Archive for the ‘drones’ category: Page 72
Feb 16, 2021
Israelis Developing Cutting-Edge Counter-Drone Tech
Posted by Raphael Ramos in category: drones
Articles: https://www.i24news.tv/en.
Live: http://i24ne.ws/4GMK30qJn0A
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#i24NEWS #Israel #Tech i24NEWS DESK.
Feb 15, 2021
New Drone Software Handles Motor Failures Even Without GPS
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: drones, robotics/AI
Onboard visual state estimation can save your quadrotor from a crash—and doesn’t need GPS to do it.
Feb 14, 2021
Grumman’s LongShot drone can search & destroy
Posted by Raphael Ramos in categories: drones, military, robotics/AI
Instead of firing missiles, planes may carry and launch unmanned drones that will be able to shoot their own missiles to search and destroy targets.
Aerospace giant Northrop Grumman is wasting no time in this competition.
Just two days after DARPA named it as one of three competitors for the LongShot contract, the company released an image of its concept for an air-launched unmanned aircraft system (UAS), Aviation Week reported.
Continue reading “Grumman’s LongShot drone can search & destroy” »
Feb 11, 2021
This Flying Train Is as Wild As It Sounds
Posted by Quinn Sena in categories: drones, robotics/AI
Circa 2018 o, o.
When it comes to the future of transportation, there is no shortage of intriguing and possibly crazy vehicle concepts. By 2100, commuters could be zipping around in passenger pods that fly through vacuum sealed tubes at 700 mph, soaring through the skies in autonomous personal rotorcraft that look like quadcopter drones, blasting off in rockets that fly from city to city, or even boarding commercial jetliners to fly more than five times the speed of sound.
But as far as wild transportation ideas go, Akka Technologies’ flying train might take the cake.
Feb 10, 2021
Fabricating fully functional drones
Posted by Saúl Morales Rodriguéz in category: drones
From “Star Trek” replicators to Richie Rich’s wishing machine, popular culture has a long history of parading flashy machines that can instantly output any item. While 3D printers have now made it possible to produce a range of objects that include product models, jewelry, and novelty toys, we still lack the ability to fabricate more complex devices that are essentially ready-to-go right out of the printer.
Feb 8, 2021
MIT is building a ‘one-stop shop’ for 3D-printing robots
Posted by Jose Ruben Rodriguez Fuentes in categories: drones, robotics/AI
Additive manufacturing has proven an ideal solution for certain tasks, but the technology still lacks more traditional methods in a number of categories. One of the biggest is the requirement for post-printing assembly. 3D printers can create extremely complex components, but an outside party (be it human or machine) is required to put them together.
MIT’s CSAIL department this week showcased “LaserFactory,” a new project that attempts to develop robotics, drones and other machines than can be fabricated as part of a “one-stop shop.” The system is comprised of a software kit and hardware platform designed to create structures and assemble circuitry and sensors for the machine.
A more fully realized version of the project will be showcased at an event in May, but the team is pulling back the curtain a bit to show what the concept looks like in practice. Here’s a breakdown from CSAIL’s page:
Feb 7, 2021
GKN Aerospace proposes eVTOL Skybus transports for 30 to 50 passengers
Posted by Quinn Sena in categories: drones, government, robotics/AI
While a multitude of companies are jostling to compete in the emerging electric VTOL air taxi market, it’s very rare to find aircraft designs carrying more than five people. But British multinational giant GKN Aerospace is looking into something much bigger: “park ‘n’ ride” Skybus transports capable of carrying 30 to 50 passengers across congested parts of town, moving affordable public transport into the third dimension.
This initiative is part of the UK’s Future Flight Challenge, which is using some £125 million (US$171 million) of government cash and a further £175 million (US$239 million) from the industrial sector to fund a wide range of projects related to electric aviation, including drone swarm and delivery technologies, air traffic control that can handle a huge influx of autonomous drones and aircraft, eVTOL air taxis, sensor technologies, industrial inspection UAVs and other projects like the pop-up eVTOL airport in Coventry we wrote about yesterday.
Where most passenger-carrying eVTOL projects are envisaged as on-demand Uber-style services connecting individual passengers or small groups with ride-share services at either end, the Skybus project takes a public transport approach, with large birds ferrying significant numbers of people over city routes on fixed schedules.
Feb 7, 2021
Elon Musk Tells Air Force General That Fighter Jets Are Over
Posted by Raphael Ramos in categories: drones, Elon Musk, military
Is this the end of manned fighter planes? 🙂
“The F-35” would have no chance” against a “drone fighter plane that’s remote controlled by a human.”
Feb 6, 2021
Drone swarms: coming (sometime) to a war near you. Just not today
Posted by Vivek Jaiswal in category: drones
At a time of fast-paced drone proliferation, militaries around the world are actively pursuing research and development in swarms.