Los Angeles, CA—When the
topics of Unmanned Aerial Vehicles or drones are brought up so are the issues
of fear, loathing and regulation. Ignorance of the unknown is always a source of difficulty. However take a look at the issues with an open mind.
Aerial photography is not
new, but until now it was just expensive.
We’ve co-existed with fixed wing airplanes and helicopters, all of our
lives. It’s settled law that we have no
reasonable expiation of privacy outside of our homes and the other shelters we
inhabit.
For nearly two decades we’ve
been under observation from high-resolution cameras mounted on satellites. We’ve all seen those incredible Google Earth
views. All of those privacy issues have
been addressed and settled in the courts redundantly.
Suddenly we have great
diminutive cameras and UAV’s to take them to the skies. The privacy laws remain exactly the same.
There are huge advantages for
these new UAV’s such as search and rescue, looking for lost pets, newsgathering
video and filmmaking. Safety inspection
of roofs, transformers, power lines and elevated structures can be accomplished
now with ease and without risk of injury.
Additionally UAV’s have
proven to help both sales people and buyers of real estate see a better view of
those properties.
Aside from all of this, there
is a long established hobby involved with remote controlled aircraft. Millions of teens and adults have been
enjoying this great hobby.
We’ve all seen videos and
pictures of catastrophic helicopter crashes in our cities. Death, destruction and horrible injuries occur
when these things happen. Those terrible
accidents are somewhat rare but by no means isolated. I lost two friends over the years in news
helicopter crashes.
Now we have the small, light
UAV’s and they're a game changer for the better.
Mishaps are not uncommon with the new UAV’s mostly due to pilot error. The difference here is the UAV’s almost
always escape damage! Injuries are beyond
rare and very minor if they happen at all.
UAV damage is proving to be somewhat less than that what would be caused by a thrown common tennis ball.
We all know about the large,
heavy military UAV drones usually armed with weapons that governments use. They cost as much or more than conventional
aircraft and are simply not part of this discussion.
The proliferation of these
new small UAV drones like the one involved in the photo above and the video
below will save millions of dollars for news organizations, businesses and
government agencies as they reduce tragic accidents.
The video below shows what
happens when a pilot loses control of a UAV in a populated area. This should not have happened and it resulted
from simple inexperience. However you
will see first hand the worst-case scenario of my own UAV mishap. No damage or injuries whatsoever.
My UAV was lost for nearly
three months. The UAV and its little GoPro camera survived without single a
scratch! They are both back in service today.
Nobody was injured nor was there even a hint of property damage.
Should the battery die in an
airborne UAV, they automatically go into a lower power mode and gently float to
the ground.
Watch the disappearance and
crash landing of my UAV over the Westwood neighborhood of Los Angeles last
January. The little 64 Gigabyte SD ram
card onboard saved and objectively documented the entire event.
2 comments:
Sunglasses!!
I love the commentary, you had me cracking up towards the end.
Im wondering about the guy that returned it?....White?
Post a Comment