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Drone 2.0 GPS Edition SandDrone 2.0 GPS Edition combines the new Elite edition drone with the Flight Recorder GPS Module.Drone 2.0 GPS Edition combines the new Elite edition drone with the Flight Recorder GPS Module. Drone 2.0 GPS Edition lets you capture high-definition photos and videos and stream them instantly through your iPhone, iPad or iPod touch. You can control the drone's direction using a map and easily instruct it to return to its take-off point. Plus, thanks to the Wi-Fi connection of the AR.Drone 2.0 and the GPS Flight Recorder, the drone's range is up to 100 metres.Drone 2.0 has an in-built high-definition 720 p camera, which records HD video and sends it directly to your iOS device. Also featuring a photo-capture option, images are easily stored on the Flight Recorder or on your device. With the Flight Recorder GPS you benefit from the additional features of Control by Map; this new control mode allows you to choose the destination of your drone. You also benefit from increased flight height of up to 100 metres and the unique Return Home Mode, which instructs the drone to return to its take-off point.

- Quadricopter drone is remotely controlled from your iPhone, iPad or iPod touch - Take photos and record video in high definition during flight with the 720 p camera - Instantly stream video footage on your iPhone, iPad or iPod touch - Store photos and images on your iOS device or USB drive - Return Home Mode - Control By Map function - Did you notice? - The HD camera streams video footage through your phone tablet - camera tricks with the free app
parrot ar drone waypoint - Compatibility (control app): Android;
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Drone 2.0 GPS Edition Sand" For more information click hereAK Interactive Metal Paints Items 1 to 9 of 10 total AK Interactive True Metal Paints Gold # 00450 AK Interactive True Metal Paints Metalic Blue # 00451 AK Interactive True Metal Paints Metalic Purple # 00452 AK Interactive True Metal Paints Old Bronze # 00453 AK Interactive True Metal Paints Dark Aluminium # 00456 AK Interactive True Metal Paints Steel # 00457
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ar drone parrot mise a jour AK Interactive True Metal Paints Iron # 00459 AK Interactive True Metal Paints Brass # 00460Posted on 04 August 2010 by author One of the greatest gaming gadgets that you could ever have is the all new AR.Drone which is especially made by Parrot, one of the industry’s leaders in wireless peripherals for mobile phone, and exclusively distributed through unique gifts specialty retailer and innovative product development company, Brookstone.

Drone is the first quadricopter which uses augmented reality and can be maneuvered via Wi-Fi thru an iPod touch, iPhone or an iPad. Basically, this gadget offers an entirely new flight and gaming experience. The AR Drone combines the best of both the real and virtual worlds to offer an ultimate gaming experience to those gaming enthusiasts who loves to play and control flying objects like a true pilot. The Parrot AR Drone is a one of a kind helicopter and it is also very easy to fly regardless wherever you are. Whether you are outdoors or indoors, you’ll surely enjoy the Parrot AR.This flying video game has been designed using very light and robust materials. Basically, its main structure is made of carbon fiber and high resistance plastic making it very durable. Among its amazing features include a built-in Wi-Fi system that simply gets you connected with any iPod touch, iPhone or iPad device. The built-in accelerometer in these devices also enables you to control your AR Drone.

The Parrot AR Drone also comes with the following great features: Another major feature that the AR.Drone has is its ability to play with other players with the use of its WiFi network. Since AR Drone combines the world of video gaming as well as radio-controlled models, one player can simple create a game party and play against each other. Since the hulls are available in different colors it is very possible to have a battle between two AR Drones. This gaming device is simply amazing. The AR Drone will be available to customers starting September 03 and will be available exclusively in Brookstone until October 31 at a price of $299. Checkout the series of AR.Drone video clips below to learn more on how you could enjoy this one-of-a-kind toy. Tags: Parrot Ar.Drone features, Parrot Ar.Drone flying video game, Parrot Ar.Drone price, Parrot Ar.Drone release date, Parrot Ar.Drone reviewAll the latest in West Coast Boating, featuring stories on Seattle's Downtown Sailing Series;

a preview of Seattle's Boats Afloat show; The HobbyTown story begins in Lincoln, Nebraska (where our national headquarters remains today). Merlin Hayes, Mary Hayes and Thom Walla founded HobbyTown Unlimited Inc. in 1985 and opened the first franchise store in1986. Today, there are more than 150 stores nationwide, making us the largest retail hobby franchise in the world. We promise to provide quality products, a knowledgeable staff and good customer service. We believe our success comes from you and when you are among us, you are among friends. We make free time awesome.The Star Trek starship Enterprise model seperated into its component parts. Stardate 1601.28: After a year of extensive research, conservation work on the original studio model of the USS Enterprise is now underway in the Museum’s spacedock. Our goal is to stabilize the model and return it to its appearance from August of 1967, during the filming of the episode The Trouble with Tribbles, which marked the last known modification of the ship during the production of Star Trek.

The model appeared in all 79 episodes of the original series, and was donated to the Smithsonian in 1974. It will go back on public display in the Boeing Milestones of Flight Hall this year, in time for the Museum’s 40th birthday in July and the 50th anniversary of Star Trek in September. Visitors to our third annual Open House at the Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center on Saturday, January 30 can catch a glimpse of the work in progress. Advisory members from left: Bill George, Kim Smith, and John Goodson. To replicate the subtle, intricate paint detailing of the model’s original design, we welcomed two new members to the project’s expert advisory committee. Academy Award-winner Bill George from Lucasfilm’s Industrial Light & Magic (ILM) and Kim Smith with Creature Art & Mechanics Digital (CAMd) and formerly ILM, will join original committee member John Goodson, also of ILM. Combined, the three have decades of experience on more than 100 movies, including eight Star Trek films (and a long time ago in a galaxy far, far away, four episodes of Star Wars).

Kim also has an unexpected family connection to our Boeing Milestones of Flight Hall. Her father, the experienced mural artist William A. Smith, advised artist Robert “Bob” McCall as he worked on one of the gallery’s murals The Space Mural—A Cosmic View. A collection of original photographs and negatives of the Star Trek starship Enterprise model. The final painting of the Enterprise model will begin in April, using newly discovered reference photos from our appeal to Trek fans in the fall. The team will also build new nacelle domes with LED lights to mimic the spinning effect seen on television. For reference, they will first build a 1:1 mock-up of the original mechanism, which utilized mirrors, motors, nails, and Christmas lights. Conservator Ariel O’Connor explains, “Although the original nacelle dome lights did not survive, we can replicate the original effect in a way that is safe to install on the model. The LED lights can be programmed to match the original VFX footage while eliminating the burnt-out bulbs, extreme heat, and motor problems that troubled the original lights.

It is a wonderful solution to re-light the nacelles while ensuring the model's safety and longevity.” The Enterprise model has been carefully separated into its individual components—saucer section; port and starboard nacelles and pylons; Each section is being meticulously studied to determine its construction and condition and will be documented with visible, ultraviolet, and infrared photography. We completed X-ray photography, with help from our colleagues at the Smithsonian Zoological Park, in spring 2015. The iconic letters of the Enterprise on original paint.
A close-up image of the model's saucer captured with reflected infrared photography.
The Enterprise was designed to look unbound by gravity, ready to explore strange new worlds at faster-than-light speeds week after week. Five decades later, the pull of our home world has taken its toll on the model, particularly the secondary hull and nacelles. “The secondary hull was built using horizontal staves, similar to a wooden barrel on its side,” says conservator Ariel O’Connor.

“But unlike a barrel with metal hoops, the Enterprise staves are only glued together with aging adhesives and no additional structural support. Our museum specialists Gary Gordon and Will Lee are fabricating a precisely fit, reversible metal collar that will be inserted inside the secondary hull and hangar bay to stabilize the secondary hull and prevent the nacelles from drooping.”
A photograph inside the saucer of the Star Trek starship Enterprise studio model.
Interior view of the secondary hull looking aft toward the hangarbay of the Star Trek starship Enterprise studio model.
To analyze the model’s original materials and understand how they are aging, metal sections of the model were analyzed with X-ray fluorescence (XRF) and plastic sections were sampled and sent to the Art Conservation department at SUNY - Buffalo State in Buffalo, NY. Conservation scientists Dr. Aaron Shugar and Dr. Rebecca Ploeger used μ‐FTIR spectroscopy and μ‐XRF spectrometry to determine the specific adhesives and polymers used in the model’s construction.

“Our analysis identified two original adhesives on the secondary hull: a clear poly(vinyl acetate) and a brown animal glue bulked with barium, strontium, and calcium. The plastic bolt cover fin and nacelle ribbed endcaps are made from clear poly(methyl methacrylate), commonly known as Plexiglas,” said Dr. Shugar.
Conservator Ariel O’Connor conducts X-ray fluorescence (XRF) spectrometry to determine the metal alloy used to construct the port nacelle of the Star Trek starship Enterprise studio model.
The saucer’s results were the most interesting. “The plastic was identified as Acrylonitrile-Butadiene-Styrine and poly(vinyl chloride) blend with lead and antimony. The lead could be from a pigment or used as a dryer, and the antimony is likely related to a fire retardant ABS-PVC blend,” confirmed Dr. Ploeger. “The saucer is lined with a fiberglass composed of crystalline silica fibers and a bisphenol A-based epoxy.” Of particular note to current model-makers, the analysis supports the long-reported use of Royalite plastic in the saucer.

The 1964 material matches the profile of several Royalite products (R-59 and R-63) available today. A cross section, or microscopic sample of paint, taken from the saucer of the Star Trek starship Enterprise studio model in an area that was hidden by the bolt cover. To understand the layers of paint applied to the model over the decades, microscopic cross sections of the paint were sampled and studied by Dr. Susan Buck, a conservator specializing in the analysis of painted surfaces. The analysis revealed layers of paint from four generations of filming and four previous restorations. The only area with unaltered original paint, on top of the saucer, will be painstakingly cleaned and stabilized, but not altered. For areas repainted during previous restorations, a new base layer will be applied on top that exactly matches the original hull grey. “We don’t have to speculate about the original grey color,” says conservator Ariel O’Connor. “Our examinations have revealed a large section of original, first pilot-episode grey hidden and protected under the saucer bolt cover, and Dr. Buck’s analysis confirmed our findings.”