Awesome Stuff: Drones! Illegal Drone Uses! And Drone Haters!
from the drones! dept
Given that we wrote this week about the FAA saying that basically any use of a drone for money is
illegal, we figured that for this week's
awesome stuff we'd focus on some projects around drones -- some of which may actually be illegal under the FAA's ridiculous interpretation.
- HEXO: Autonomous Aerial Camera
First up, we've got the HEXO, an autonomous aerial camera. It's a drone that you can attach a GoPro to (some packages include the GoPro) with some software that you can use to let the drone know who/what to follow, and the drone will do exactly that. It's designed very much with aerial imagery of sporting events in mind. The examples in the video above are... amazing. Makes me want to do more sporting activities that I'd want to film just to use this kind of thing.
- Airdog: Auto-follow Drone for GoPro
Okay, this one is very similar to the HEXO above -- a drone system for automatically filming action sports from above with a GoPro. In fact, in some areas the similarities are striking. They're both built by companies based in Palo Alto, California. They both launched on Kickstarter on the same day, and they're both built by companies made up of action sports folks who wanted to have better systems to film themselves. It looks like the AirDog is a little different in that, rather than autonomously following you via the software, the AirDog requires a "leash" that you strap to your wrist, so it knows where to film. The AirDog also looks a little bit more expensive, and, frankly the sample shots in the video aren't nearly as impressive as those in the HEXO video, though that may have more to do with filmmaking technique than the devices in question. Either way, two options for very similar offerings -- and using either of them for commercial uses will piss off the FAA.
- View from Nova Scotia -- an aerial drone film
A filmmaker wants to make a film about Nova Scotia, filmed entirely by drones. The project is just about over and has almost no backing, so it's not going to get funded. Also, it's in Canada, so the FAA rules don't directly apply to it, but if this were in the US, the project itself would almost certainly go against the FAA rules, for being a "commercial" offering using drones. That seems fairly ridiculous for a variety of reasons.
- Personal Drone Detection System
Okay, finally a project that the FAA might like. Consider this as the anti-drone project if you, like the FAA, look at the above stories and freak out. Some folks who don't like drones have built some "drone detection systems" to let you spot drones flying around you. Honestly, given the quality of the video and the prototypes shown, this seems like a fairly amateurish project. The system also doesn't really do anything other than alert you if a drone is entering the "grid" that you set up. Seems like a perfect solution for people overly sensitive to drones. Perhaps the FAA will order a few dozen.
That's it for this week. Have fun and try not to piss off the FAA this weekend.
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Filed Under: awesome stuff, drone detectors, drones
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'The Skunk boasts eight electric motors with 16-inch propellers, lifting 45kg and carrying 4,000 pepper-spray paintballs, plastic balls or other "non-lethal" ammunition. The device is equipped with four barrels firing up to 20 balls per second each, which could equate to 80 pepper balls per second "stopping any crowd in its tracks".'
'The Skunk is also fitted with bright strobe lights, "blinding lasers" and on-board speakers to enable communication and warnings to the crowd. It has a thermal camera and high-definition video camera with on-board recording.'
http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/jun/20/pepper-spray-drone-offered-south-african-min es-strike-control
It's not technically a commercial drone being used to "make money", so I see no reason the FAA would declare them illegal. Especially if law enforcement applied for them citing safety and security concerns. Skunk will probably be pilot tested in prisons first, then gradually rolled out for use on the general public.
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Re:
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ALL drones are illegal, per the FAA....
Obviously, the FAA has a bridge for sale...in Brooklyn! (as well as a future-proof bomb shelter somewhere)
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A flying Cuisinart that follows me where ever I try to run?
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Re: A flying Cuisinart that follows me where ever I try to run?
what could go wrong ? ? ?
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Re: A flying Cuisinart that follows me where ever I try to run?
I trust you've never actually seen one of these things? Because that description is not even close to accurate. You notice how all of the propellers are very thin light plastic?
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Re: Re: A flying Cuisinart that follows me where ever I try to run?
Man Dies In Horrific Remote-Controlled Helicopter Accident In NYC Park
http://newyork.cbslocal.com/2013/09/05/man-killed-while-operating-remote-controlled-helicopter/
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Re: Re: A flying Cuisinart that follows me where ever I try to run?
http://robotics.stackexchange.com/questions/2559/are-propellers-dangerous/2577#2577
Those are 6 pictures of quad/hexa injuries. Granted they still have all fingers but if I ever buy one of those drones I'll make sure the rotors stop on contact.
Oh and do yourself a favor and don't click the link to the french website. Those are injuries caused by bigger RC stuff. The guy isn't exaggerating.
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Re: A flying Cuisinart that follows me where ever I try to run?
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Re: Re: A flying Cuisinart that follows me where ever I try to run?
It's not a matter of if, but a matter of how often someone will be injured.
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Re: Re: Re: A flying Cuisinart that follows me where ever I try to run?
If we start getting into a system where the FAA needs to pre-approve every drone then the whole approval process could turn into the mess that we have with the FDA. Politics will get into the mix, companies will seek to have patents on approved criteria so that they can be exclusive sellers, there will be all sorts of back door dealings going on, and these things will be unreasonably expensive for no good reason with very little innovation (and this is more justifiable with drones because they affect the safety of others. When it comes to the FDA the justification is far less because what I choose to take is often my own decision and my own business and has no impact on others). Then again if we set objective standards that must be met there should be some process to ensure that manufacturers are meeting those standards. Meeting them could absolve a company from liability. One problem with that is new and improved, safer, standards may need to go through another bureaucratic process to get approved leaving drones less safe than future advancements could allow them to be.
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https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/airdroids/the-pocket-drone-your-personal-flying-rob ot
Quadcopters with cameras are definitely a hot topic as well. Just a couple weeks ago the news featured some guy who was harassed by a woman on the beach just because she thought he was invading public privacy... Yeesh...
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Declared illegal after the fact?
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Re: Declared illegal after the fact? FCC should be shut down
As for the management deportation to saudi arabia would be ideal.
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just the flag carriers before the interstates...
(of COURSE -like much technology- the military/etc will take advantage to work their bit of evil with the other edge of the two-edged tool...)
but, like buggy whip makers* twisted the law to get flag carriers parading in front of early cars, not to *benefit* cars/public, but to impede its adoption; the status quo defenders of today will seem silly and selfish in retrospect...
(* citation needed; or is it a generalization used as a shorthand to symbolize the manner in which entrenched interests control the law, etc to favor their own ends, and not the interests of the public at large ?)
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Uses of drones
Aerial videography drones like the DJI Phantom and the accessories like what KumbaCam sells, make these drones even more diverse and capable of doing a lot more. New infra red cameras and other things are in the works and nearly completed just to name a future capability.
http://kumbacam.com has all the drone accessories with the fastest time to flight setup on the market.
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What All Quadcopters Illegal According To FAA?
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Uses of the best quadcopter
Airbone videography quadcopters such as the DJI company Phantom as well as the reviews like what our site publishes, make these quadcopters even more unique and able of performing much more. Fresh infra red video cameras as well as some other stuff are within the tasks and also almost finished simply to tell a future capacity.
(best drones for sale article) has all of the reviews of the best quadcopters for sale
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