Jamie Lowe
It’s not a bird,
it’s not a plane but there is some new hardware zooming through the sky.
Unmanned
Aircraft Vehicles, UAVs, or drones have flown into current technology in the
form of the shelves in the form toys and hobbyist pieces all the way to
military survelliance drones. The U.S. Department of Transportation has
classified drones as “device(s) used or intended to be used for light in the
air that has no onboard pilot.”
While Amazon.com
has stayed silent about there recently released Amazon Prime Air service
featuring 30 minute deliveries by drones, there are other uses for consumer
drones.
The most popular
use of drones is purely for pleasure. Small-sized quadracopters and drones can
be had for under $100 on most purchasing websites. There are other more costly
models that hobbyists pursue and rate amongst themselves.
Alex Bracetti, a
writer for ComplexTech, recently rated the top 10 consumer drones in the
current market.
“The most
popular drone on the consumer market made a huge splash at last year’s CES,”
wrote Bracetti of the Parrot AR. Drone 2.0. “Three being the improved control
system, the built-I camera capable of capturing 720HD video and the ability to
create its own wi-fi network.”
It goes without
saying that these consumer drones are resplendently , and some people other
than the U.S. government, are working on how to apply these devices to business
in day-to-day life.
Ian Nott, the
founder of DR1, started his company out of Savannah College of Art and Design.
“Our mission is to provide very expensive, very technological UAV.
Before, like on a movie set, the director would have to hire production crews
with high booms and even helicopters to get aerial shots or even use CG,” Nott
said. “We make the software to go on these UAVs to get shots that were never
possible before.”
Although there
are several possible arts-related application for drones, there are also agro
and tech possibilities that Nott’s company is exploring.
“Say if you're a farmer and there's a field of
crops... a big field of corn, you can fly one of these UAVs over the field and,
using spectrum-anaylsis, figure out if some sections of the entire field are a
little water starved or maybe need fertilizer,” Nott said. “Then the farmer can
go out and make those adjustments. It would let you see certain areas instead
of just looking at the whole field. You could also use our UAVs for inspection
of roofs and towers. Things that people are risking life and limb for."
[business- ian
explanation]
[chunk of ian
intrnview]
[rules of UAS]
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