The Navy Has The Ultimate MH370 Search Tool, It's Just Not Operational

The Navy Has The Ultimate MH370 Search Tool, It's Just Not Operational

While the world is tied up in the mystery of what happened to Malaysian Air Flight 370, testers at Edwards AFB in south central California and at Naval Air Station Patuxent River in Maryland are hard at work developing the ultimate tool for solving such a mystery, the Northrop Grumman built MQ-4C Triton.

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Is Using Drones At Sports Events Actually A Crime? Should It Be?

Is Using Drones At Sports Events Actually A Crime? Should It Be?

Last month, the Nationals were seen using a four-rotor drone to take publicity photos. The FAA took issue. "No, we didn’t get it cleared, but we don’t get our pop flies cleared either and those go higher than this thing did," a team official told the AP afterward. Which pretty neatly sums up the FAA’s conundrum with regulating drones in the wild.

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Northrop Grumman: Flight of the Triton

Wow. Just wow. You can almost hear the corporate execs at the screening of this, Northrop Grumman’s official music video for the MQ-4C Triton Unmanned Aircraft System’s first flight, thinking to themselves, "This is the coolest thing ever. Just look at all those thumbs up, the kids are just going to go nuts for this." To be fair, there are a lot of thumbs up in this video, could probably use some more high-fives though. [UAS Vision]

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America’s New Maritime Spy Drone Program Is Finally Getting Off the Ground

The world’s oceans are massive, easily big enough to hide a whole fleet of surface ships if not carefully monitored. That’s why the Pentagon’s newest Broad Area Maritime Surveillance (BAMS) platform will keep its eyes peeled for enemy carrier groups from 60,000 feet up. More »

Puma AE: The Special Forces Spy Drone that Lands Anywhere [Video]

When scouting enemy positions, our forces rarely have the luxury of a proper airstrip—or even a fairway—with which to land an unmanned aircraft. That’s why California’s AeroVironment corporation has designed a drone that lands just about anywhere—water hazards and sand traps be damned. More »

Army seeking proposals for casualty-carrying UAVs

Army seeking proposals for casualty-carrying UAVs

Combat is a grizzly business, and despite the best efforts of medical evacuation crews, it’s not always feasible to send rescue teams into the fray. The US Army is seeking to address this with “autonomous vertical takeoff and landing (VTOL) unmanned aircraft systems (UAS)” (read: drones) for dropping off medical supplies and picking up injured troops. In its latest request for research and development proposals, the Army calls not for new tools, but for the repurposing of current aircraft to do the job. Preferred candidates in the already unmanned class include the A160 Hummingbird and the K-MAX, while one of the suggestions for remote-control modification is the infamous Black Hawk. Makes the AR.Drone seem a little wimpy, doesn’t it?

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Army seeking proposals for casualty-carrying UAVs originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 05 Aug 2012 14:39:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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LaCie reveals new Mac-friendly USB 3.0 external drives

LaCie reveals new Macfriendly USB 30 external drives

Lacie’s just announced its next generation USB 3.0 drives meant to take advantage of the new Ivy Bridge internals of the latest MacBooks. The fresh Rugged Triple, Porsche Design P’9223 and P’9233, and RuggedKey models all use USB Attached SCSI Protocol (UAS) for maximum data transfer speeds to and from machines running Lion or Mountain Lion. If you’re looking to pick one of these slick storage devices, they’ll be available in Apple stores and on LaCie’s website this summer.

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LaCie reveals new Mac-friendly USB 3.0 external drives originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 04 Aug 2012 22:01:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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