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FPV drone racing robots beat human champions—pilotless victory
Recent developments in First Person View (FPV) drone racing highlight an intriguing twist as autonomous drones, powered by ...
Researchers have taught a drone to follow screams. The project has clear search and rescue applications—but all tech can be abused.
The drone uses a mix of artificial intelligence and more conventional programming to fly through a race course. (Leonard Bauersfeld) Today researchers in Switzerland unveiled a small drone powered ...
This supersized drone will fly you to work (or anywhere) The "184" is a delivery drone for humans.
For the first time an autonomously flying quadrotor has outperformed two human pilots in a drone race. The success is based on a novel algorithm that calculates time-optimal trajectories that ...
Drone deliveries are well on their way. Could they also be used for safely delivering transplant organs to hospitals without damage? A recent test flight involving a human kidney, DJI M600 Pro ...
A team of surgeons from the University of Maryland Medical Center are testing out how to transplant human organs for emergency transplants using drones.
The dream is to fly over traffic-choked streets, and an autonomous drone is preferable to the old, dangerous sci-fi dream of self-piloted flying cars.
Aviation Robotics says it’s become the first company allowed to operate drones without needing a human pilot or an observer anywhere near the aircraft. We took a look at the FAA documents.
With the goal of making drone flight more in tune with the human body, researchers instructed 17 test subjects to mimic a drone flying through the air.
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