1. Micro-Drones Improving Intelligence, Autonomous Capabilities Point to Bigger Role in Military

…researchers led by Roland Brockers at the NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California, have developed a MAV that uses a camera pointed at the ground to navigate and pick landing spots. It can even identify people and other objects. The system enables the drone to travel through terrain where human control and GPS are unavailable, such as a city street or inside a building.
A human operator needs to tell the drone only two things before it sets off: where it is and where its objective is. The craft figures out the rest for itself, using the camera and onboard software to build a 3D map of its surroundings. It can also avoid obstacles and detect surfaces above a predetermined height as possible landing zones. Once it selects a place to put down, it maps the site’s dimensions, moves overhead and lands.
In a laboratory experiment, a 50 centimetre by 50 centimetre quadrotor craft equipped with the navigation system was able to take off, travel through an obstacle-filled indoor space and land successfully on an elevated platform. Brockers’s team is now testing the system in larger, more complex environments.
…Vijay Kumar of the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia says that autonomous navigation and landing capabilities are unprecedented in a drone of this size. “Typically the information required to locate a landing site and stabilise a vehicle over it is coming in at a 100 times a second,” he says. “No one else has been able to design a system so small with this kind of processing power.”

(via Micro-drones: The new face of cutting-edge warfare - tech - 23 July 2012 - New Scientist)

    Micro-Drones Improving Intelligence, Autonomous Capabilities Point to Bigger Role in Military

    …researchers led by Roland Brockers at the NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California, have developed a MAV that uses a camera pointed at the ground to navigate and pick landing spots. It can even identify people and other objects. The system enables the drone to travel through terrain where human control and GPS are unavailable, such as a city street or inside a building.

    A human operator needs to tell the drone only two things before it sets off: where it is and where its objective is. The craft figures out the rest for itself, using the camera and onboard software to build a 3D map of its surroundings. It can also avoid obstacles and detect surfaces above a predetermined height as possible landing zones. Once it selects a place to put down, it maps the site’s dimensions, moves overhead and lands.

    In a laboratory experiment, a 50 centimetre by 50 centimetre quadrotor craft equipped with the navigation system was able to take off, travel through an obstacle-filled indoor space and land successfully on an elevated platform. Brockers’s team is now testing the system in larger, more complex environments.

    …Vijay Kumar of the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia says that autonomous navigation and landing capabilities are unprecedented in a drone of this size. “Typically the information required to locate a landing site and stabilise a vehicle over it is coming in at a 100 times a second,” he says. “No one else has been able to design a system so small with this kind of processing power.”

    (via Micro-drones: The new face of cutting-edge warfare - tech - 23 July 2012 - New Scientist)

     
    1. yomimono reblogged this from joshbyard
    2. bobchik reblogged this from futurist-foresight and added:
      They always get the cool stuff.. How much advancement we are unaware of..
    3. strayblossoms reblogged this from emergentfutures
    4. datdudeyadigfastcash reblogged this from emergentfutures and added:
      Tight.
    5. can-enginerd reblogged this from futurescope
    6. inuyasha420 reblogged this from emergentfutures and added:
      Get the fuck out of here look how small that is. Why the ones we got fall once and never work again.
    7. crazygothkid reblogged this from joshbyard
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    11. asonofadam reblogged this from futurist-foresight and added:
      I wish they had these when I was in!!!!
    12. engineeringarchangel reblogged this from futurist-foresight
    13. informationaction reblogged this from futurist-foresight
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    15. futurist-foresight reblogged this from emergentfutures
    16. tumbmats reblogged this from emergentfutures and added:
      Micro-Drones Improving Intelligence, Autonomous Capabilities Point to Bigger Role in Military …researchers led by Roland...
    17. itsdds reblogged this from futurescope
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    23. spacecowboywhit reblogged this from emergentfutures and added:
      This is just going to lead to soldiers having annoying fairy sidekicks. “Hey, listen!” “HEY, LISTEN!”
    24. 5hank reblogged this from emergentfutures
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