) is called, “A visually intelligent smart camera that can click in and out of a multitude of self controlled motorized accessories, allowing you to stay in the moment and stream your footage live to the internet.” It can follow you at a fixed distance by tracking a pattern on your shirt. At one of the keynote speeches, Intel CEO Brian Krzanich, shows drones from Ascending Technologies that use a depth-sensing camera from Intel. This technology finds the shortest route from Point A to Point B while avoiding obstacles in the way. CES 2015: Why the future of drones is up in the air CCS Insight analyst Ben Wood said, "Drones are arguably the most hyped product at CES.” There was a pink version of the Ghost Drone at CES, under the belief that the quadcopter would thus be more appealing to the female market. DJI showed their Drone Stick, a handheld mount when you are not flying your camera. It's compatible with the DJI Inspire 1 camera and gimbal. DJI also announced the new H4-3D gimbal, which works with the GoPro Hero4 Black camera. It also works with the DJI Phantom 2 and Flamewheel systems. CES 2015: The drone revolution begins with AirDog, Hexo+ and Nixie The Hexo+ drone from Squadrone System is another autonomous auto-follow drone getting a lot of attention. They call it a “self-flying camera,” but you supply the GoPro and control it through an app. Available for pre-order at $1,149. Video of the Week Racing in a Las Vegas Drone Rodeo — CES 2015 A Drone Rodeo put on by DJI for a day of racing and of fighting drones with the madmen from Game of Drones. Mentioned Coit Tower Reopens After Controversial Drone Filming Geo-matching.
Wi-Fi security, Internet privacy (slipping away fast), Sandboxie (a good sandbox option), installing a new Wi-Fi router (must register with ISP), channel agnostic customer service (customer selects the channel for everything), Profiles in IT (Randy Pausch, co-founder Alice programming initiative, last lecture went viral), mindful leadership (new trend in Silicon Valley, leads to emotional intelligence, level 5 leadership), another drone violation (drone crashes near police seige in Australia, owner fined), first 3D printer tool in space (NASA just emailed the file for the socket wrench), drones for Christmas (Hubsan X4 Quadcopter $80, Parrot AR Drone 2.0 $500, DJI Phantom 2 Vision $1125), robots for Christmas (iRobot Create 2 Prgrammable Robot $200, Parrot Minidrones Jumping Sumo $160, WowWee MiP $100, Modular Robotics Exofabulatronixx $100, Obrotix Ollie $100). This show originally aired on Saturday, December 20, 2014, at 9:00 AM EST on WFED (1500 AM). This show originally aired on Saturday, December 20, 2014, at 9:00 AM EST on WFED (1500 AM).
A new civilian HALE, 12 drones for the holidays, where to fly your drone in the UK and Canada, drone near misses and hits, and a holiday video of the week. News Arca Space Announces New Range of High-Altitude UAVs New Mexico-based Arca Space Corporation announced the AirStrato line of electric HALE (High Altitude Long Endurance) UAVs. These fill a gap between large, expensive military unmanned aerial vehicles and small, inexpensive civilian commercial drones. The target market is small-scale businesses and research institutions. The Twelve Drones of Christmas FlightBots.com picked their favorite drones for the holiday season: Quadcopter Q4 Nano - A very small RTF. Hubsan X4 HD - A low cost little starter drone quadcopter with HD 2MP Camera. Hubsan X4 H107D FPV - An out of the box basic first person view (FPV) starter drone. Blade 180 QX HD ready to fly (RTF) - A low cost starter drone for aerial photography. Parrot AR.Drone 2.0 Elite - Control this using your smartphone or tablet. Quanum Nova - Outperforms other drone in its price range. Walkera QR X350 PRO - An RTF FPV Quadcopter that generally costs less than competing products. DJI Phantom 2 Vision+ - The easy to fly all-in-one consumer drone with advanced software. 3DR IRIS+ - For real consumer and professional applications. 3DR X8+ - A real workhorse with modular design and autonomous delivery capabilities. Walkera Scout X4 - Features include the ability change from quadcopter with 4 motors to octocopter with 8 motors, real time telemetry and flight times up to 25 minutes. DJI Inspire 1- Carbon fiber arms lift out of sight, 360 degree view, 4K video, 12 megapixel photos. Where you can and can't fly a drone The niche hobby has turned mainstream, and that means lots of new drone pilots after the holidays. What are the rules in the UK? TGI Friday's Dumb Mistletoe Drone Cut Somebody's Face Open TGI Friday's idea for drones carrying mistletoe inside the restaurant has already resulted in an accident. During a demonstration for the Brooklyn Daily, the pilot encouraged the reporter to let him land the drone on her hand. She flinched and the drone struck a photographer in the face. Pilots fear private drones after Heathrow near-miss The UK Airprox Board (UKAB) is expected to release its report on December 12 about the Heathrow Airport incident earlier this year where an Airbus A320 with passengers had a close encounter with a civilian drone. Near-collisions between drones, airliners surge, new FAA reports show Reports of near collisions between unmanned and manned aircraft continue to be reported to the FAA by commercial pilots, private pilots, and air traffic controllers. Since June 1, there have been 25 such encounters of small drones coming “within a few seconds or a few feet of crashing into much larger aircraft.” The list is available from The Washington Post in Near Mid-Air Collisions With Drones. The Government Admits Drone Rules Won't Be Ready Until at Least 2017 The FAA was given until September 2015 to establish regulations that integrate UAS into the National Airspace. The The Government Accountability Office (GAO) says the rules won't be in place until 2017 or later. Video of the Week This Drone Video of Synchronized Holiday Lights Is the Most American Thing Ever A subdivision in the American Southwest synced up a neighborhood-spanning light show to Trans Siberian Orchestra's "Wizards of Winter," and filmed the whole thing with a drone. Feedback DroneIQ - How to freely operate a commercial or research drone in Canada By freelance reporter and UAV enthusiast William Levasseur. This video provides details about the new Transport Canada regulations for commercial UAV operations. DroneIQ - Why the Transport Canada UAV exemption is useless This follow-on video explains why the Transport Canada definition for "built-up area" might make the new exemption useless for anything other than surveying very remote farmland o...
An amphibian RPA, India bans drones, open source code for drones, area terrain mapping, DARPA's ship-based MALE UAV concept, a new UAV market study, and more on logbooks for drone pilots. News The Flyox Amphib UAV enters market Singular Aircraft has released the Flyox I, an amphibian RPA (Remotely Piloted Aircraft) that can take off and land on water, as well as on unpaved runways and snow. Flyox I is a high wing aircraft with a 14 meter wingspan, a 2000 kg payload, and is powered by two 340 HP engines. It can automatically take-off and land, and can be programed with preset flight paths. Envisioned applications include agriculture, firefighting, goods transport, surveillance, and rescue. India bans civilian drones in the country till it revises existing policies The Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) has prohibited the use of civilian drones in India. The DGCA says, “Due to lack of regulation, operating procedures/standards, and uncertainty of the technology, UAS poses threat for air collisions and accidents.” Serbia and Albania game abandoned after drone invasion sparks brawl Serbia's European Championship football (soccer) qualifying match with Albania was stopped after a fight between the players broke out. When a DJI Phantom flew over the field carrying a "Greater Albania" flag, a Serbian player pulled it down, and that sparked the brawl. Industry Coalition Wants Open Source Code for Drones The Dronecode Project has been established as a Linux Foundation Collaborative Project to foster a common, shared open source platform for UAVs. The Project includes the APM/ArduPilot UAV software platform and associated code, currently hosted by 3D Robotics. Founding members include 3D Robotics, Baidu, Box, DroneDeploy, Intel, jDrones, Laser Navigation, Qualcomm Technologies, SkyWard, Squadrone System, Walkera and Yuneec. More than 1,200 developers are working on Dronecode. Press Release: Linux Foundation and Leading Technology Companies Launch Open Source Dronecode Project Drone approved to map area terrain Wright State Research Institute (WSRI) will partner with 3D Aerial Solutions to fly an eBee drone to map terrain at the Wilmington Air Park. The photogrammetry flights will produce a series of two-dimensional photographs that together create a 3D image. The Ohio/Indiana UAS Test Site will then use the data to virtually fly UAVs. The eBee is a hand-launched flying wing type aircraft with a single pusher engine. It has a 38” wingspan, a 50 minute flight time, and a radio range of just under 2 miles. Wright State also has asked the FAA for permission to fly a UAV above the National Center for Medical Readiness. A decision is pending. DARPA advances ship-based MALE UAV concept DARPA (the US Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency) has awarded AeroVironment a $19 million preliminary design contract to demonstrate launch and recovery of a medium-sized UAV from a small vessel. According to DARPA, the tactically exploited reconnaissance node (TERN, now retitled Tern) program, “envisions using smaller ships as mobile launch and recovery sites for medium-altitude long-endurance [MALE] unmanned aircraft. Ideally, Tern would enable on-demand, ship-based unmanned aircraft system operations without extensive, time-consuming and irreversible ship modifications.” “Subscale flight demonstrations” are expected over the next 12 months. 2014 UAV Market Research Study assesses size, growth of total UAV market The "2014 UAV Market Research Study" from IGI Consulting estimates that the US market will grow from $5 billion in 2013 to $15 billion in 2020. The study looks at the total UAV market, ranging from large military UAVs to small amateur UAVs. It considers DOD, Civil, Commercial, sUAS, DIY Amateur, and Radio Control aircraft. Growth will be driven by the commercial and Do-it-Yourself markets, with major commercial applications being: agriculture, real estate, filmmaking, oil and pipeline,
Agriculture wants UAVs, the White House seeks drone data transparency, a wearable quadcopter, UAVs fight poachers, and Facebook plans to offer Internet access via drone. News FAA's Sluggish UAV Ruling Slows Ag Research, Group Suggests Commercial farmers everywhere are eager to apply new technology to their operations. That includes using unmanned aircraft for things like crop and livestock surveys, monitoring irrigation needs, and pest control. Farmers in Louisiana as well as representatives from Louisiana State University's AgCenter have formed a 17-member study group headed by a state Senator. They want to make recommendations to the FAA before it issues UAS regulations. White House plans to require federal agencies to provide details about drones The Obama Administration is circulating a draft Executive Order that if signed would make government use of drones more transparent. The Order would apply to federal agencies like the Department of Homeland Security, the Pentagon, the Justice Department, NASA, the Interior Department, and the Commerce Department. It would require that they provide information about the size of their fleet, how it is used, and what is done with the data collected. Meet The Finalists Of Intel's Make It Wearable Challenge One of the ten finalists in the Intel Make It Wearable Challenge is “Nixie,” a wristband camera that unfolds into a remote-controlled quadcopter. The idea is that on command, Nixie unfolds, flies up, turns around, takes a picture of you, and returns so you can catch it. How the Shadowview Foundation uses aerial surveillance to stop poaching With the help of the Shadowview Foundation, drones are being used to fight illegal poaching in Africa and Asia. Shadowview provides UAS for environmental, conservation, and humanitarian relief operations. Others are active in this area. The World Wildlife Fund received a $5 million grant for its work in with drones specially designed by drone-maker Falcon UAV. Facebook Wi-Fi Drone the Size of 747 Could Fly in 2015 Facebook plans to offer WiFi service to the two thirds of the world without Internet access via large, solar powered drones. Fans are using drones to spy on the 'Star Wars: episode VII' set Former RAF airbase, now public park Greenham Common is located about 50 miles west of London. It's also the site where scenes for the next Star Wars movie are being filmed. Someone identified only as “3dlp” flew a drone over the site and posted video on YouTube showing a Millennium Falcon under construction and two X-wing starfighters. New Jersey Man Accused Of Shooting Down Neighbor's Remote Control Drone A man was using a drone to take pictures of a friends house under construction. A neighbor didn't take kindly to that and took out the drone with a shotgun. He was arrested by police and charged with Possession of a Weapon for an Unlawful Purpose and Criminal Mischief. Drone used in Hannah Graham search; cops check for cold case ties An Aeryon SkyRanger is being used in the search for missing University of Virginia student. The FAA approved the use of the drone, a first in Virginia according to authorities. John Coggin, chief engineer of the Mid-Atlantic Aviation Partnership, said the drone will be used to take a closer look at objects of interest in areas too difficult to reach by other means. Video of the Week “Beautiful Scotland,” A Drone's-Eye View of the Scenic Beauty of Scotland Edinburgh-based filmmaker John Duncan used a DJI Phantom 2 quadcopter fitted with a GoPro 3+ camera FPV to shoot stunning aerial footage of Scotland for this his short film.
FAA grants an emergency COA, Reno is not just for manned aircraft anymore, Chinese inflatable UAVs, more UAS regulations, and more bad behavior with drones. News Drones Get Waiver to Search for Missing Texas Woman Christina Morris The FAA granted an Emergency COA to the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) of Gaithersburg, MD in order to utilize an Unmanned Aircraft System in the search for a woman missing in Texas. Under the Emergency COA, NIST was able to operate an unmanned aircraft through contractor Texas EquuSearch, a non-profit organization that assists with locating missing individuals. The FAA issues COAs “on an emergency basis when: 1) a situation exists in which there is distress or urgency and there is an extreme possibility of a loss of life; 2) the proponent has determined that manned flight operations cannot be conducted efficiently; and 3) the proposed UAS is operating under a current approved COA for a different purpose or location." Texas EquuSearch used the NIST's catapult-launched MLB Super Bat, but did not locate the woman. The search was subsequently suspended until more leads could be developed. Reno air races draw new kind of aircraft: drones This year's National Championship Air Races in Reno included the Small UAS Challenge, designed to test speed, agility, and strength. Contestants navigated an obstacle course, and participated in a time trial and a dead lift. A “Drone Zone” gave event attendees an opportunity to learn more about unmanned aerial vehicles and systems. Tianjin expo reveals Chinese UAV innovations, aspiration and Now that's an AIRplane! Homemade inflatable drone reaches speeds of 120mph The Chinese are actively seeking to develop their aviation industry, and that includes unmanned vehicles. At the Tianjin International UAV and Model Aircraft Technology Exhibition, a family of UAVs were shown that featured inflatable bodies. The SF-1, SF-2 and SF-3 have wingspans of 2.5 m, 3 m and 4.3 m respectively, and a useful load of 25 kg. They can be inflated with either air, helium, or hydrogen. This development reminds David of the experimental Goodyear Inflatoplane, produced in the 1950's and ‘60's. Europe Outlines Action Plan For UAV Policymaking Matthew Baldwin, the director of aviation and international transport affairs with the European Commission (EC) had some comments from the UAS 2014 conference held in London: The task of creating a regulatory framework that promotes UAS but addresses safety and privacy concerns. The current European framework is fragmented, and that's a competitive disadvantage. Thresholds based on UAV weight are inconsistent, absurd, and arbitrary. Baldwin said, "We believe that EASA [the European Aviation Safety Agency] is best placed to develop rules, and we envisage an EC proposal early next year to cover safety, liability and insurance, security privacy and so on.” This Dunkable Drone Will Suck Up Whale Snot for Science Whales have blowhorns that are lined with mucus and researchers want to collect that mucus to determine the health of the whale. Obviously, whale mucus is not easy to collect. The Olin College of Engineering has tackled this problem by developing and testing a drone they call Snot Bot. They want the FAA to give them permission to use it on real whales. Pilot spots drone flying near Nashville airport runway On approach to Nashville International Airport, the pilot of an American Eagle flight spotted a hovering drone. ATC notified the police air unit and the FAA is investigating. Drones snooping into homes Residents in this town are complaining about drones snooping around. One woman says her son had friends over for a pool party, and suddenly a drone was hovering overhead. Neighbors also report seeing a drone after dark with flashing red and green lights. Videos of the Week Keep an eye on battery life Max Trescott sends in this close call where the pilot saves his DJI Phantom bef...
Sense and Avoid by NASA and General Atomics, South African rules by 2015, Amazon's drone page, package delivery by Flirtey and Google, and cease and desist letters from the FAA. Guest Maj. Gen. Charles Frank Bolden, Jr., (USMC-Ret.), the NASA Administrator since July, 2009. In this clip from a longer interview recorded for the Airplane Geeks podcast, Charlie talks about NASA's activity to develop autonomous flight technologies with the UAS test sites, focusing on sense and avoid. NASA is looking at low altitude sUAS air traffic control, and they are finalizing an agreement with Google on sense and avoid technology for package delivery systems. NASA wants to help the FAA get out ahead of the developing market. News General Atomics Readies for 'Detect and Avoid' Demo General Atomics Aeronautical Systems is developing aircraft detect-and-avoid (DAA) systems for unmanned aircraft. First, they'll conduct software regression and hardware functional testing on their Predator B at the company's flight operations facility in Palmdale, California. Then, they'll move the system to the NASA Predator B Unmanned Science and Research Aircraft System named “Ikhana,” a Native American Choctaw word meaning intelligent, conscious, or aware. Five weeks of collision avoidance trials will be performed where the Predator will be flown against “intruder” aircraft. CAA on track to introduce UAV regulations by March 2015 The South African Civil Aviation Authority says it will finalize UAV regulations by March, 2015. The CAA says until then, UAV operation in civil airspace is illegal and operators could be subject to a fine or up to ten years in prison, or both. Flying on private land or in restricted airspace is also illegal. However, the director and chairman of the Commercial Unmanned Aircraft Association of South Africa (CUAASA) says you cannot be fined by the CAA because there are no laws in place. Guess Which Giant Retailer Has Officially Opened Up a "Drone Store" Amazon.com has officially opened a “Drone Store” featuring the DJI Phantom and the Parrot Drone. Coming soon is the TechJect Dragonfly, a “Wi-Fi enabled robotic insect.” Mike Fortin, the CEO of CineDrones thinks selling hobby-grade equipment without emphasizing education or safety is irresponsible. But Amazon's Drone Store web page has a “Fly Responsibly” link that takes you to more “links for informational purposes only:” FAA UAS website Academy of Model Aeronautics sUAS Flight Safety Guide [PDF] Association for Unmanned Vehicle Systems International (AUVSI) Fly Responsibly webpage Drone Startup Flirtey Partners with The University of Nevada, Reno To Push UAV Delivery Forward In October 2013, Flirtey started drone delivery tests in Australia. They now have more than a hundred successful test deliveries of textbooks, with its partner Zookal, a company that sells textbooks online. Now Flirtey has teamed up with UAS research center University of Nevada, Reno. The University gets equity in the company, and Flirtey gets collaboration with the University's R&D labs for design, manufacture, and research. Flirtey also gets access to the University's graduate students and indoor flight-testing facilities. Flirtey is going commercial in New Zealand, which is launching Airshare as a UAV hub where commercial operators can log flight information. 2 Arrested for Flying Drones Near Brooklyn Bridge, US Open: NYPD The first individual arrested was allegedly flying over the Brooklyn Bridge. He was reported to police by transit workers. The man was visiting from Russia. The second arrest was for an overflight of the National Tennis Center, hosting the U.S. Open. The operator, a filmmaker, reportedly stated that he thought he was flying in an “appropriate park space.” The National Tennis Center is a private facility adjacent to Flushing Meadows Corona Park, which is a public space. Undeclared drone batteries sparked plane fire at Melbourne airport
Martha Stewart's farm via DJI Phantom, UAS competitions, Amazon.com petitions the FAA, and a utility company to start drone testing. News: Amazing Aerial Photos Of My Farm One of Martha Stewart's security employees took a tour of Martha's farm with his new DJI Phantom. On her blog, she posted photos taken by the quadcopter, much to the delight of her fans. Is that commercial use by Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia, Martha's company? Shaken or stirred? Drone bartender battles bots in design challenge The Electrolux Design Lab is a design competition where students submit innovative ideas for households of the future. Among the 35 finalists this year, we see one that carries either hot or cold beverages to thirsty bar patrons, and dispenses the drinks into cups. Control is intended to be by voice or mobile app. 'Gobble Hawk' Wins NASA High-Altitude UAV Design Competition There was another recent contest for students, this one specifically for UAVs that track hurricanes. NASA was looking for a lower cost high endurance UAS, and they chose the twin-fuselage Gobble Hawk design concept from Virginia Tech. The second place OQ451-5 Trident from Purdue would be powered by hydrogen engines, with an endurance of 7 days. Third place was the University of Virginia Big WAHOO (Worldwide Autonomous Hurricane and Oceanic Observer), also hydrogen-powered.. Amazon asks the FAA for permission to play with its drones outside Amazon.com has been operating its package delivery drones in an indoor test facility in Seattle. On July 9, they sent a Petition for Exemption to the FAA asking to move outside. Amazon is serious about package delivery by drone. In part, their petition says: Amazon Prime Air, a new delivery system that will get packages to customers in 30 minutes or less using aerial vehicles, is one invention we are incredibly passionate about. We believe customers will love it, and we are committed to making Prime Air available to customers worldwide as soon as we are permitted to do so. We also see that Amazon has made significant progress: In the past five months, we have made advancements toward the development of highly-automated aerial vehicles for Prime Air, including: Testing a range of capabilities for our eighth- and ninth-generation aerial vehicles, including agility, flight duration, redundancy, and sense-and-avoid sensors and algorithms; Developing aerial vehicles that travel over 50 miles per hour, and will carry 5-pound payloads, which cover 86% of products sold on Amazon; and Attracting a growing team of world-renowned roboticists, scientists, aeronautical engineers, remote sensing experts, and a former NASA astronaut. Finally, Amazon summarizes: One day, seeing Amazon Prime Air will be as normal as seeing mail trucks on the road today, resulting in enormous benefits for consumers across the nation. We respectfully submit this petition for exemption so that Prime Air can be ready to launch commercial operations as soon as eventually permitted by subsequent FAA action. Eagle shot wins drone photography competition A competition for drone photographs recently concluded and the winning photo is a birdseye view of an eagle in flight over Bali Barat National Park in Indonesia. You can see the contest winners at Dronestagram, a website dedicated to aerial photographs. Sponsorship was provided by National Geographic, Go Pro, Picanova, Droneshop and Parrot. SDG&E Is First (Utility) in Unmanned Flight With Drone Testing The San Diego Gas & Electric Co. says the FAA has given them permission to conduct test flights of a small camera-equipped quadcopter. Ultimately, the utility wants to use the UAVs for infrastructure inspection. Test flights are limited to rural areas away from houses. MultiRotorForums Petitions White House to Adopt UK Drone Policy DroneLive.com reports that MultiRotorForums.com created a petition on WhiteHouse.gov asking that the Obama Administration compel the FAA ...
DJI Phantom drone flyaways, automatic website login using cookies, dangers of digital litter(old pics may resurface), password storage using one way hash algorithm, Profiles in IT (Barry Appelman, father of AIM Buddy List and TCP/IP pioneer), Heartbleed Bug author (CS German grad student, unpaid volunteer working on OpenSSL, error unintentional), flawed Internet security open software development (OpenSSL is underfunded, relies on unpaid volunteers, companies who benefit do not contribute enough, change needed), Nerd humor (these jokes seemed funny at 4am), first Earth-sized planet in habitable zone discovered (looking for life in the Universe, a major succcess for the NASA Kepler Science Telescope), Googles Easter eggs (seven identified, many more still uncovered, an Easter tradition), and and Space X launches (good news for NASA private space initiative, will supply cargo to ISS, manned flights will follow soon). This show originally aired on Saturday, April 19, 2014, at 9:00 AM EST on WFED (1500 AM).
The X-47B UCAS-D team wins the Collier Trophy, drones and Bluefins and the search for Malaysia Flight 370, the UK CAA convicts a drone pilot, and listener feedback. The News: Legendary Collier Trophy Awarded to X-47B Team The 2013 Robert J. Collier Trophy has been awarded to the X-47B Unmanned Combat Air System Demonstration (UCAS-D) team by the National Aeronautic Association. The team was selected for "developing and demonstrating the first unmanned, autonomous air system operating from an aircraft carrier." How Drones Could Have Helped Find Malaysia Air Flight 370 UAVs could be used more extensively for search and rescue operations. We have aircraft like the AeroVironment Global Observer, Lockheed Martin's High Altitude Airship, and Boeing's Phantom Eye. Hopefully someday soon these and others could be used for missions like the search for MH 370. Boston-Area Underwater Robot To Aid Search For Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 The Bluefin-21 from Bluefin Robotics is an 18 foot autonomous underwater vehicles, or AUV, that uses side-scan sonars to create a mosaic image, like an ultrasound. UK's first drone conviction will bankrupt me, says Cumbrian man The Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) prosecuted a man for the dangerous and illegal flying an unmanned aircraft near a nuclear submarine testing facility. From Listener Feedback: 'River of blood' after drone 'hits' Australian athlete Triathlete injured as drone filming race falls to ground Triathlete injured in drone incident CASA investigating Geraldton drone incident A UAV injures an athlete, but what really happened? Lehmann Aviation The LA100 is called a flying platform for GoPro users. It's RTF, fixed wing, fully autonomous, with communications via WiFi, and a five minute flight time. E-Waste Quadcopter Lifts Your Spirits While Keeping Costs Down A quadcopter made out of junk: plywood, 140mm PC fans over-driven to 15,000 RPM by a 24V Dewalt cordless tool battery. Its controlled by an Arduino running MultiWii control software using sensors from a Nintendo Wii remote. Its dated April 1, but a fun idea nonetheless. Drones on ice After trials in Japan, a DJI Phantom and GoPro are being used to study sea ice and climate change. Drones Over Dolphin Stampede and Whales off Dana Point and Maui Great aerial video. Drone Saves Puppy Trapped In Stony Creek Swamp A one year old beagle got himself lost in the cattails of a muddy swamp in Connecticut. He couldn't be located until a fire department drone woke him up, and his barking led rescuers to the dog. This is the same fire department that used a DJI Phantom in the quarry fire in January. UAV User Groups - See the Thirty Thousand Feet UAV page for some drone user groups. Send us yours if its not listed. Game of Drones Mounting a paintball gun. (Don't try this at home.) FAA Unswayed by Do-Good Drones Texas EquuSearch fights back. Mentioned: Become a Pilot Family Day and Aviation Display - The annual Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum event at the Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center. Bring your family for a great day, and meet Max and David. June 14, 2014.
An FAA Center of Excellence for UAS, 3D printing a drone, the industry pressures FAA on UAS regs, drone privacy, a thought-controlled quadcopter, drones used for and against hunters, anti-drone legislation, Korean drones, and who needs drones when you have gulls? The News: Notice of Intent to Establish the FAA Center of Excellence (COE) for Unmanned Aircraft Systems (UAS) Within the next year, the FAA intends to competitively select a Center of Excellence for UAS. The Center will conduct UAS related research, education, and training. It will also work with university partners on issues of mutual interest and concern. Following the Notice of Intent, the FAA will issue a Draft Solicitation for public comment, hold a public meeting in May, and issue awards within "the next year." Engineers print a functioning 1.5m-wide prototype unmanned aerial vehicle Additive manufacturing, popularly known as 3D printing, has been used by the Advanced Manufacturing Research Centre (AMRC) at the University of Sheffield to build a UAV. The polymer UAV made of nine parts that snap together. It's thought to be an example of a low cost craft that could be built “on demand.” Aerospace, Consumer Tech Lobbies Join Forces to Push for Domestic Drone Regulations The aerospace and the consumer electronics industries are teaming up to pressure the FAA into moving quickly to define the regulations governing UAS operations. Mansfield woman says missing drone "freaked me out" An 18-year old student with hopes of becoming a filmmaker was flying his DJI Phantom when some kind of failure occurred. It went down around some homes, but couldn't be found after a 2-hour search. So he put fliers on doors, hoping someone would find the Phantom. One woman found the flier and contacted the police, the mayors office, and even State officials fearing she was being spied on. UNG students test drones to be controlled by thoughts In a project funded through the Center for Undergraduate Research and Creative Activities, the University of North Georgia is using brain impulses to control a small quadcopter. Using an electroencephalogram-sensor headset, students are experimenting with control by thoughts without actually moving. Alaska bans hunters from using drones The Alaska Board of Game has wants to ban hunters from using drones to track animals. It's already illegal there to use manned aircraft to spot game and kill them on the same day. Colorado Bans the Use of Drones in Hunting Alaska is not alone in this. The Colorado Parks and Wildlife Commission banned unmanned aircraft “from hunting, scouting, and any other pursuit involved in the taking of wildlife.” States Mulling Legislation to Ban Drones The U.S. Sportsmen's Alliance is pushing states to take up legislation that protects “hunters, anglers and trappers from harassment by unmanned, aerial drones while exercising their legal right to pursue and take wildlife.” Editorial: Bill imposes pre-emptive limits on promising technology The Washington State Legislature has passed anti-drone House Bill 2789, which seeks to address privacy concerns. This “speculative lawmaking” looks at negative uses of drones, and not positive ones. The Bill does look for transparency and appropriate legal approval to collect personal information via drones. South Korea investigates two suspected North Korean drones As North and South Korea recently exchanged hostilities, some blue drones equipped with cameras crashed in South Korea. Gull drones to assist island deliveries Under the concept from Block Island called B.I.R.D.S. (Block Island Rural Delivery Service), restaurants and stores on the island will use gulls to deliver food and merchandise. Gull training is underway now. Video of the Week: Tooth Extraction by Drone? Mentioned: National Association of Drone Sportsmen AerialWorx