Drones are UAVs, unmanned aerial vehicles.
Male Drone Bee |
The man-made aircraft drones are able to fly without a
pilot. Drones usually have a controller
on the ground. These aircraft are
superior because the margin for error is cut drastically. The cost of the aircraft can be cheaper. Drones don’t need safety paraphernalia for
emergency situations when the pilot might have to abort and eject.
Not all of the drones are used for the military. Easily, you could think of another use for a
drone. We could use personal drones to
run simple errands, like dropping mail at the post office.
Aircraft drones have a variety of uses. Some are super light, and others aren’t far
from a real plane. A large number of
UAVs have been loaded with a plethora of surveillance technologies, such as
real-time video and thermal imaging technology.
Taking pictures from surreal places and altitudes is a wonderful use (http://www.businessinsider.com/drone-flying-videos-2014-4). Some other civil applications include: police missions, firefighting, security
work, private surveillance, commercial agriculture, mineral exploration,
emergency management operations, etc.
Personal-use Drone |
A drone eliminates some pilot liabilities, but there is
still plenty of room for mechanical issues.
If any situations arise, error would be attributed to mechanical
malfunctions.
Technology also brings cyber issues that weren’t a problem
prior to drone flights. A jogger was in
a park running a race and got hit by a hacked drone. (http://io9.com/athlete-struck-by-potentially-hacked-aerial-drone-1560728218) Another news headline with drones was about
the crash into an elementary school.
Drones could be anywhere, and in the future will be used to carry
packages for companies such as AMAZON.com.
Just keep up with the headlines and you’ll see them before you actually
see them in the air. (http://www.nltimes.nl/2014/04/07/ten-drones-intercepted-nss/)
“As of August 2013, commercial unmanned aerial system licenses
were granted on a case-by-case basis, subject to approval by the Federal
Aviation Administration (FAA). A Congressional mandate to integrate Unmanned Aircraft
Systems into U.S. airspace protocols are forecast to grant FAA licenses more
broadly as early as 2015, the agency expecting that five years after it unveils
a regulatory framework for UASs weighing 55 pounds or less, there will be 7,500
such devices in the air(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unmanned_aerial_vehicle).” Also, it is deemed that DJI Phantom Drones
can’t enter no-fly zones. The issue has gone back and forth with the FAA which
is attempting to control drone regulations.
An advisory issue in 1981 has remained.
Drones are unable to fly above 400 feet or near airports.
Federal Aviation Administration (USA) |
South Korea suspects that three drones discovered in recent
weeks came from North Korea. They were
painted light blue, resembling remote control airplanes, but equipped with scrambling
gear to ensure secure airspace. South
Korea’s defense ministry believed the spy drones were from Pyongyang. South Korea also has their own reconnaissance
drone program which includes a deal to buy four Global Hawk UAVs from Northrop
Grunman Corp for over $800 million.
Drone crash found in S. Korea. |
There are a variety of drones:
What is your opinion on drones?
“Canada has seen a
highly select group of government actors pave the way in setting UAV policy in
Canada. Seemingly, though, none of them concern Canadians’ privacy rights.
Public privacy bodies, privacy academics, and civil liberties experts are key
groups that serve the public interest when it comes to privacy and surveillance
technologies. Canadians deserve better. All UAV working groups at the federal
level ought to include representatives from the Office of the Privacy
Commissioner of Canada at the very least. Ideally, these groups should include
members of the scholarly and civil-liberties communities. Failure to include
these organizations in policy development will lead to myopic UAV policies that
are very likely to infringe upon Canadians’ privacy rights (http://www.ottawacitizen.com/opinion/opd/Canada+needs+privacy+rules+drones/9710176/story.html).”
A volunteer search and rescue team out of Houston is
contacting the FAA to combat their drone restrictions. The Texas EquuSearch Mounted Search and
Recovery Team has retained drone lawyer Brendan Schulman. The team would like to sue about FAA and
airspace regulations on search and rescue drones, Spectra flying wing plane
with attached cameras. Their drones can
photograph a square mile in less than 10 minutes.
UAVs will revolutionize crop management on farms, make package
delivery even faster, equip your tech-savvy neighbors with their own personal
satellite controlled squadrons of drones, provide for more environmental uses
such as flying around after earthquakes and floods to survey damage and look
for victims in distress. In the 2011
tsunami in Japan, damaged nuclear reactor drones flew in to monitor radiation
when it was still too dangerous for humans.
In the 2013 typhoon in the Philippines the drones flew lower than helicopters
and pilots to survey the damage.
Drones have become the next “thing” in sports professional
photography. During the Winter Olympics
in Sochi, drones captured some of the best aerial photography ever seen in ski
and snowboarding events. They are more
flexible than cable suspended camera systems.
UAVs began as a gimmick, but will be the constant soon enough. Remo Masina, sports photography, cited via
Associated Press that, “Drones are quieter and cheaper than a manned
helicopter, although they can still charge up to $40,000.00. They also allow the filmmaker to get much
closer to his subject.” A few prototypes
are being programmed to follow their skiing subjects automatically from a few
feet away.
SOCHI 2014 Winter Olympics Drone |
Have you caught yourself hearing the UPS or FEDEX driver
ever 30 minutes until your beloved package makes the front steps? Amazon delivery drones will help. Timed drones are delivering AMAZON packages
straight to customer’s doors within 30 minutes of an order being placed. That is faster than going to the mall. AMAZON CEO Jeff Bezos, released on 4/12/2014,
in a letter to shareholders, that the company has flight-tested several
generations of, Prime Air, aerial vehicles.
One expansion with drone delivery will be with fresh food: soups, sodas,
chips, jelly, cornbread in a box, and macaroni with cheese. The future is near.
AMAZON.com Delivery Drone |
UAVs aren’t very similar to the dictionary meaning of a
drone. As of this moment, none of them
are used to carry pollen and mate. None
of them seem to work efficiently at creating honey, either. Surveillance drones could be compared to a
lazy person that doesn’t work, contribute, or give off any sort of energy
towards a constructive activity. Alternatively,
a drone can be exactly what it is programmed to be: FBI informant, university
researcher, amateur photographer, or a curious neighbor.
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