Menu

Blog

Archive for the ‘drones’ category: Page 131

Feb 26, 2018

Can High-Tech Drones Help Stop Mass Shootings?

Posted by in categories: drones, government, policy, surveillance

I’m excited to share a new article of mine via The Daily Dot on the future of so-called “gun control,” one that promises freedom and protects people from criminals and mass shooters. As usual, the answer is in technology to improve the world—and not in Congress changing or creating laws. This is a policy article of mine, and this is the technology you could expect to see in California if I was elected Governor:


High-tech drones and surveillance technology can offer a radically new type of gun control, helping detect possible the presence of guns and intervene in mass shootings.

Read more

Feb 25, 2018

Top A.I. experts warn of a ‘Black Mirror’-esque future with swarms of micro-drones and autonomous weapons

Posted by in categories: drones, robotics/AI

To better protect against the rise of ill-intended AI, policymakers ought to be working closely with technical specialists to be aware of potential applications of machine intelligence. Also, technical developers ought to be proactively reaching out to appropriate leaders when they understand the technology they are developing can have negative applications, the report says.


New report from 26 technology experts issues dire warning about the potential of malicious artificial intelligence.

Read more

Feb 22, 2018

Stealth space catapult startup SpinLaunch is raising $30M

Posted by in categories: drones, satellites, sustainability

What if instead of blasting cargo into space on a rocket, we could fling it into space using a catapult? That’s the big, possibly crazy, possibly genius idea behind SpinLaunch. It was secretly founded in 2014 by Jonathan Yaney, who built solar-powered drone startup Titan Aerospace and sold it to Google. Now TechCrunch has learned from three sources that SpinLaunch is raising a massive $30 million Series A to develop its catapult technology. And we’ve scored an interview with the founder after four years in stealth.

Sources who’ve spoken to the SpinLaunch team tell me the idea is to create a much cheaper and sustainable way to get things like satellites from earth into space without chemical propellant. Using a catapult would sidestep the heavy fuel and expensive booster rockets used by companies like SpaceX and Blue Origin.

SpinLaunch plans to use a centrifuge spinning at an incredible rate inside a vacuum that reduces friction. All that momentum is then harnessed to catapult a payload into space at speeds one source said could be around 3,000 miles per hour. With enough momentum, objects could be flung into space on their own. Alternatively, the catapult could provide some of the power needed with cargo being equipped with supplemental rockets necessary to leave earth’s atmosphere.

Read more

Feb 21, 2018

AI being used for ‘malicious purposes’, warn experts

Posted by in categories: cybercrime/malcode, drones, military, robotics/AI

From healthcare to warfare, machine-based thinking is revolutionising the way we live, exposing us to the benefits and the risks. Twenty-six world experts in emerging technologies say cybercrime will grow and drones will be misused in the next decade.

Read more

Feb 20, 2018

Japan has just invented Robo-bees that can legitimately pollinate the earth

Posted by in categories: bioengineering, drones, robotics/AI

In an example of life imitating art, scientists have come up with a technology straight out of an episode of Black Mirror: Bee-like pollinating drones.

A team at the National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology (AIST) in Japan engineered the devices using a combination of horsehair, $USD 100 drones and a sticky ion gel.

It’s pretty simple really – first, the drones fly into flowers much like a bee would. Inside the flower, pollen gets stuck to the drone due to the combination of the ion gel and horsehair. That same pollen is then shaken off into the next flower, and so on. It’s just your run of the mill birds and the robots bees.

Continue reading “Japan has just invented Robo-bees that can legitimately pollinate the earth” »

Feb 13, 2018

This people-moving drone has completed more than 1,000 test flights

Posted by in category: drones

The flying taxi could soon be spotted in Dubai and Las Vegas.

Read more

Feb 10, 2018

Cleo Robotics Demonstrates Uniquely Clever Ducted Fan Drone

Posted by in categories: drones, media & arts, robotics/AI

A personal drone that i could eventually see as something that will follow you around all day and be rigged up as an AI assistant. Have it equipped with solar power skin so it could operate indefinitely. The video has the music cranked so it is probably super loud. Drones need to solve noise and power issues before this becomes practical, no one will want something as loud as a vacuum cleaner buzzing around their head.


This donut-shaped drone, not technically known as a dronut, offers a tasty combination of safety and ease of use.

Continue reading “Cleo Robotics Demonstrates Uniquely Clever Ducted Fan Drone” »

Feb 8, 2018

People are now flying around in autonomous drones

Posted by in categories: drones, robotics/AI

Chinese startup Ehang has released the first video of passengers flying aboard its autonomous 184 drone.

Read more

Feb 2, 2018

Airbus’ drone taxi takes to the skies for the first time

Posted by in category: drones

Airbus’ self-piloted taxi flies for the first time.

Read more

Jan 31, 2018

Drone racing in the UK

Posted by in category: drones

Drone racing brings us one step closer to pod racing.

Read more