company:3d robotics

  • Les inquiétudes de #Chomsky sur « L’ère du #drone » :
    http://www.satellitemagazine.ca/2013/09/noam-chomsky-on-the-era-of-the-drone

    Just driving in this morning I was listening to NPR news. The program opened by announcing, very excitedly, that the drone industry is exploding so fast that colleges are trying to catch up and opening new programs in the engineering schools and so on, and teaching drone technology because that’s what students are dying to study because of the fantastic number of jobs going on.

    And it’s true. If you look at the public reports, you can imagine what the secret reports are. It’s been known for a couple of years, but we learn more and more that drones, for one thing, are already being given to police departments for surveillance. And they are being designed for every possible purpose. I mean, theoretically, maybe practically, you could have a drone the size of a fly which could be buzzing around over there [points to window] listening to what we’re talking about. And I’d suspect that it won’t be too long before that becomes realistic.

    Meanwhile…

    #3DRobotics Announces $30 Million Series B Financing
    http://3drobotics.com/2013/09/3d-robotics-announces-30-million-series-b-financing
    L’industrie du drone se porte effectivement bien. La boîte de drones DIY open source de Chris Anderson (ex Wired) a annoncé le 26 septembre avoir trouvé 30 millions de dollars d’investissement. Pour la propagande dronesque, c’est l’occasion de redire que c’est à la fois l’avenir de l’écologie et de l’économie qui se joue. Bientôt, un paysan qui n’utilisera pas de drones sera considéré comme un dangereux pollueur.

    As part of this funding round 3D Robotics will expand its development and deployment of advanced UAV applications, with a focus on agricultural crop mapping and other commercial aerial survey technology. “The opportunity to bring ‘big data’ to agriculture through low-cost automated aerial crop surveys could be a game-changer for both farming and the UAV industry alike,” said Chris Anderson, CEO of 3D Robotics. “Adding UAVs to the precision agriculture toolkit of a 21st Century farmer gives them the power to use imaging data to not only increase yield, but decrease water use and the chemical load in both food and environment.”

    Starting in 2015, AUVSI, the UAV industry trade group, estimates that the first three years of integration of commercial drones into the national airspace will create more than 70,000 jobs in the United States with an economic impact of more than $13.6 billion. International prospects are much larger. ”We’re building out a world-wide sales, service and support model that will help us build long-term relationships with local resellers that can in-turn support their local community requirements for mapping and imaging,” said John Cherbini, 3D Robotics VP of Sales.

    #drones

  • Chris Anderson: How I Accidentally Kickstarted the Domestic #Drone Boom | Wired
    http://www.wired.com/dangerroom/2012/06/ff_drones/all

    For me, it’s become not just a hobby but a second career: I cofounded a company, 3D Robotics, to make the open source hardware that the DIY Drones community was designing, and we’ve already shipped more than 10,000 autopilots and countless other drone parts. By our estimates, 3D Robotics’ customers alone are flying more drones than the total number operated by the US military (7,494 today, according to a recent congressional report). And there are dozens of other companies making drone technology for the “hobby” market, including Hoverfly, DJI Innovations, MikroKopter, Droidworx, and uThere.

  • More Commercial Drones Flying Now Than Military | TPM Livewire
    http://livewire.talkingpointsmemo.com/entries/report-more-commercial-drones-flying-now-than-military

    #Wired magazine editor and chief Chris Anderson writes that his other company, 3D Robotics, estimates it has shipped more commercial #drone parts to customers (10,000) than the U.S. military has flying today (7,494).

    Anderson goes on to explain how in 2007 he came to start an online forum for amateur drone ethusiasts and hobbyists that now has 26,000 members, pointing out that the cheap availability of smartphone sensors has led to an explosion in commercial drone development. Anderson doesn’t see this as threatening but rather a revolution akin to that of the personal computer.

    What we will do with our personal drones? That question is just as unanswerable—but just as tantalizing—as the same question about personal computers back in 1977.

    #diy #geek_power