DARPA’s 1.8-gigapixel cam touts surveillance from 20,000 feet (video)

DNP 18gigapixel drone cam from DARPA touts surveillance from 20,000 feet

It’s been three years since we first heard about DARPA’s ARGUS-IS, but thanks to a PBS Nova special entitled “Rise of the Drones,” we finally have more information about the 1.8-gigapixel camera that is supposedly the highest-resolution surveillance system in the world. The documentary showed video footage of the imaging system in action, though the camera itself remains shrouded in mystery for security reasons. Designed to be used with UAVs like the Predator, the ARGUS-IS (which stands for Autonomous Real-time Ground Ubiquitous Surveillance – Imaging System) can spot a six-inch object within a ten square mile radius from 20,000 feet in the air. As shown in the clip after the break, the high-res cam doesn’t quite reveal facial features, but you can spot details like a bird flying around a building and the color of someone’s clothes.

The video goes on to reveal that the camera’s internals are actually a collection of 368 sensors that are identical to the ones found in 5-megapixel smartphones. But the ARGUS-IS wouldn’t be much without the processing power of the platform behind it. We’re not entirely sure how this is done, but the camera allegedly streams around 1 million terabytes (that’s an exabyte, folks) of video, which adds up to roughly 5,000 hours of HD footage per day. Thankfully, there’s software that helps guys on the ground filter through the mass of data. As seen in the image above, it lets them track moving objects with up to 65 simultaneous windows. The military potential here is obvious, but DARPA is keeping mum on any future implementations of the ARGUS-IS — or if it’s been in use all this time.

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Source: ExtremeTech, PBS

These UAVs Fly Through Fallout Clouds To Learn Who Launched a Nuke

During the Cold War, it wasn’t hard to determine who could have been behind an airborne nuclear strike—just check behind the Iron Curtain. But in the modern era of nuclear proliferation, figuring out who set off a bomb would be more akin to crime scene investigation. More »

Northrop Grumman, Cassidian run Euro Hawk UAV through its first full test flight (video)

Northrop Grumman, Cassidian fly highaltitude Euro Hawk UAV for the first time video

Europe isn’t quite as firmly on the bleeding edge of UAVs as the US. Northrop Grumman and EADS-run Cassidian just brought the continent one step closer through the first full test flight of Euro Hawk. A new take on the Global Hawk HALE with a new mission system from Cassidian, it should be the continent’s first military UAV that mates both long flight durations with high altitude: the two partners expect Euro Hawk to collect strategic intelligence from up to 60,000 feet and for as long as 30 hours before it needs to touch down. There’s more testing to go before active service begins — the initial flight only lasted eight hours, for example — but the unmanned flyer should eventually keep watch over German troops and territories well past the limits of human endurance.

Continue reading Northrop Grumman, Cassidian run Euro Hawk UAV through its first full test flight (video)

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Source: Cassidian

This Is the Future of the US Navy

Witness, the beginning of a new era: the X-47B Unmanned Combat Air System on the flight deck of the USS Harry S. Truman. Soon, there will be no more Maverick or Ice Man. In a couple of decades, everything will be stealthy, autonomous or remote controlled war creatures, much more cost-effective than their expensive human-carrying counterparts. Not as romantic and epic, but cheaper to manufacture, cheaper to operate and no lost pilots’ lives. More »

Google gives WWF $5 million to fund wildlife-observing drones

Google gives WWF $5 million to fund wildlifeobserving drones

Most of the drone-related news these days may focus on military or police use, but those are far from the only applications for the unmanned aerial vehicles. Case in point: the World Wildlife Fund, which has now received a $5 million grant from Google’s Global Impact Awards program to fund UAVs designed to monitor endangered species. Details on the drones themselves remain light, but the WWF says they’ll be used to detect poachers and tagged animals on the ground, and then relay that information to a command center and mobile law enforcement units. What’s more, while that initial funding will only provide something of a testbed, the WWF says it’s focusing on “easily-replicable technologies,” with its ultimate goal being to create an “efficient, effective network that can be adopted globally.”

[Image credit: WWF]

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Via: BBC News

Source: WWF

Europe’s Killer Drone Is Alive and Flying

It looks like a furious Cylon, it subsists on croissants and lattes, and now it’s successfully on its way to blowing things up: the European nEUROn drone just made a giant leap. More »

Spy Through The Air With The Greatest of Ease With Your Own Autonomous UAV

Have you ever wanted to do survelience on your friends, neighbors, enemies, or that sketchy-looking house down the street? Have you ever wanted a drone of your own? Well Lehmann Aviation’s LA100 might be your chance if you can spare the scratch. More »

LA100 Automatic UAV Shoots Photos From Above

If you are a photographer who is looking to up your game, then you might have been toying around with the idea of capturing images from different angles – and with the help of the LA100 automatic micro UAV (unmanned aerial vehicle), that is not too hard to do. Lehmann Aviation of France is the one behind the LA100 fully automatic UAV which was specially designed to tote around a GoPro HERO3 camera.

The LA100 is obedient enough to follow a pre-programmed flight path, but it will be different from others such as the Swinglet as the LA100′s flight path cannot be customized or overridden by remote control. The whole idea is this – this particular aircraft will target users who have absolutely zero piloting background, which can be a boon or a curse, depending on which side of the fence you are sitting on. Basically, the LA100 will be able to capture footage from a height of 80 to 100 meters without the need for any input from the user who has his or her feet planted firmly on the ground, where the hand-launched LA100 will return to the launch site for a horizontal landing afterwards. It is capable of flying at speeds of up to 80 kmh, in a space of 5 minutes.

Not exactly priced to move, the LA100 will retail for €990 a pop, and will arrive this December – although whether it will make the Christmas deadline or not remains to be seen.

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An American Moral Crisis: Gizmodo Talks Drones with Dennis Kucinich

There’s Foxconn, there’s torrented TV shows, there’s patent bickering. But for the use of right and wrong in technology, there’s one question that supersedes all others: Should our country be killing ordinary people with robotic soldiers in the sky? More »

Everything You Need to Know About Killer Drones in One Rad Musical Cartoon!

Are you confused by the ethical grey area, constitutional ambiguity, and general scariness of robots that kill people? Don’t sweat it, man. Hang out with these Cool Drones, and watch this Edu-Fun video, right here on Gizmodo. More »