google to buy drones

The flutter to fill our skies with privately owned, stuff-delivering drones got another major participant today as Google snapped up start-up Titan Aerospace.Word was Facebook was in talks to buy the solar-powered drone maker earlier this year, but Google put a ring on it once and for all. That's OK, though, since Facebook already has the drone team from Ascenta under its belt.Google's drone-ings make sense for the company for three reasons. First, Titan's drones are set to gather high-res images of the planet, perfect for depicting deforestation or, highly relevant to users, creating better Maps.Second, there's the mission to connect more people to the internet, which is at least publicly fueling Facebook's own high-flying ambitions. And finally, it just makes good competitive sense. Why would Google, sitting on mountains of money, let Facebook, Amazon and hordes of smaller firms stake a claim to the clouds when it can too?But while getting into the drone game is a smart step for Google, it's also terrifying for the rest of us.

Titan claims its solar-powered drones can fly continuously for five years without ever having to land, making them ideal for continually delivering the internet signals Google will use to connect the unconnected and snapping pictures from the stratosphere uninterrupted.The longevity afforded by a sustainable fuel source make the drones virtually autonomous information-gathering machines. There will naturally be relaying data to and from operators on the ground, but these babies can, in theory, keep circling the globe for half a decade (I say in theory because Titan has yet to actually produce a drone that's flown for that long; an anecdote from the Wall Street Journal has a drone flying for a few minutes 400 feet off the ground).The Titan team is headed to work alongside Google's Project Loon, the search company's initiative to build giant, internet-delivering balloons. There's a Planes, Trains and Automobiles vibe to Google's endeavor, but if it wants to beat WhatsApp-owning Facebook to the connection-delivering punch, it has to come at it from inventive angles.

Google's aims may sound altruistic, but the door is open enough for abuse to seep in and bloom. Google's Street View sparked plenty of privacy concerns; how will people feel about unmanned, camera-armed drones flying 65,000 feet above them?I am all for connecting as many people as possible to the internet if it means enhancing and enriching their lives, but I am dubious of a company - any company - that fundamentally makes its profits from accessing personal information, such as my location, and targeted advertisements.Throw the potential for surveillance into the mix, and you've got me running for the hills with a tin-foil hat on.I actually believe Google and Facebook when they say they want to bring those untouched by the internet into the web's folds. However, they tend to leave out the part about how building their own networks that could be used by billions of people will translate into a new boon of profits.I envision a kind of 21st century Gold Rush where every company that can afford to seeks out fortune by striking mines of broadband and voice calling, all without having to set foot on soil.

Truth be told, they probably see much, much more than brimming bank accounts and happy investors; what a coup it would be for a few billion more people to turn to you as the deliverer of information, the Great Connector in the Sky.In our post-NSA-revelations world, it's impossible not to think of surveillance when plans like Google's come to light.
ar drone 2 camerasMaybe Google will spy on me to sell me eerily relevant goods, or the government is going to find its trusty back doors to peak at what the drones are seeing.
ar drone 2 mediamarktGoogle has been on a purchasing frenzy the last six months or so, seemingly on a quest to buy its way into every corner of our lives.
what's the best drone to buyIt bought Nest, AI-firm DeepMind and robotics developer Boston Dynamics, one of seven robotics companies it picked up during an 8-day span in December 2013.From phones to animal-like robots to thermostats to the skies, is there any part of our world Google doesn't want to control a piece of?
ar drone 2 controls reversed

It's definitely not alone, and the race of companies like Amazon, Google, Facebook and Apple to be everywhere to everyone is becoming increasingly worrisome.If and when Amazon, Facebook and Google's drones take flight, I don't doubt the firms will do their best to convince us our privacy is their No. 1 priority.
storm drone 4 partsBut will we trust them?
ar drone 2 switch cameraI can't say I will.HomeFind the Best Drones for Sale[ Update: Google denies the report. Jeff Jarvis adds further detail. Over at the Telstar Logistics blog, BB pal Todd Lappin points to a a German news report that Google has purchased small UAV "microdrone" aircraft manufactured by Germany's microdrone GmbH, perhaps for use to augment the company's Street View mapping data. From the cited report: The UAVs being flogged are mini helicopters with cameras attached

that can be flown about all over the place. They're quiet and resemble sci-fi UFOs for the vertically challenged alien. They can fly up to 80km per hour, so Microdrone CEO Sven Juerss suggests they'll be brilliant for mapping entire neighbourhoods really quickly and relatively cheaply. Even before Google started data mining on open web networks its Street View operations were controversial, with Google Maps picking up on people who didn't exactly want their faces plastered all over the internet. With the kind of high-angle aerial shots this sort of kit can achieve, it boggles the mind as to the sort of images that may be accidentally Todd's take: "Skepticism is warranted, and outrage is probably premature." His post is worth a read, and includes some interesting (and creepy) video of the drones in action. Does Google Plan to Fly UAV Spies in the Skies? Supply of old-fashioned CRT arcade monitors dries up The last manufacturer of arcade-sized cathode ray tubes is out of the business, with one supplier having only 30 or so in stock and no chance of ordering more.

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