transportation:drones
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| transportation:drones [2025/06/16 01:04] – [War / Military] timb | transportation:drones [2026/01/11 20:19] (current) – [Zero Zero Robotics] timb | ||
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| ====== China ====== | ====== China ====== | ||
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| + | ===== Ban ===== | ||
| == US Considers Potential Rules To Restrict or Bar Chinese Drones == | == US Considers Potential Rules To Restrict or Bar Chinese Drones == | ||
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| + | == The U.S. Could Ban Chinese-Made Drones Used By Police Departments == | ||
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| + | Posted by EditorDavid on Sunday December 21, 2025 08:05PM | ||
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| + | Tuesday the White House faces a deadline to decide " | ||
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| + | One person making the case against the drones is Mike Nathe, a North Dakota Republican state representative described by the Post as "at the forefront of a nationwide campaign sounding alarms about the Made-in-China aircraft." | ||
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| + | The president already signed anexecutive orderin June targeting " | ||
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| + | == FCC Bans Foreign-Made Drones Over National Security, Spying Concerns == | ||
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| + | Posted by BeauHD on Monday December 22, 2025 05:40PM | ||
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| + | The FCC has banned approval of new foreign-made drones and components, citing "an unacceptable risk" to national security. The move will most heavily impact DJI but it "does not affect drones or drone components that are currently sold in the United States." | ||
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| + | The tech was placed on the commission' | ||
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| + | FCC Chair Brendan Carr said in a statement that while drones offer the potential to boost public safety and the U.S.' posture on global innovation, " | ||
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| + | The ruling comes as China hawks in Congress amplify warnings about the security risks of drones made by DJI, which accounts for more than 90% of the global market share. But efforts to crack down on Capitol Hill have been met with some pushback due to the potential impacts of curbing the drone usage on U.S. businesses and law enforcement. A wide variety of sectors, including construction, | ||
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| + | == The U.S. Has Officially Banned New, Foreign-Made Drone Models == | ||
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| + | Merry Christmas, drone enthusiasts! | ||
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| + | Bruce Gil - December 23, 2025 | ||
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| + | The U.S. Federal Communications Commission (FCC) announced on Monday that it is banning new foreign-made drones and drone components over national security concerns. The move could disrupt the drone industry as it aims to keep popular Chinese brands out of the U.S. market. | ||
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| + | The FCC said the ban follows a review that determined drones and drone parts made outside the U.S. pose “unacceptable risks to the national security of the United States and to the safety and security of U.S. persons.” | ||
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| + | As a result, foreign-made drones and components have been added to the FCC’s Covered List, which includes communications services and equipment that are prohibited in the U.S. over security risks. | ||
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| + | == Trump administration’s ban on foreign-made drones starts this week — you can say goodbye to new DJI models == | ||
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| + | Lucas Ropek - 1:16 PM PST December 23, 2025 | ||
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| + | On Monday, the Trump administration’s Federal Communications Commission banned all new foreign-made drone models from distribution in the U.S., citing “national security concerns.” Americans who already own older foreign drone models will still be able to use those products, the government said. | ||
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| + | In a fact sheet published Monday, the FCC claimed that “criminals, | ||
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| + | The FCC’s chairman, Brendan Carr, said Monday that he approved of the policy. “I welcome this Executive Branch national security determination, | ||
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| + | The new rule will obviously impact many different companies, but it is destined to strike a blow against Chinese drone maker DJI, which is currently considered the dominant player in drone sales globally. Indeed, DJI is considered to be one of the most popular drone brands for American consumers. | ||
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| + | == Shoplifters Could Soon Be Chased Down By Drones == | ||
| + | osted by BeauHD on Thursday September 25, 2025 08:30PM | ||
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| + | An anonymous reader quotes a report from MIT Technology Review: | ||
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| + | Flock Safety, whose drones were once reserved for police departments, | ||
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| + | == DJI’s Tinniest, Cheapest Drone Is Coming Back to Terrorize Your Neighborhood == | ||
| + | Or at least, it will if you can actually import one into the U.S. | ||
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| + | Kyle Barr - October 24, 2025 | ||
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| + | Dronemaker DJI is hinting that we could be in store for one last drone launch before the end of the year. However, leakers already have spoilers for what appears to be a sequel to the small, cheap, and incredibly loud DJI Neo drone. The little drone could scream as loud as a banshee’s wail, which makes it the perfect doohickey to bring us frights before All Hallows’ Eve. However, it likely won’t be coming to the U.S. anytime soon over the government’s own fears of Chinese surveillance. | ||
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| + | Drone and action camera leaker Igor Bogdanov posted numerous images on X showing off what is clearly a successor to the DJI Neo, likely to be called the Neo 2. Bogdanov has a relatively accurate track record for leaks, so the images may be coming from DJI’s upcoming official announcement. Judging purely by the pics, the new Neo drone sports an updated propeller cage and an expanded antenna on the back. It still appears to be the same small size as the first Neo, though it apparently has additional sensor bars on the front panel. | ||
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| + | ===== Voltair ===== | ||
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| + | == Self Charging Drones == | ||
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| + | Voltair - Winter 2026 | ||
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| + | Voltair builds drones that ‘perch’ like birds to recharge on power lines. For this first time, this allows for drones with infinite range. Removing battery swaps is the last step to deploy UAVs autonomously at scale. After building drones for the Air Force and DARPA, Ronan realized this was both practical and technically feasible. | ||
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| + | Power utilities are the perfect first customer. Drone inspections identify maintenance concerns before they cause faults. Faults cause power outages, and spark wildfires - like the Eaton Fire in early 2025 where 19 people lost their lives and nearly 10,000 structures were destroyed. Fires bankrupt utilities and make them uninsurable. Autonomous drones can deliver over 20x the inspection coverage for the same cost. | ||
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| + | Since June, we’ve validated our core charging tech on a power line, built 5x flying prototypes, and inspected ~2000 poles. | ||
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| + | After power companies, we will service rail, road, telecom, real estate and other inspection markets. Insurance and grid traders also want our data product. At scale we are a new infrastructure layer for data on the physical world. | ||
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| His innovation won him an $8,000 scholarship in April at the Junior Science and Humanities Symposium, funded by the Defense Department. Then, on May 16, he received an even bigger scholarship of $15,000 from the US Navy, which he won after presenting his research at the Regeneron International Science and Engineering Fair... | His innovation won him an $8,000 scholarship in April at the Junior Science and Humanities Symposium, funded by the Defense Department. Then, on May 16, he received an even bigger scholarship of $15,000 from the US Navy, which he won after presenting his research at the Regeneron International Science and Engineering Fair... | ||
| - | </ | ||
| It all started when Taylor' | It all started when Taylor' | ||
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| Taylor designed a motor "that could start out helicopter-style for liftoff, then tilt back to become an airplane-style motor," | Taylor designed a motor "that could start out helicopter-style for liftoff, then tilt back to become an airplane-style motor," | ||
transportation/drones.1750035852.txt.gz · Last modified: by timb
