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Archive for the ‘drones’ category: Page 48

Jan 29, 2022

Multiple clients for Sunflower Lab’s security drone-dock system

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

Sunflower Labs announces a flurry of client acquisitions of its security drone-in-dock Beehive System in both the US and Europe.


San Carlos-based Sunflower Labs has announced a spate of new clients for its automated Beehive System security drone-and-dock, in deals ranging from Switzerland to the US South.

Continue reading “Multiple clients for Sunflower Lab’s security drone-dock system” »

Jan 28, 2022

The Role Of Drones In Connecting AI And Human Intelligence

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

A newly created nano-architected material exhibits a property that previously was just theoretically possible: it can refract light backward, regardless of the angle at which the light strikes the material.

Jan 25, 2022

British startup plans to develop 200 vertiport sites across the world

Posted by in categories: drones, sustainability

British startup Urban-Air Port (UAP) has announced plans to open 200 flying taxi and cargo drone hubs in 65 cities globally over the next five years. The announcement comes following a significant investment from Supernal, a division of Hyundai Motor Group, to deliver on the company’s shared vision of integrating advanced air mobility (AAM) into existing transit networks and creating a seamless passenger journey.

UAP’s vertiport sites will provide essential infrastructure to help enable mass adoption of eVTOL aircraft – such as cargo drones and air taxis – as public acceptance grows and will transform the way goods and people are transported around urban areas. The world’s first fully operational hub for eVTOLs, Air-One, will open for public visitation in Coventry City Centre in April.

The demonstration will show how AAM can help unlock the potential of sustainable mobility and how the industry will work to help reduce congestion, cut air pollution and decarbonize transport.

Jan 25, 2022

Wingcopter, Spright ink $16 million eVTOL drone delivery deal

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, drones

US medical drone delivery specialist Spright extends partnership with Germany’s Wingcopter to use its eVTOL UAV exclusively in its fleets.


German drone company Wingcopter and US medical UAV services provider Spright have deepened their relationship with a new deal for electric vertical takeoff and (eVTOL) aerial delivery craft valued at $16 million dollars.

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Jan 24, 2022

New humanoid robot Tocabi | Elon Musk’s Mechazilla SpaceX Tower | High Tech News

Posted by in categories: drones, Elon Musk, media & arts, military, robotics/AI, space travel

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kXS5kkIKqGA

👉For business inquiries: [email protected].
✅ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/pro_robots.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xppMgm2buuM

Continue reading “New humanoid robot Tocabi | Elon Musk’s Mechazilla SpaceX Tower | High Tech News” »

Jan 24, 2022

DJI makes RC Pro compatible with Air 2S drone

Posted by in category: drones

DJI is rolling out a new firmware update that makes its latest smart controller, RC Pro, backward compatible with Air 2S drones.

So, it was only natural that RC Pro would receive interest from even those DJI users who weren’t planning to upgrade to the Mavic 3. However, there was no other drone that the controller was compatible with at launch.

Jan 23, 2022

UK startup to build flying taxi hubs in 65 cities

Posted by in categories: drones, innovation

This article was originally published by Christopher Carey on Cities Today, the leading news platform on urban mobility and innovation, reaching an international audience of city leaders. For the latest updates, follow Cities Today on Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn, Instagram, and YouTube, or sign up for Cities Today News.

UK start-up Urban-Air Port (UAP) has announced plans to establish 200 hubs for flying taxis and cargo drones across 65 cities globally over the next five years.

The firm is set to launch its first ‘vertiport’, dubbed the “worlds smallest airport”, in Coventry in April, and says a “significant investment” from Hyundai Motor Group’s urban air division Supernal will enable expansion to further sites.

Jan 21, 2022

First fully programmable quantum computer based on neutral atoms

Posted by in categories: drones, particle physics, quantum physics, robotics/AI

Most quantum computers are based on superconductors or trapped ions, but an alternative approach using ordinary atoms may have advantages.


Back in 2016, we told you about the iBubble, an underwater drone that autonomously follows and films scuba divers. Well, it now has a more capable industrial-use big brother, known as the Seasam.

Jan 21, 2022

Seasam drone autonomously follows divers and performs underwater tasks

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

Back in 2016, we told you about the iBubble, an underwater drone that autonomously follows and films scuba divers. Well, it now has a more capable industrial-use big brother, known as the Seasam.

Manufactured by French marine tech company Notilo Plus, the Seasam actually first hit the market in 2019. That said, it recently gained attention when it was featured in the horror film The Deep House, in which a scuba diving couple explore an underwater haunted house … and yes, that is kind of a cool premise for a movie.

Continue reading “Seasam drone autonomously follows divers and performs underwater tasks” »

Jan 20, 2022

The Rise of A.I. Fighter Pilots

Posted by in categories: drones, robotics/AI

Mock seemed pleased with the outcome. “You could look at this and say, ‘O.K., the A.I. got five, our human got zero,’” he told viewers. “From the fighter-pilot world, we trust what works, and what we saw was that in this limited area, this specific scenario, we’ve got A.I. that works.” (A YouTube video of the trials has since garnered half a million views.)

Brett Darcey, who runs Heron, told me that the company has used Falco to fly drones, completing seventy-four flights with zero crashes. But it’s still unclear how the technology will react to the infinite possibilities of real-world conditions. The human mind processes more slowly than a computer, but it has the cognitive flexibility to adapt to unimagined circumstances; artificial intelligence, so far, does not. Anna Skinner, a human-factors psychologist, and another science adviser to the ACE program, told me, “Humans are able to draw on their experience and take reasonable actions in the face of uncertainty. And, especially in a combat situation, uncertainty is always going to be present.”

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