Drones have been a hot topic in the news for some time. Depending on
what you’ve read, they’re devastatingly effective weapons of war, the
next big threat to personal privacy, a revolutionary leap in video technology, or hazardous toys capable of chopping your fingers off.
To be fair, there’s a measure of truth to all those
statements. But you might be surprised to learn that drones will soon
affect our everyday lives in a host of useful ways. People are already
using them to deliver fast food to hungry teens in Virginia, improve the
productivity of Midwestern farms, and even protect rhinos and elephants
in Africa from poachers.
In the next year, almost 2.3 million of the unmanned
aircraft will be sold, according to market analysis firm Skylogic
Research. And the vast majority will be the multirotor models embraced
by apple farmers, wedding photographers, and search-and-rescue workers.
“This is one of the few technologies that could
revolutionize the way the world appears,” says Mark Blanks, who oversees
the test site at Virginia Tech University where air-traffic-control
concerns related to drones are being studied.
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