UAV

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  • Omer Messinger via Getty Images

    DJI forces UK pilots to sit a ‘knowledge quiz’ before takeoff

    by 
    Nick Summers
    Nick Summers
    12.21.2017

    If you're hoping for a DJI drone this Christmas, be prepared for one teeny-tiny roadblock as you rush into the back garden with controller in hand. Today, the company has announced a mandatory "Knowledge Quiz" for all of its customers in the UK. It will live in the DJI GO 4 app — which is basically required to use the company's snap-on controller — and pose eight questions about safe, common sense flying. In short, you won't be able to fly until you've answered them all successfully. So if you haven't already, it's worth swatting up on our handy guide to UK drone regulations.

  • US Army

    US Military tests system for on-demand 3D-printed drones

    by 
    David Lumb
    David Lumb
    12.18.2017

    The US military has used drones in combat zones for over a decade to scout and support infantry. Now they're testing a way to give ground troops another edge: The capability to build UAVs themselves. What's more, the US Army is partnering with the Marine Corps on a test project that lets troops 3D-print particular drone parts from a tablet-based catalog, which could eventually lead to manufacturing UAVs customized to the mission.

  • DJI

    DJI's scanner can nab info on drones mid-flight

    by 
    David Lumb
    David Lumb
    10.25.2017

    This morning, Chinese drone company DJI demonstrated its new AeroScope device that can track UAVs in a 5-kilometer radius. At the moment, it can only monitor the company's drones, but it's a potentially potent tool for law enforcement (or other DJI-authorized customers) to keep an eye on aerial activity within their radius.

  • Lucas Jackson / Reuters

    Snapchat reportedly has 'hundreds of thousands' of unsold Spectacles

    by 
    Timothy J. Seppala
    Timothy J. Seppala
    10.23.2017

    Sure, they were a hot commodity when they first dropped, but almost a year later and Snapchat has "hundreds of thousands" of pairs of Spectacles sitting in Chinese warehouses. The news, via The Information, comes after CEO Evan Spiegel boasted that sales of the video-recording sunglasses had topped 150,000. Apparently execs were so enthused by how popular Spectacles were in their limited run, that the company ordered more and is left holding the bag now that demand has waned.

  • IEEE Spectrum

    SpiderMAV drone shoots 'webs' at walls to perch in place

    by 
    David Lumb
    David Lumb
    10.09.2017

    Consumer drones have more or less conquered hovering, but are there easier ways to stay in place? Researchers from Imperial College London have a possible answer: The SpiderMAV, a UAV that shoots ropes that magnetically cling to surfaces to anchor itself in place.

  • Cherlynn Low / Engadget

    Parrot’s Mambo FPV puts you in the mini-cockpit

    by 
    Cherlynn Low
    Cherlynn Low
    10.02.2017

    With its cannon and claw accessories, last year's Mambo drone from Parrot was more a toy than a photography tool. The latest version of the mini drone looks to be at least more fun, if not more useful, than its predecessor. The Mambo FPV comes with a camera attachment and a headset, so you can stream what the tiny flyer is seeing right into your eyes.

  • PA Wire/PA Images

    UK lifeboat crew tests drones as search and rescue helpers

    by 
    Nick Summers
    Nick Summers
    09.21.2017

    Drones are becoming an important part of the emergency services. Police are using them to search for missing people, while fire departments test them as a tool to survey dangerous sites. Until now, however, we haven't seen or heard about them being used by the coastguard. That all changes today, however, as a lifeboat service in Norfolk, England, has started using them in open water. As the BBC reports, they're equipped with cameras that can live-stream footage to monitors inside the boat. They could prove useful in choppy conditions when the crew can't see above the waves.

  • Jason Lee / Reuters

    The UN wants all drones registered in a global database

    by 
    David Lumb
    David Lumb
    09.08.2017

    The United Nations' aviation agency, the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO), plans to support a single worldwide drone registry. This singular ledger would be easier for law enforcement to sift through than each country's individual UAV ledger.

  • Corr

    Drone pilots are getting their own weather forecasts

    by 
    Steve Dent
    Steve Dent
    09.07.2017

    Whether you think drones are super-great or want to shoot them out of the sky, they've become increasingly vital for missions like crop spraying, inspection and filming. Yet, it's impossible for operators to get the kind of detailed weather info that airplane pilots have because UAVs generally fly at much lower altitudes. Now, a company called Earth Networks is unveiling Sferic DroneFlight, "hyperlocal, low-altitude weather weather forecasting for drone operators.

  • Johns Hopkins

    A quadrocopter could be used to explore Saturn's largest moon

    by 
    Timothy J. Seppala
    Timothy J. Seppala
    08.25.2017

    Back in 2014, NASA proposed using drones to explore Saturn's largest moon, Titan. Well, three years later, Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Lab has a pitch for the aeronautics agency. Like NASA suggested a few years ago, Hopkins' craft is a quadrocopter. The school said that its Dragonfly drone is ideal for exploring the moon given its dense atmosphere and weak gravity, making it "perfect" for heavier-than-air flight. "A human could actually strap on wings, flap their arms and fly," Peter Bedini says in the video below.

  • University of Sherbrooke

    Fixed-wing drone lands on vertical surfaces like a bug

    by 
    Rachel England
    Rachel England
    08.22.2017

    Scientists have borrowed a few tricks from Mother Nature in order to create a drone capable of landing flush against a wall. The Multimodal Autonomous Drone (S-MAD) looks like a small airplane and flies like a glider, but on approaching a flat surface is able to change configuration to make a smooth, ricochet-free vertical landing -- much like a graceful bird or a large, unpleasant insect, depending on how this unsettling robotic behavior makes you feel.

  • DJI / Facebook

    DJI drones are getting an offline mode for secret flights

    by 
    Saqib Shah
    Saqib Shah
    08.15.2017

    Chinese manufacturer DJI is adding a local data mode to its drones. Once enabled, the new feature will stop the company's apps from collecting user data (such as photos, videos, and flight logs). Although, DJI claims the update is in response to public demand, it's hard to ignore the security concerns recently raised by the US army. Less than two weeks ago, the military ordered staff to halt use of all DJI hardware and applications, citing "operational risks."

  • Lockheed Martin, Flickr

    Lockheed Martin previews a future of tiny space telescopes

    by 
    Jon Fingas
    Jon Fingas
    08.06.2017

    Current space telescopes are... big. You can't really avoid it given the need for giant lenses and bulky sensors. Lockheed Martin wants to fix that -- the aerospace firm has just released the first images from SPIDER (Segmented Planar Imaging Detector for Electro-Optical Reconnaissance), an optical instrument that promises pictures as sharp as what you'd get from a space telescope in a sensor that's just an inch thick. Instead of using a handful of monolithic lenses, it relies on a legion of small lenses whose data is divided and recombined using a photonic circuit. The initial results aren't spectacular, but they hold a lot of promise.

  • Feisal Omar / Reuters

    DJI and 3D Robotics team up for business-focused drone tools

    by 
    Timothy J. Seppala
    Timothy J. Seppala
    08.01.2017

    For all their hobbyist applications, like photography and videography, drones are still primarily commercial tools. Thus, 3DR's partnership with DJI for the Enterprise Drone Platform. Specifically, the Enterprise Drone Platform will be integrated with DJI's UAVs and further expand its Site Scan system to incorporate the job-site surveying tech into the Chinese company's drones.

  • US Army Research Laboratory

    US Army is building a versatile, flying squirrel-like drone

    by 
    Mallory Locklear
    Mallory Locklear
    07.07.2017

    The military is constantly working on new drone technology. That includes new types of drones like autonomous boats and small swarming UAVs as well as ways to combat drones, like frying them with microwaves, guided bullets and hacking. Right now, the US Army is working on a small, lightweight drone that can take on a number of tasks depending on what's needed in a given situation.

  • Getty Images

    Israel reportedly has US-made drones capable of launching grenades

    by 
    Timothy J. Seppala
    Timothy J. Seppala
    07.06.2017

    Aerodynamics and physics dictate that you can't quite strap an assault rifle onto a DJI Phantom and expect it to fly and hit a target. Florida company Duke Robotics has apparently devised a way to keep a drone steady while compensating for a gun's recoil. "Though a system of flexibly connected pates, the TIKAD distributes the backward momentum in a way that keeps the vehicle stationary in the air," Defense One writes. "A ten-pound robot gimbal allows six degrees of movement freedom and the ability to rapidly re-target the weapon and camera."

  • Project Wing

    Google tests air traffic control system that manages lots of drones

    by 
    David Lumb
    David Lumb
    06.07.2017

    If you've been scratching your head at the FAA's extensive efforts to regulate your personal (or company) drone use, consider the chaos when they start filling the skies. That's why the agency partnered with NASA for a series of nationwide tests to explore potential systems that could track and manage a wide range of drones simultaneously. Google parent company Alphabet's Project Wing tried out its own UAV air traffic control platform yesterday, a system that might one day guide a massive volume of airborne drones to keep them from crashing into buildings, people or each other.

  • Amazon

    Amazon's drone deliveries could include shipping label parachutes

    by 
    Rob LeFebvre
    Rob LeFebvre
    05.31.2017

    It's hard to believe it's been almost three years since Amazon announced its plan to deliver packages via drone. The first air delivery occurred last December in the UK and the retailer continues to refine the concept with futuristic ideas to perch the flying couriers on streetlights and deploy them from flying warehouses. In a new patent discovered by GeekWire, Amazon's next step is an "Aerial Package Delivery System," a delivery label that includes one of those parachutes that could make shipping via an unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) that much easier.

  • DJI's palm-sized Spark drone delivers epic selfies

    by 
    Edgar Alvarez
    Edgar Alvarez
    05.24.2017

    Everyone loves taking selfies, even if they don't like to admit it. And if you're looking to take those snaps of yourself to the next level, DJI's new, cutesy Spark drone may be just for you. The company's latest drone is designed to fit on the palm of your hand and can be controlled with motion gestures, letting you take some over-the-top pictures and videos without much effort. You can wave your hand to have move it up or down, right or left and pull it toward or away from you, while a quick gesture that resembles you taking a picture will trigger the camera's selfie mode. The only drawback to this is that the Spark can only go up to 10 feet away from you, and that's where the Spark's companion app and remote control come in.

  • DJI

    You can fly DJI's cutesy Spark drone with hand gestures

    by 
    Chris Velazco
    Chris Velazco
    05.24.2017

    DJI made a name for itself with its chunky flying Phantom drones, but within the last year we've seen the company really embrace the value of smallness. Despite numerous delays, the Mavic Pro was greeted very positively, and now the company has another small drone — the Spark — made for first-time pilots and drone dabblers alike. DJI likes to call the Spark the "perfect lifestyle accessory," which sounds like a stretch if we've ever heard one, but the company might not be totally off-base. After all, the Spark weighs less than a can of pop, comes in five colors, and can be controlled (at least a little) with simple hand gestures.