The New Zealand Herald

Drones do the dull, dirty, dangerous

- Andy Miah — Andy Miah is the chair in Science Communicat­ion & Future Media, University of Salford.

Of the many technologi­es to have captured our imaginatio­ns over the last five years, there have been few with such lofty aspiration­s as drones. These high-tech flying machines have opened up new cultural pastimes which bring together hobbyist enthusiasm and a simple human curiosity to take to the skies.

In 2015, one of the largest commercial drone developers, DJI, was valued to be worth over US$10 billion, ($13.73 billion).

What are the big five applicatio­ns that explain the proliferat­ion of drones over this period, or which signal important contributi­ons to our society?

Delivery

The great thing about drones is that they are small, fast, agile, self-guiding, and can carry things. Companies like Flirtey have received approval for commercial drone delivery flights, for items ranging from pizza delivery to bottled water, emergency food and first aid kits.

Other delivery designs have included life-ring drones, blooddeliv­ery drones, and defibrilla­tor “ambulance” drones — the prototypes of which show great success and clarity of use.

Filmmaking

In 2015, the world’s first Drone Film festival took place in New York, shortly followed by a number of others around the world. In the same year, the Drones for Good prize launched in Dubai, creating an annual US$1m ($1.37 million) prize for inventors to come up with some of the best drone applicatio­ns. Finalists ranged from drones designed to map biodiversi­ty, to a search and rescue drone which was its inaugural internatio­nal winner.

Award winning filmmaker Liam Young created the first film shot entirely by drones, called In the Robot Skies. Artists are even putting 360 cameras onto drones and turning them into virtual reality perspectiv­es.

Drone racing

The United Arab Emirates created the world’s first Grand Prix Drone Racing event, with British teen Luke Banister winning its inaugural event in 2016 with a first prize pot of US$250,000 ($344,000). Since then an entire community of drone races have been popping up around the world, with the first profession­al race taking place in the UK at the 02 Arena in 2017.

Conservati­on

Drones also have the extraordin­ary capacity to occupy parts of our natural world that no other object can. These machines have been seized upon by environmen­tal scientists to help us understand the natural world in ways that have never been possible before.

For instance, primate biologist Serge Wich has been monitoring apes from above using a range of drone systems, while Neil Entwistle, of Salford University’s School of Environmen­t and Life Sciences, has been mapping out flooding patterns in the UK to more effectivel­y help us figure out how to protect ourselves against catastroph­ic weather.

Journalism

Journalist­s have also been quick off the mark to use drones. The Knight News Foundation project is developing a Drone Journalism operations manual to help reporters fly ethically and safely.

And in countries where there is tight media control there is particular value in having drones to access places which have decreed off limits. In Turkey, for example, an activist allegedly had his drone shot down by police when he was trying to capture footage of demonstrat­ions in Istanbul.

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