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New Draganflyer Predator Unmanned Aerial Vehicle

John Jorsett writes "I've long lusted for the Draganflyer indoor-outdoor radio-controlled helicopter, but now I've got a new object of desire. Since seeing it flown on The History Channel's 'Tactical to Practical' show last September, I've been waiting for the Draganflyer Predator, modeled on the military aircraft of the same name. Electrically powered, the $750 Draganflyer Predator can be equipped with video cameras and a GPS receiver to carry out radio-controlled or pre-programmed self-guided surveillance missions of up to 20 miles range, the company claims. Time to buy my own UAV and find out what's really going on over there in Area 51."

187 of 255 comments (clear)

  1. Hmm. by Limburgher · · Score: 4, Funny
    Time to buy my own UAV and find out what's really going on over there in Area 51."

    As if they won't shoot THAT down, too. :)

    --

    You are not the customer.

    1. Re:Hmm. by Cruciform · · Score: 4, Funny

      I hear Guantanamo Bay is lovely this time of year :D

    2. Re:Hmm. by Deraj+DeZine · · Score: 5, Funny

      But who can get in to Area 51 first? You and your Dragan Flyer Predator or the aliens and their UFOs from Mars?

      It's a race to determine the superiority of two teams: Aliens vs. Predator!

      --
      True story.
    3. Re:Hmm. by Patrik_AKA_RedX · · Score: 5, Funny

      With all the publicity A51 got, I doubt anything intresting is still there. They probably moved everything to Area 42 or something.

    4. Re:Hmm. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      ...or outsourced it to India.

    5. Re:Hmm. by dasunt · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Hardware like this is trouble for organizations which want to be private.

      How long until we can build a cheap mostly-plastic flier that can fly high enough, yet take good enough pictures, of secret sites?

      What's stopping us from finding an open WAP nearby and dropping a cheap WAPWireless Controller bridge? Perhaps with a few more cheap relays if we don't have the range.

      Sit down in an internet cafe, bounce your signal through eastern Europe, and get ready to get your own pics of Area 51. Sure, you lose the flyer, but so what?

      Perhaps we'll end up living in a transparent society...

    6. Re:Hmm. by Cruciform · · Score: 2

      Hmph. What do aliens care about Area 51? It's obvious from all those documentaries shown at Drive-Ins during the 50s that Mars Needs Women!

    7. Re:Hmm. by ryanjensen · · Score: 3, Funny
      Perhaps we'll end up living in a transparent society...

      Only, instead of big brother being the government, it really WILL be your big brother spying on you. And your sister, your cousin, your neighbor, etc., etc.

    8. Re:Hmm. by Deraj+DeZine · · Score: 3, Funny

      What are you talking about? They're trying to rid the universe of women.

      --
      True story.
    9. Re:Hmm. by Cruciform · · Score: 5, Informative

      Have you seen some of the miniature RCs being created by hobbyists?

      Henry Pasquet has a 2.6 gram airplane that flies at walking speed. You can see it in the Feb 2004 issue of FlyRC magazine, on page 162.

      Soon you won't even need to get high up to do the recon, you'll be able to navigate through buildings and populated areas with machines that are incredibly hard to spot.

      Whether that will lead to a crackdown on RC hobbies in the future remains to be seen.

    10. Re:Hmm. by dnoyeb · · Score: 1

      i'm sure this is ob the banned exports lists. or soon will be. GPS? yea, soon...

    11. Re:Hmm. by k31bang · · Score: 1

      With all the publicity A51 got, I doubt anything intresting is still there. They probably moved everything to Area 42 or something.

      thats what they want you to think.

      --
      -+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+ *** http://www.mountainfort.com *** +-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-
    12. Re:Hmm. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      But that's okay if you can spy on them equally easily. The Orwellian problem arises with asymmetric intelligence (in the "spying" sense) availability like we have now. With confused or stupid computer geeks pushing for privacy, little realising that privacy laws are a shield for the powerful and useless to the weak (since government intelligence agencies are not really bound by them, and you _can't tell_ if someone more powerful than you is watching you, but if you are a weakling being watched while watching, damn sure the powerful dude you are watching can tell and will sue your ass or worse...)

    13. Re:Hmm. by Gyorg_Lavode · · Score: 2, Insightful

      No offense, but I'm sure the majority of the countries who have an interest in our places like area 51 are already flying satalites strait over them to see whats there.

      --
      I do security
    14. Re:Hmm. by NanoGator · · Score: 5, Funny

      " They probably moved everything to Area 42 or something."

      I heard they moved it toAF#$H20x9934SDF..3jk..ata.[NO CARRIER]

      --
      "Derp de derp."
    15. Re:Hmm. by Lord+Dreamshaper · · Score: 5, Insightful

      "The Orwellian problem arises with asymmetric intelligence" Asymetric intelligence would (is?) certainly a problem, but allowing everyone to spy on everyone is a pyrrhic victory. I don't WANT to know what everyone else is doing. If I want to be seen, I'll alert the media and see if anyone gives a rat's ass what I'm doing. Until then, I don't need the whole world knowing that I'm a guy who reads Danielle Steele novels while suntanning...(or whatever...)

      --
      When all of your wishes have been granted, many of your dreams will be destroyed - Marilyn Manson
    16. Re:Hmm. by mikael_j · · Score: 1
      Actually, they just use the tourism around Area 51 to fund the real secret base, which is, as another poster pointed out, outsourced to India.

      /Mikael

      --
      Greylisting is to SMTP as NAT is to IPv4
    17. Re:Hmm. by alienzed · · Score: 1

      three awesome posts those before mine!

      --
      Never say never. Ah!! I did it again!
    18. Re:Hmm. by way2trivial · · Score: 4, Funny
      I'm about 4 miles from a nudist camp myself..

      up til now I'd been trying to think of a way to up the range of the thinkgeek desktop tanks...

      --
      every day http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special:Random
    19. Re:Hmm. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Problem with RC toys are that they can triangular the location of the transmitter. This is not to say you can't have the transmitter in a different location than you are.

    20. Re:Hmm. by Cruciform · · Score: 2

      That's a good point... as long as they're monitoring the radiowaves they'll know something's going on... I'd see the military watching out for that, but corporate espionage would probably be easier to pull off.

    21. Re:Hmm. by doormat · · Score: 1

      Actually there were a lot of rumors it got moved to Utah.

      --
      The Doormat

      If you're not outraged, then you're not paying attention.
    22. Re:Hmm. by NeoSkandranon · · Score: 2, Funny

      Henry Pasquet has a 2.6 gram airplane that flies at walking speed.

      Unless there's wind. Then i'm betting it doesn't fly at all.

      --
      If you can't see the value in jet powered ants you should turn in your nerd card. - Dunbal (464142)
    23. Re:Hmm. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Prepare to be disappointed. Unless the camp is called 'playboy mansion'...

    24. Re:Hmm. by rhs98 · · Score: 1

      Just what are you gonna see anyway? They work indoors don't they? Or do they really build all this secret stuff outside?

    25. Re:Hmm. by Nogami_Saeko · · Score: 2, Funny

      No carrier? I havn't had a carrier in 6 years :)

      N.

      --
      "Nothing strengthens authority so much as silence." - Charles de Gaulle
    26. Re:Hmm. by Cruciform · · Score: 1

      It's designed to be flown indoors.

    27. Re:Hmm. by afidel · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Nope, the skunkworks operations moved to Edwards AFB in California. The restricted area around Edwards is MUCH larger than that around Area 51, the only downside is the improved runway is only about half as long so super and hypersonic craft need to lose more energy before landing.

      --
      There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order. Starting now.
    28. Re:Hmm. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting
      No offense, but I'm sure the majority of the countries who have an interest in our places like area 51 are already flying satalites strait over them to see whats there.

      but you can predict when sattelites will pass overhead. randomly scheduled drones could efectively close these windows of opportunity

    29. Re:Hmm. by Deadstick · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Asking to come in for a visit would be simpler.

      rj

    30. Re:Hmm. by torpor · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Its not whether the freedom is -enforced- it is whether the freedom is -allowed for in the existing laws- ...

      There is a big difference between those two states, and the lines between are being drawn by your current legislators.

      --
      ; -- the corruption of government starts with its secrets. a truly free people keep no secrets. --
    31. Re:Hmm. by Tracy+Reed · · Score: 1

      eh...the size of the restricted area doesn't mean anything. I am a pilot and have flown my plane straight through R-2501 on a number of occasions. Sometimes at fairly low altitude. Certainly low enough to get some very good pics.

    32. Re:Hmm. by KlausBreuer · · Score: 2, Interesting

      >Whether that will lead to a crackdown on RC hobbies in the future remains to be seen.

      Well, seen like this, most hobbies would have to be cracked down on...

      Anyway, I'm sure it's not terribly difficult to set up a little interference sender, causing any RC-controlled whatsits to loose interest ;)

      --
      Free PC version of ChipWits at http://www.breueronline.de/klaus/chipwits/
    33. Re:Hmm. by superhoe · · Score: 1

      Hell no, we'll tie up some blinking christmas lights to one of these and drive all the UFO freaks completely nuts.

      --

      -el

    34. Re:Hmm. by gnu-generation-one · · Score: 1

      "Time to buy my own UAV and find out what's really going on over there in Area 51."
      As if they won't shoot THAT down, too. :)
      "

      Give it airbags and let it bounce in... and try to get a Brit to help with the design...

    35. Re:Hmm. by Wah · · Score: 1
      --
      +&x
    36. Re:Hmm. by visgoth · · Score: 1
      OSQ*

      Lisa: Area 51!? I found Area 51!
      Guard: No m'am this is Area 51A
      Lisa: Grr....well, um, i'm kind of lost, can you tell me where I am?
      Guard: I'm sorry, the location of this location is classified!

      *Obligatory Simpsons Quote

      --
      My patience is infinite, my time is not.
  2. Big Brother restrictions by maliabu · · Score: 5, Interesting

    it'll be interesting to see if the government will impose some restrictions on such device, so that it can't be used for anything threating the homeland.

    more importantly, can this Predator still be controlled if someone's using a jammer of some sort?

    1. Re:Big Brother restrictions by WeblionX · · Score: 5, Informative

      If you preprogrammed it it should continue to fly. Unless they jam the GPS frequency, too.

      --
      (\(\
      (=_=) Bani!
      (")")
    2. Re:Big Brother restrictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      Unless they jam the GPS frequency, too.

      Time to dig out some gyros and rig an backup intertial guidance system...

    3. Re:Big Brother restrictions by Azghoul · · Score: 1

      Uhm, there are some massive restrictions on what you can and cannot do with this kind of technology already.

      Just try to take it with you when you go overseas and see what happens.

      (disclaimer: I don't know the exact nature of this device, so I can't know what it's specific situation is re: USML and other export issues... perhaps this one's already been settled)

    4. Re:Big Brother restrictions by samsmithnz · · Score: 1

      If there are restrictions on this, why can you still relatively easily buy a F-15 on Ebay?

    5. Re:Big Brother restrictions by jjeffries · · Score: 5, Informative

      Actually there are two GPS systems, the civilian one that you and I and the bad guys can use by plunking down a couple of bux for a receiver, and the military version, which gives more precise measurements and is encrypted.

      The two systems are seperate, and the civilian GPS can be (not sure if it's actually been done yet) shut down when the gubbermint feels it necessary. Also they are able to introduce errors in the civilian GPS data stream to knock the precision even further when Uncle Sam feels it prudent. They can also turn it off just in a certain area, for example, the middle east...

    6. Re:Big Brother restrictions by John+Jorsett · · Score: 2, Informative
      If there are restrictions on this, why can you still relatively easily buy a F-15 on Ebay?

      F-18. The reason is that the government sold it as scrap, but neglected to cut it up first. Some guy bought it for 25 cents a pound, and thinks it can be made flyable for $9 million. The FBI has 'persuaded' him not to sell it to non-Americans, and to keep it in the U.S. And there's still talk in goverment circles about taking it back anyway.

    7. Re:Big Brother restrictions by 26199 · · Score: 2, Informative

      Hmm, how much do you know about GPS?

      I don't feel like actually researching the issue to come up with a definitive answer, but I thought it was more a matter of the military adding pseudo-random noise when they want to; their own detectors can remove it, civilian detectors can't.

      But I might be wrong :-)

      (hmm, they would still be able to add pseudonoise in certain areas, since the satellites cover different areas...)

    8. Re:Big Brother restrictions by Nivoset · · Score: 1

      from all i know about GPS (i am no expert so yeah) they use the same satelites. but all the military has is a few more to also get more information and closer readings. to stop us from using it, they just excrypt them for where they want us to not know. course we only know about ours... i wonder if someone else might have the same type of system hidden....... *ponders*

      --
      Movies made by a crazy person

      http://www.youtube.com/marginalpro
    9. Re:Big Brother restrictions by Dun+Malg · · Score: 2, Informative
      If there are restrictions on this,

      There are.

      why can you still relatively easily buy a F-15 on Ebay?

      You can't. Perhaps you are referring to the story about the F-18 for sale on ebay. That auction was cancelled before it ended. I don't personally know why, but I imagine one likely reason is ebay not wanting to be on the hook for assisting the sale of full mil-spec hardware which, by government regulations, must be "de-milled" before being sold to the public.

      --
      If a job's not worth doing, it's not worth doing right.
    10. Re:Big Brother restrictions by dj245 · · Score: 5, Informative
      Actually that is only partially correct. Bill Clinton signed into law an act that got rid of Selective Availability, the 'errors' that made civilian GPS less accurate. I'm not sure about the year, but maybe 1996. Before that, a few GPS companies made GPS hacks that got rid of Selective Availability anyway, so you could have greater accuracy anyway, it was just cheaper when Clinton had it turned off. Now, with widespread uptake of WAAS, and SA turned off (and a promise to never turn it on again) GPS accuracy in many cases can be 3m or less. With dual aerials 1m apart, you can have accuracy to 10cm. But I digress. Selective Availability is turned off. Its not coming back. Even if it does, the public sector has the technology to get around it, and a $750 technology 8 years ago probably is a lot cheaper now.

      If the US wants to disadvantage other countries in a conflict they don't worry about civilian vs military GPS, they just jam it with aircraft.

      --
      Even those who arrange and design shrubberies are under considerable economic stress at this period in history.
    11. Re:Big Brother restrictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Interesting

      You're exactly right.

      The military systems contain an algorithm that lets them generate that sudo-random noise, played against the noise that's transmitted, you get a pretty pristine signal, that's quite accurate.

      It's the same idea that AT&T used in WWII to create phonographs that had random noise on them, to scramble commnunications. One player would sync the other player, across the world via radio, and inversion of the signal would yield a voice. It's like a one-time pad for voice communication.

      Except in modern times, the idea is a bit better, and they can upload a new psuedo-random code up to the satalites, and install a new one in their receivers. Voila. It's still pseudo-random, so in thoery it could be broken, but it would be quite difficult, and they have the capacity to change it in an instant, so doing so would yield little to no value for the work put into it.

    12. Re:Big Brother restrictions by myowntrueself · · Score: 1

      "it'll be interesting to see if the government will impose some restrictions on such device, so that it can't be used for anything threating the homeland."

      I think that the US government should absolutely forbid any American from doing *anything* that could *conceivably* threaten The Homeland!

      --
      In the free world the media isn't government run; the government is media run.
    13. Re:Big Brother restrictions by MemoryAid · · Score: 1
      The military GPS uses a second frequency to receive from the satellites. It is my understanding that the two frequencies (civillian and encrypted military) have the normal random noise that you would expect from a transmission. However, the two signals have different noise (because they are independently random), allowing comparison of the two to find the most accurate signal possible.

      The data loaded into the receivers is just normal crypto codes to decrypt the military-only signal. I guess the encrypted signal could be called pseudo-random, though.

      There is also a bit that should be mentioned about the crypto making it unfeasible to spoof a GPS signal to send planes and weapons off course. Jamming is still an issue, though.

      --
      Language students: Don't try to learn English here. This ain't it.
    14. Re:Big Brother restrictions by stephenisu · · Score: 1

      Great, now I can't even own a pen.

      --
      Sigs? We don't need no stinking sigs!
    15. Re:Big Brother restrictions by nathanm · · Score: 2, Informative
      Actually there are two GPS systems, the civilian one that you and I and the bad guys can use by plunking down a couple of bux for a receiver, and the military version, which gives more precise measurements and is encrypted.

      The two systems are seperate,
      There aren't 2 different systems. The satellites merely transmit 2 signals, one being the encrypted signal civilians can't decode.
      and the civilian GPS can be (not sure if it's actually been done yet) shut down when the gubbermint feels it necessary.
      They wouldn't shut it down. There are too many mission critical uses of GPS now, from police/fire/ambulance to air navigation and commercial shipping.
      Also they are able to introduce errors in the civilian GPS data stream to knock the precision even further when Uncle Sam feels it prudent.
      This used to be standard policy, but as of May 1, 2000 Selective Availability (SA) was turned off.
      They can also turn it off just in a certain area, for example, the middle east...
      This is more like what would happen today if they deemed it necessary.
    16. Re:Big Brother restrictions by Nogami_Saeko · · Score: 1

      Selective Availability can be enabled in different geographic regions. They could quite easily turn it on in the middle east when a conflict arises, and leave it off everywhere else.

      The catch of course is that many Allied troops use civillian GPS units (Garmin and the like) because they're a heck of a lot better for casual use than the military models (which are built like tanks, but are also heavy, ackward to use, lack features, and are large).

      Another factor is that European countries are working on putting up their own GPS network which will be independant from the US network, so in a few years, new receivers should be able to take readings from both GPS networks and increase the accuracy even more (and have redundancy, which is nice seeing as how GPS is absolutely vital to many forms of transportation and rescue).

      N.

      --
      "Nothing strengthens authority so much as silence." - Charles de Gaulle
    17. Re:Big Brother restrictions by nathanm · · Score: 3, Informative

      The date SA was turned off was May 1, 2000.

      As far as precision, any standard handheld today can be accurate to 3m. The weak link in most low-end GPS models is the clock they use, usually a cheap quartz clock.

      With WAAS, 1m accuracy is easy. But for 10cm accuracy like you mentioned, 2 antennas aren't going to do it, since they're both unknown points. Using survey grade GPS equipment with a base station over a known geographical point and another roving unit can get you 1 cm accuracy.

    18. Re:Big Brother restrictions by myowntrueself · · Score: 1

      "Great, now I can't even own a pen."

      Exactly.

      It is my hope that this process with continue until the USA is reduced to pre-stoneage technology.

      Note to all the guys at the NSA; Stones, rocks and pieces of stick are all potential terrorist weapons and must be eliminated for the safety and security of The Homeland.

      --
      In the free world the media isn't government run; the government is media run.
    19. Re:Big Brother restrictions by patternjuggler · · Score: 1

      so that it can't be used for anything threating the homeland.

      100% serious tangent here: do you actually know anybody that uses the phrase 'homeland' outside of references to the government agency, and without inducing cringing in anybody within earshot? This post is probably the first time I've seen it used non-sarcastically and without criticizing the word for its connotations... though on second thought, since the poster is speculating about the intentions government they are putting it in phrase in a way that they think the government would, and quotes belong around it.

    20. Re:Big Brother restrictions by ronnie · · Score: 1

      They already know it's a threat, because you can make almanacs with those..

    21. Re:Big Brother restrictions by darkmeridian · · Score: 1

      Well, actually, the military has reserved the right (and apparently has the capability) to selectively degrade GPS signals for a specific part of the world. The US government runs the GPS show, you know, and they kind of hate helping the enemy.

      --
      A NYC lawyer blogs. http://www.chuangblog.com/
    22. Re:Big Brother restrictions by 26199 · · Score: 1

      Hmm, two opposing assertions, it's time for a reference :-)

      http://www.afa.org/magazine/April1996/0496gpsin.as p

      In fact, GPS satellites broadcast two different kinds of time signals. The first is the Coarse Acquisition signal, or C/A-code. Designed for nonmilitary users, it provides position information accurate to about 100 meters. The second signal is the encrypted Precision signal, or P-code. Intended for US military or other authorized recipients, it is accurate to within twenty meters.

      They go on to say that the C/A-code has at times been intentionally degraded further at times, but when their own troops only had commercial receivers, during the Gulf War, it was fixed.

      Anyway, yeah, you were right :-)

    23. Re:Big Brother restrictions by kris_lang · · Score: 1

      and the U.S. was trying to place restrictions on the European version of GPS that is being launched that would force the europeans to disable high-accuracy readings if the U.S. wanted them to.

      The european system is called Galileo. pdf link to http://europa.eu.int/comm/dgs/energy_transport/gal ileo/doc/gal_european_dependence_on_gps_rev22.pdf

  3. Phantasm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    It would be pretty cool to chase my brother around the house with that three-pronged flying silver ball from phantasm. Someone ought to start making those (without the drill of course). Every kid will want one.

  4. Area 51 by kfg · · Score: 5, Funny

    All they're doing there is building spy planes, UFOs and talking to aliens and shit. Boring stuff.

    On the other hand there's this sunbathing little cutie next door. . .

    KFG

    1. Re:Area 51 by nacturation · · Score: 4, Funny

      So I take it you'll be investigating Area 69?

      --
      Want to improve your Karma? Instead of "Post Anonymously", try the "Post Humously" option.
    2. Re:Area 51 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      Yeah ...the plane can fly over the cutie at a height 50 ft. Thats a lot closer than you will ever get to her!!

    3. Re:Area 51 by wrmrxxx · · Score: 1

      I have already laid claim to that area, in triplicate.

    4. Re:Area 51 by rich_r · · Score: 1
      Oh please, like they don't already have a backdoor in the thing to watch you.

      must... resist... soviet... joke...

    5. Re:Area 51 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      >On the other hand there's this sunbathing little cutie next door. . .

      Be careful: you must've heard of all those, ummm, disappearing things near the Bermuda Triangle...

  5. Already mentioned by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative
    1. Re:Already mentioned by babyrat · · Score: 1

      Uh no - that was the Draganflyer III - this is the Draganflyer Predator.

      Not only do they have different names, one is a helicopter (or helicopterish thing) and the other is a plane.

  6. Area 51? by SmoothTom · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I'll bet they's toast your flying machine pretty quickly if you sent it into their airspace ...

    Be fun to try, though.

    Oh, yeah, have a realtime video link back to your base - I doubt if you'd get your video camera back. In fact, I doubt you'd really want to ask for it ...

    1. Re:Area 51? by jo_ham · · Score: 2, Informative

      Plus, they have a restricted ground zone the size of Switzerland around the base - these things only have a 20 mile range.

    2. Re:Area 51? by peragrin · · Score: 1

      Actually if you really wanted to, you can build your own plane, using twin turbo jets(yes real jet engines) a uhf video downllink, a radio control uplink for control, using directional anntenna's and by flying 50' or less off the deck, I bet one could fly 20 miles with out being picked-up. unless of course it is seen. sound levels are minimal, using stealth tech, and camoflauge, It would be intersting to try, unfortuneately I don't have an extra $6000 to actually try it.

      --
      i thought once I was found, but it was only a dream.
    3. Re:Area 51? by timeOday · · Score: 1

      What are they going to down it with, a shotgun?

    4. Re:Area 51? by SmoothTom · · Score: 1

      Oh, I'd expect the downwash from a chopper would down it well enough.

      If not, drop a net on it or yes, have the guy riding 'shotgun' in the chopper use his, uh, shotgun on it.

      Many military 'base security' types actually are issued shotguns - incredibly effective at the ranges required for close security jobs.

      --
      Tomas

    5. Re:Area 51? by aardvarkjoe · · Score: 2, Funny

      What are they going to down it with, a shotgun?

      Alien tractor beam, of course.

      --

      How can we continue to believe in a just universe and freedom to eat crackers if we have no ale?
    6. Re:Area 51? by Snart+Barfunz · · Score: 1

      Then I'd retaliate with a flying toaster

      --
      --- Yx3 = Delilah ---
  7. area 51? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny
    Time to buy my own UAV and find out what's really going on over there in Area 51

    Heck with area 51. I want to find out what's going on over at the Playboy mansion. :)

  8. Area 51 by unassimilatible · · Score: 4, Funny
    Time to buy my own UAV and find out what's really going on over there in Area 51

    Oh please, like they don't already have a backdoor in the thing to watch you.

    The closest distance between two points is a tunnel.
    - Lyndon Johnson

    --
    Slashdot "libertarians": Small government for me, big government for those I disagree with. -1, I disagree with you
  9. Odd wishes by Rosco+P.+Coltrane · · Score: 5, Funny

    Time to buy my own UAV and find out what's really going on over there in Area 51

    Hello John, I was glad to read your Slashdot article. Now, can you hear the knock on your door? Can you see the black vans with the engine running in the street? well, rejoice: you'll get to see a classified site very soon, and even visit it with a couple of muscular new friends, without even having to buy a UAV. I hope you'll enjoy your trip!

    Regards,
    -- J. Ashcroft (johnny_the_poo@dhs.gov)

    --
    "A door is what a dog is perpetually on the wrong side of" - Ogden Nash
  10. Could be dangerous by cpirate · · Score: 5, Insightful

    So what is stopping someone from using this like a real predator and strapping something not so nice to it like a small bomb or gun. Since it can fly autonomously it looks like they just made a cheap over the counter missile platform. Just fly around a building transmitting real time images till your target emerges from the building and....boom!

    1. Re:Could be dangerous by coolmacdude · · Score: 5, Informative

      It is only rated as being able to lift 16 ounces. Not nearly enough for a bomb.

      --

      -You may license this sig for only $6.99.
    2. Re:Could be dangerous by 2nd+Post! · · Score: 1

      But enough for a vial of SARS infected urine~

      Especially if you can rig the UAV itself to blow up, via short circuit and some other stuff.

    3. Re:Could be dangerous by Patrik_AKA_RedX · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Just think about this: How much does a shotgun shell weight?

    4. Re:Could be dangerous by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      It is only rated as being able to lift 16 ounces. Not nearly enough for a bomb.

      You're right; it's a virtually insurmountable engineering problem. The resources required to overcome it could easily reach into the tens of dollars.

      The typical shotgun shell has about 2 ounces of shot in it. A cheap but functional barrel and firing pin could be constructed in well under 8 ounces. The flyer itself could aim. Looks like an autonomous flying shotgun to me.

    5. Re:Could be dangerous by wrmrxxx · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It would have to be a very lightweight weapon. Perhaps something biological?

      This kind of system might also expose a new hole in the defenses we have against terrorist or criminal acts. Imagine trying to defend a building against this. It's small enough to hide and launch from anywhere, has enough range to be launched from outside a ground based barrier, but is launched close enough to a target to reach it (or near enough for a chemical or bio-weapon) before large air defense systems become useful. Would this thing even show up on radar as a threat? It might look a lot like a bird, especially if the radio control signals are just assumed to be part of the ambient radio noise you'd get in a built up area.

    6. Re:Could be dangerous by MemoryAid · · Score: 1

      Great! That's all we need; now the hive mind at Slashdot is designing weapons.

      --
      Language students: Don't try to learn English here. This ain't it.
    7. Re:Could be dangerous by marko123 · · Score: 1

      With only a slightly larger stalling problem owing to the recoil from the gun than the A-10 Thunderbolt has.

      --
      http://pcblues.com - Digits and Wood
    8. Re:Could be dangerous by Imperator · · Score: 1

      What are you going to do, drop it on someone? Shotgun shells aren't particularly dangerous unless fired out of a shotgun--and a shotgun isn't massless. You might as well just drop a 1 lb rock on the target. Depending on the altitude and terminal velocity of the object, you might hurt someone. Then again, the more (downwards) velocity you want it to have, the higher you have to drop it from, and thus the less likely you are to hit your target. I suppose you could try dive-bombing to increase your accuracy, but this is starting to get quite complicated and require real skill.

      --

      Gates' Law: Every 18 months, the speed of software halves.
    9. Re:Could be dangerous by Sabalon · · Score: 1

      but by then the damage (to the target) would have been done. Probably a lot easier to lose one of these than an A-10.

    10. Re:Could be dangerous by Ieshan · · Score: 1


      It is only rated as being able to lift 16 ounces. Not nearly enough for a bomb.


      Or plenty to drop a pound of pick your poison, with no danger of personal injury.

    11. Re:Could be dangerous by Wes+Janson · · Score: 1

      Right. And we all know how incredibly dangerous a single-shot flying shotgun would be to national security. You might as well try running over your target with the plane, at least then you might hit them. Let's also take into account the fact that most shot(guns) have those barrel-things, which make the shot-things go in a straight line for a little ways. Putting a shotgun shell onto the frame and setting it off would accomplish little more than blowing a hole in the middle of a thousand-dollar toy.

    12. Re:Could be dangerous by Wes+Janson · · Score: 1

      And that incredible threat could easily be countered by sticking your average low-ranking shitbird out in the parking lot with an M16. You could likely hear that model from at least a few hundred yards away, and I strongly doubt it would survive even a single round without coming apart.

    13. Re:Could be dangerous by gotak · · Score: 1

      funny you should mention yellow liquid.

      There is actually a video online, let me see if i can find it, of some dude picking up glow fuel jug filled with piss with a RC helicopter.

      He the flew the chopper high up and did a nice flip to set the container falling. Results.. eh as expected..

      Ahh here it is. enjoy.
      http://www.augustoheli.com/videostuff/vide oarchive /FunnyOrOdd/CarsonBottleDrop.wmv.zip

    14. Re:Could be dangerous by YrWrstNtmr · · Score: 2, Informative

      This kind of system

      ...has been available for decades. This is nothing more than a regular R/C control system built into a Predator looking body. R/C planes have had the ability to drop small loads, on command, forever. Little charges, dropshapes, parachute loads...

      This is nothing new. Cool looking, but not really new

    15. Re:Could be dangerous by c0dedude · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Yeah, there's this thing called Inertia and Impulse. 2 oz of shot at about 1km/s would be enough to throw the thing WAY off course, likely to never recover.

      --
      Since when has this country used intellectual elite as a pejorative term?
    16. Re:Could be dangerous by ttsalo · · Score: 1

      I take it that you have never tried to shoot down an RC airplane? (I have.) I wouldn't count on "easily" hitting anything that small with an M16, and tens, not hundreds of yards is more like the realistic range of hearing an electric model in most realistic environments.

      --
      If the road to hell is paved with good intentions, where does the road paved with evil intentions lead to?
    17. Re:Could be dangerous by kabocox · · Score: 1

      Oh, great I can see it know. Get your own personal Backyard AA gun. Will shoot down any flying objects up to the size of a flying pig. (All flies, bees, birds, frisbees, kites, and anything else airborne above your backyard.) Anything the size of a flying pig, the military should handle.

    18. Re:Could be dangerous by broody · · Score: 1

      Arafat beat them to it.

      --
      ~~ What's stopping you?
    19. Re:Could be dangerous by Angst+Badger · · Score: 1

      It's small enough to hide and launch from anywhere, has enough range to be launched from outside a ground based barrier, but is launched close enough to a target to reach it (or near enough for a chemical or bio-weapon) before large air defense systems become useful.

      Um, before you start building defenses against expensive electronic toys, you might want to consider that all of the criteria you mentioned above are satisfied by mortars, and that mortars are not terrifically difficult to obtain and any ex-infantryman -- a class which numbers in the tens of millions in the US -- can operate one. A mortar round can, additionally, contain a larger payload than Mr. Dragan's nifty little toy.

      I suspect that this little aircraft is more of a threat to backyard sunbathers than national security. After all, who wants to watch Laura Bush sunbathing naked in the White House backyard?

      --
      Proud member of the Weirdo-American community.
  11. get your Pentagon budgets ready... by segment · · Score: 5, Interesting
    Don't shoot the messenger... I could see it now "They have Dragonflyers and weapons of mass destruction. We have to ban all RC toys due to al Qaeda this christmas"

    A Remote Threat

    This past June, quoting a German intelligence official, the Reuters news agency reported that al Qaeda might be planning to attack passenger aircraft using model airplanes. Some have dismissed this threat as unlikely or fanciful, but other terrorism experts foresee terrorist groups' using remote-control planes, boats, helicopters, and other delivery devices to attack people and sites without sacrificing any of their members.

    Is the time ripe for such attacks? With the Western world hardening its defenses after 9-11, terrorists will be looking for creative ways to get past security, says Louis R. Mizell, a private security expert and ex-U.S. intelligence officer.

    Mizell, who gathers data on security and terrorist incidents, says precedent for such attacks exists. He has recorded 43 cases involving 14 terrorist groups in which remote-control delivery systems were "either threatened, developed, or actually utilized." Only last year it was reported, for example, that Osama bin Laden considered using remote-control airplanes packed with explosives to kill President George W. Bush and other heads of state at the G-8 summit in Genoa, Italy. In 1995, reports indicated that Aum Shinrikyo, the Japanese terrorist group that attacked the Tokyo subway with sarin gas, planned to use remote-control helicopters to spray dangerous chemicals from the air. The helicopters crashed during testing. In the 1980s, the Basque separatist group ETA tried to blow up a Spanish patrol ship using a four-foot remote-control boat packed with explosives.

    The U.S. military is devoting considerable resources to its own remote-control delivery systems. For example, engineers are working on enhancing pilotless "drones" to make them effective means of attack without putting a flight crew at risk.

    Critics have downplayed this threat because of the relatively small payloads that such devices can deliver. But some remote-control devices on the market can hold large amounts of explosives. A Mississippi company called Bergen R/C Helicopters, for example, advertises over the Internet a five-foot-long remote-control helicopter, costing $4,000, that can carry a 20 kg (44 lb) payload for 30 minutes without needing to refuel. Yamaha Motor Co. markets over the Internet a remote-control helicopter with a 20 kg payload as a pilotless crop duster. And, Mizell points out, terrorists could use many vehicles with smaller payloads en masse to create the same effect.

    Other experts agree that the threat is legitimate. "Do you want to know if this is a real threat?" asks Gary Richter, a systems analyst at Sandia National Laboratories who evaluates the goals and capabilities of terrorist groups. "The answer is an unequivocal yes."

    Robert Blitzer, a former chief of the Domestic Terrorism/Counterterrorism Planning Section in the FBI's National Security Division, said he hadn't personally encountered that threat while with the FBI but conceded that it was viable. "I wouldn't be at all surprised that al Qaeda would have the wherewithal to do something like that," Blitzer says.

    "Remote-control vehicles of various sorts do have to be considered," agrees RAND analyst Brian Jenkins, "but they have a limited spectrum in terms of utility." He points out that remote-control bombs "would barely dent a skyscraper" and wouldn't compromise the dome of a nuclear reactor. Jenkins adds that remote-control delivery devices would be unnecessary in situations where terrorists could simply plant a bomb and walk away--in Times Square, for example.

    But Mizell sees a much broader scope of potential applications, such as boat attacks on maritime vessels and littoral utilities, as well as plane, helicopter, or car attacks on targeted VIPs' vehicles. "Real-life analogous situations show us what could be done," he says. For example, in 1998, a radio-control model airplane forced the pilot of a DC-9 to change his approach to Dulles International Airport.

    source

    1. Re:get your Pentagon budgets ready... by RevRigel · · Score: 1

      The author of this article did some pretty spotty research. Bergen R/C is in Cassopolis, Michigan, not Mississippi (someone doesn't know their state abbreviations), and the Industrial Twin carries 20 pounds, not 20 kilograms, for 30 minutes, and even that is a slight overstatement of its capabilities.

    2. Re:get your Pentagon budgets ready... by dougmc · · Score: 2, Interesting
      For example, in 1998, a radio-control model airplane forced the pilot of a DC-9 to change his approach to Dulles International Airport.
      I have my doubts about this, but even if it did happen, I doubt the model airplane forced anything. I tend to doubt that a DC-9 pilot would even be able to see a normal sized model plane during normal flying. What seems more likely is that he saw a full sized plane way off, and thought it was a model much closer, and then over-reacted (which is probably safer than under-reacting.)

      This sort of thing is usually really well documented by the FAA. Given the details given, I ought to be able to find the indident report, but I wasn't able to. But perhaps I'm just looking in the wrong place ...

      The sky is big. Really big. And it's hard to make two model airplanes collide when you're flying only 20 feet away from you -- to think you could do it intentionally, with the plane thousands of feet up, trying to hit a jet going hundreds of miles per hour is just crazy. Model airplanes just aren't the wonderful weapons that some journalists think they are.

  12. Re:whoa by SYFer · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Prepare to hurl then. You are apparently mistaking this consumer model for the real deal which costs the military many "illions" indeed.

    In fact, one might argue that the low price tag on this DIY baby really should make you a bit queasy.

    --
    "...all the labours of the ages, all the devotion, all the inspiration, all the noonday brightness..." yada yada
  13. Area 51? That's so 1996. by IvyMike · · Score: 4, Interesting

    You want Area 6413.

  14. Flying over classified areas by tx_kanuck · · Score: 5, Funny

    If you were to place a windows based OS on it, could you get away with flying it over a classified area? You could always claim there was a programming glitch, and since it was a classified area, you didn't have a phone number to call them, so you decided to just watch the video instead.

    I mean, we all know how error prone programs are when they are still in alpha stage anyway, right? It's not like you can be faulted for testing your prototype to find all the bugs in it and having it "accidently" go where it's not supposed to, right?

    >:)

    --
    Now, if that makes sense to anyone, could you please explain it to me? I think I've confused myself.
    1. Re:Flying over classified areas by vensonOnSlashdot · · Score: 1

      Windows 3.1/95, you mean?

  15. Heh. by avalys · · Score: 4, Funny

    I can feel myself wasting money just reading that site.

    I should step outside before I find my wallet.

    --
    This space intentionally left blank.
  16. Building your own UAV by tramm · · Score: 5, Informative
    John Jorsett writes:
    Time to buy my own UAV
    You can buy your own from Rotomotion, or build your own with the GPLed version of the Rotomotion software from autopilot.sourceforge.net. We've been working on it for a while and now have the hardware and the code to fly a helicopter or other rotocraft autonomously. And it's Free Software, too.
    --
    -- http://www.swcp.com/~hudson/
    1. Re:Building your own UAV by John+Jorsett · · Score: 4, Funny
      You can buy your own from Rotomotion

      At $21,000 - $27,000, it'd better do my laundry, housework, and taxes too.

    2. Re:Building your own UAV by bentfork · · Score: 1
      The Observer Series 1 UAV looks like a well designed UberToy.

      But at it is a little expensive with a Price: starting at US$21,000.00 .

      A pat on the back however for the AutoPilot SourceForge project

    3. Re:Building your own UAV by kfg · · Score: 2, Insightful

      It's even easier the cheaper to build your own version of this toy, since it's a model of the Predator fixed wing aircraft.

      The commercial version is an order of magnitude cheaper than the Rotomotion as well, putting it honestly in the toy/hobbyiest catagory.

      But as your own post points out there's nothing particularly revolutionary about it. Hobbyists have been building these things for a while. In light wind conditions small blimps are a hoot, can carry a fair amount of gear, and with todays wireless networking technology can be monitored and controled by equipment many people already have.

      Yeah, sometimes I get bored and hack stuff up out of what I've got lying around just to see what I can do with it.

      KFG

    4. Re:Building your own UAV by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Paparazzi has an autonomous model airplane for 500$. a little cheaper !

  17. UAV @ Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University by Cytop1asm · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I just transfered from the Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University and while there my Microprocessor Systems Professor who took me in shared with me information of the UAV project that he was starting. The following was the information about the UAV he planned: -It will be small, the craft being a helicopter -It would be cheap. $15k ($7k - Helicopter, $8k Electronics) -Price to public would be $50k-$75k -It would be easy to fly & user friendly. Requiring NO pilot training. Would be similar to flying a video game airplane. -Allowing for single-user operation. With high level command structure. -Object-oriented design with much more robust software to ensure it won't fail like the Predator in combat. -Includes GPS & Video for non-combat survillance work. Most people in the Aviation field laughed at him after making most of these statements including the price. Unfortunately, they don't understand his background and full knowledge of the field. After being a Microprocessor Engineer for Texas Instruments and Intel he took a liking to flying and started an aviation business for UAV flight control system in 1994. His knowledge and abilities will be make it able for him to help the students of Embry-Riddle create the UAV despite the many people who continue to laugh in his face!

  18. Careful! by sulli · · Score: 2, Funny

    Bush might say it's a Weapon of Mass Destruction for Saddam!

    --

    sulli
    RTFJ.
  19. And perhaps fly over... by thrill12 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    a few powerlines to powerup the UAV again, to increase the range drastically. Would take some plotting, but you could get far I guess.

    --
    Slashdot: stuff for news, nerds that matter, matter for news, stuff that nerd
  20. I want one NOW! by nodialtone · · Score: 1

    But, a copule questions first. I live in a hilly (rolling hills, 100-200 feet above see level, and the area is with a lot of tall trees. 100' to 180' tall. What do you think the best altitude is to program this thing to scope out the neihgborhood is? I mean zig zag across and see whats up in da hood?

  21. Need to check with the FAA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

    If I remember right having a GPS on board could make this product considered as guilded missile.

    Don't be suprised if someone wearing dark glasses and jack boots showing up ready to give you a rectal exam.

    1. Re:Need to check with the FAA by MoonBuggy · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Don't ya just love the legal system - put guidence on board and it's a missile despite the copious lack of any kind of explosive.

    2. Re:Need to check with the FAA by lwsimon · · Score: 1

      Thank you Clinton. GPS no logner has a 20m error built-in. This is due to the capability to induce a "localized error". Not like they have TIME to do it. AND..... If you made a REAL guided missile, you'd online need GPS for the first few seconds of flight, after that inertial would be great, since you have a fairly exact fix on the first portion, the rest will be somewhat accurate as well.

      --
      Learn about Photography Basics.
    3. Re:Need to check with the FAA by /dev/trash · · Score: 1

      What about the fuel?

    4. Re:Need to check with the FAA by YrWrstNtmr · · Score: 1

      It's electric. I guess you could try to bean him with the battery pack.

    5. Re:Need to check with the FAA by /dev/trash · · Score: 1

      Don't batteries have evil things like cadium and mercury?

  22. Does this matter? Why yes it does...very much by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Actually the enviorment is getting cleaner,the world is more prosperous and "dying to survive is an oxymoron".
    YOU can do what you like about the problems you percieve.WE can play with cool toys in our spare time.Isn't freedom wonderful? Enjoy it while you can the clock is ticking for all of us and you don't get a second chance.

  23. RC Aircraft aren't easy to fly. by RyanFenton · · Score: 5, Insightful


    My father got into building and flying RC aircraft - he even became the president of his local RC flying organization. It is a cool hobby to play with - but there's two things you have to expect.

    One: You are going to crash and damage your toys. Be prepared for the emotional effects this may have. Having a camera up front is a nice way to tie controls in with movement, certainly nicer than the fly-by-watching indirect controls my dad had to use - but the dynamics of RC scale speed Vs. large scale wind means that you are still going to have to contend with hard landings and rapid unexpected direction changes. Always stay clear of ANY obstacles, never fly around people or property, and come prepared to climb trees to retrieve your toy.

    Two: This is NOT a cheap hobby. In terms of time and resources, the $750 is just the tip of the iceburg in terms of the resources you are going to spend to maintain this little aircraft if you plan on flying it regularly. You'll need a little workshop, epoxies and other wear-and-tear repair equipment, scraps of all kinds to repair larger issues, spark plugs, oils and other maintenence tools depending on engine, carrying equipment, etc., etc. You've got to be fairly finantially devoted to keep this hobby up - and I'm not even mentioning the costs of a serious crash.

    It is a hobby you can be proud of in your accoplishments - but it's also one you have to take great care with, and be ready for literally crushing emotions when gravity takes its toll.

    Ryan Fenton

    1. Re:RC Aircraft aren't easy to fly. by Saeger · · Score: 2, Informative
      The lesson I learned: Fly cheap ARFs, but leave your balsa masterpieces on the ground for show. You can't have much fun if you're always stressing out over crashes.

      I gave up the smelly/expensive RC hobby a while ago though, and the last time I flew a plane it wasn't even real.

      (*ARFs == Almost Ready to Fly kits)

      --

      --
      Power to the Peaceful
    2. Re:RC Aircraft aren't easy to fly. by babyrat · · Score: 2, Informative

      I gave up the smelly/expensive RC hobby a while ago though, and the last time I flew a plane it wasn't even real.

      Electrics have come a LONG way in a short time...takes away the 'smelly' part of RC and some of the newer flying wings are almost indestructable, and cheap to fix if they do destruct.

      Not to say you can't still go for the smelly and expensive just that you don't have to anymore.

  24. Price list by Hal+The+Computer · · Score: 2, Funny

    one 15mm piece of plastic tubing: $5
    one dart (from friendly neighbourhood games shop): $2.89
    10 cc of posison from the south sea cone shell: $399
    one incredibly precise radio detonater: $39
    forgettting a propellant: priceless

    There are some people who would make really crappy assassins. For all the rest of you James Bonds, there's Paypal.

    --

    int main(void){int x=01232;while(malloc(x));return x;}
  25. half a kilo by nounderscores · · Score: 1

    Well, a quarter kilo of explosives isn't much (maybe 3 or 4 m bursting radius). But what if you don't use conventional weapons? remember - biological weapons INCREASE in mass after they start converting victims into more plague.

  26. Re:whoa by MoonBuggy · · Score: 4, Informative

    Engage geek drool mode - affordable uber geek toys. At current exchange rates the camera model is only 400GBP. For any old R/C aircraft that's pretty good - for a self controlled one complete with camera that's goddamn amazing :D

    It's just a shame I don't actually own 400

  27. you're next... by Lord+Dreamshaper · · Score: 1

    nevermind Area 51; how long until Big Brother is buzzing you with mini Predators? makes ya think twice about sunbathing...unless you're feeling exhibitionist...

    --
    When all of your wishes have been granted, many of your dreams will be destroyed - Marilyn Manson
    1. Re:you're next... by nodialtone · · Score: 1

      If they'd like to see a real schlong.. then it's ok with me.

  28. regardless by segment · · Score: 1


    20lb versus 20kg, I wasn't trying to point out a fud based document, more like making a statement about the current state of affairs concerning ^terror*. Now, just to amuse everyone a bit more, assuming someone used one of these rc's for an aerial dusting, how much damage do you think 1lb of anthrax could do? 30 minutes, scratch that. What about 2 minutes with 1 pound of anthrax, say over a sports event? Irrelevant, it's a toy, and I was pseudo trolling about the (again) the "everything must be al Qaeda" state of news running around in the world today. Maybe someone will get a clue to what's real and what is media && big bro fabrication. It was supposed to make you shake your head and laugh it off, so get a "grep" on yourself you worry to much, forget what you just read everything is fine

    1. Re:regardless by will_die · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The problem with spreading anthrax has never been that kind of delivery it has been making it small enough to do damage to a human.
      Once you could dispense it small enough you would not need the model aircraft. One of the "news" shows after 9/11 they went and got models of the russian disperial devices filled it with a harmless white dust and set it up in the on a fire hydrant(or something like that) on a busy street of NYC. The dust was visible(unlike the real thing) and people just kept walking through it and could care less. Better chance of infecting people, and a RC plane would get people looking.

  29. Re:Such restrictions are already law in the US by rholliday · · Score: 1

    Actually, Posse Comitatus would allow for jamming, I would think, as a type of "logistical support." And, of course, defense of military installations/secrets is legal, too.

    --
    Xbox reviews.. We think they're funny.
  30. Autopilot not cheap by willy_me · · Score: 3, Informative

    It looks like an additional 5 grand for the 2028 model. Now they might offer a package deal but it still isn't going to be cheap.

  31. Why Area 51? by nurb432 · · Score: 1, Redundant

    Its been closed down for years.. Lots of value 'spying' on an empty, radioactive, military base..

    --
    ---- Booth was a patriot ----
    1. Re:Why Area 51? by tuxtomas · · Score: 2, Informative

      It's a toxic waste dump. Not much more to see there. It stays top secret, or becomes a superfund site costing billions to clean up.

      There's probably a few cool planes there too!

      --
      Open source- the greatest equalizer mankind has ever seen.
  32. nosy neighbor deterrent by ErichTheWebGuy · · Score: 2, Funny

    Sweet! Now, next time I see that old bat staring at the thru her window with her binoculars, I will just sick my Dragonflyer on her. I wonder how hard it would be to mod it to carry a BB cannon, or a small flamethrower?

    --
    bash: rtfm: command not found
  33. Pick the right mission by AndroidCat · · Score: 1

    That sounds about right for the mission of intercepting all those terrorist midgets with Nausicaa jet flyers. Delivering four Quarter-Pounders to the target should knock them out of the air.

    --
    One line blog. I hear that they're called Twitters now.
  34. as fun as cruising area 51 might be... by neuraloverload · · Score: 3, Interesting

    if you really wanted to get it done, train a bird to carry a camera and then fly it over the base. any radar signature outside of a bird would probably trigger a big response and a triangulation of any radio signals in the surrounding area. of course being paranoid enough to annex the mountaintops around the base means that they probably auto eyeball every object in local space.

    1. Re:as fun as cruising area 51 might be... by nodialtone · · Score: 1

      Heh, His and my birds are on there way to your place. Lay well tonight.

  35. I can hear this now at the hearings afterwards... by ScottGant · · Score: 2, Funny

    Senator Joe: So tell us Agent Kurtis, why did the FBI discount the idea of using RC's in causing harm to our people?

    Agent Kurtis: Well, we threw out the idea because the author of the original article did some pretty spotty research. He used the abbreviation for Mississippi instead of Michigan and mixed up 20 pounds for 20 kilograms.

    Senator Bob: You see, this is why we need to outlaw all nitpickers that ignore the issue and quibble over small, petty things.

    --

    "Music is everybody's possession. It's only publishers who think that people own it." - John Lennon.
  36. Quarter-Pounders by handy_vandal · · Score: 1

    Delivering four Quarter-Pounders to the target should knock them out of the air.

    Make mine four Quarter-Pounders with Cheese, please ....

    -kgj

    --
    -kgj
  37. You were joking. They don't. by DynaSoar · · Score: 5, Informative

    "Time to buy my own UAV and find out what's really going on over there in Area 51."

    You could get one to the top of Tikaboo Peak and launch it, no problem. They may or may not catch the model, but with the sensors they have all over around the area, they'd definitely catch you, both trudging around on the ground and the radio transmitter you'd be using. The same, though less stringent, warning would go for using one to view any sensitive area. The end result would be going to jail, and could well end up with the goobermint trying to make RC aircraft illegal, or at least heavily licensed, under PATRIOT II. Seriously.

    They've already been hard at work trying to outlaw model rockets engines. They're under the impression these can be taken apart and used to make a bomb. Technically, they're correct, but it'd be far easier and cheaper to get shotgun shell reloading material and make it from that. Rocket engine propellant is designed to burn at a certain speed, not as fast as possible, and so makes a lousy explosive. That's not stopping them.

    The ATF tried asking model rocket engine manufacturers to supply them with some engines for testing. All refused. So they came up with a court order, forcing one of the manufacturers to supply some engines. They complied.

    ATF rented a van and set out to test these engines. They got some rockets, went out to a remote area, and started launching them. Out of the back of the van. Which contained the rest of the engines. The rest of the engines caught fire. The rented van burned to the ground. (Details, and confirmation of same by the owner of the company forced to supply the engines, available from Google Groups usenet archive for newsgroup rec.models.rockets).

    They were enjoying their newfound freedom to "protect" at all costs way too much before. Now they're also humiliated, so they're tryng all the harder. If someone were to take some of the widely available still- or movie-camera carrying rockets and launch those from Tikaboo Peak, there's no doubt in my mind "America's 87th Most Popular Hobby" would be grounded without even the comfort of having lost out in a congressional vote.

    --
    "I may be synthetic, but I'm not stupid." -- Bishop 341-B
    1. Re:You were joking. They don't. by canuck_wingnut · · Score: 1

      Actually, I stumbled accross a site last night, (white power crap, bah) described how to
      make an anti - personel rocket launcher, the projectile was powered by an estes "D" class
      engine, touted to be usefull against targets ranging in size up to small non - armoured vehicals
      not cool. I enjoy rocketry as well, and I work with someone who does high powered stuff,
      I'd hate to see it go away because of crap like this.

      --
      -: :- mv sco /dev/null because a computer is a terrible thing to waste. -:
    2. Re:You were joking. They don't. by aiyo · · Score: 1

      EVERYONE has heard of Area51 today, it's not what it used to be. They still do some great interesting stuff there I bet but nothing close to black projects like stealth aircraft. It has a great history but is nothing more than air strips and the supporting facilities (most of which are underground now). I wonder where they moved all the good stuff to?

    3. Re:You were joking. They don't. by ameoba · · Score: 1
      The ATF tried asking model rocket engine manufacturers to supply them with some engines for testing. All refused. So they came up with a court order, forcing one of the manufacturers to supply some engines. They complied


      I'm suprised the judge didn't laugh them out of the courtroom & tell them to drive down to the local hobby shop and but the engines themselves. Doesn't part of the the point of showing that consumer-grade off-the-shelf parts can be a threat showing that they can be purchased by anyone on short notice? It's not like they don't have the budget to buy these things.
      --
      my sig's at the bottom of the page.
    4. Re:You were joking. They don't. by DynaSoar · · Score: 3, Interesting

      [The ATF tried asking model rocket engine manufacturers to supply them with some engines for testing. All refused. So they came up with a court order, forcing one of the manufacturers to supply some engines. They complied]

      "I'm suprised the judge didn't laugh them out of the courtroom & tell them to drive down to the local hobby shop and but the engines themselves. Doesn't part of the the point of showing that consumer-grade off-the-shelf parts can be a threat showing that they can be purchased by anyone on short notice? It's not like they don't have the budget to buy these things."

      They were trying to test high powered engines, greater than G class. Not many places stock those. They *did* try to purchase them at first. The manufacturers turned down the ATF purchase order.

      High powered engines require some pretty stringent licensing already, developed by those in the hobby, as well as ATF licensing for low power explosives. You'd think they'd be satisfied. Particularly since the licensing brings in income and gets the users (and potential sources for leaks) registered. Theor going against the nomral grain of goobermint agency actions like that just indicates they're working way outside their already twisted framework of logic, and are simply out to score FUD points. That's become a major federal occupation since 9/11 -- pretending they're doing something to make us feel less afraid and more thankful to them for doing so, no matter whether we want it or not.

      --
      "I may be synthetic, but I'm not stupid." -- Bishop 341-B
    5. Re:You were joking. They don't. by bhima · · Score: 1

      Amazing, and the USians get all hot under the collar I point out that the US is becoming a Fascist Theocracy.

      --
      Nothing in the world is more dangerous than sincere ignorance and conscientious stupidity.
  38. Navigation would be easy. by thrill12 · · Score: 1

    Thinking of this, navigating a powerline would be quite easy once you're there. It simply takes a rough point where the powerlines are. Make the plane fly over that point at a safe height, so you're sure it went over the powerlines at least once. The powerpeak on the plane's internal coil would be logged including the lat./long. where it occured. Then make it circle back until it "hits" the powerline again. Flying towards point 1 would keep you adjacent to the powerlines, so your UAV should be powering up in 'no time' (really, I don't know the physics of the actual powering up, and whether that could be possible, but leave it as a nice thought-experiment :)

    --
    Slashdot: stuff for news, nerds that matter, matter for news, stuff that nerd
  39. Into north korea--airplanes by mumblestheclown · · Score: 4, Informative
    First, a lot of people are giving this thread some "gee whiz" treatment for reasons that are undeserved. That it's a helicopter is a bit novel, but really the things most people are suggesting that are now possible with this thing have been possible for a long time with model airplanes rather than helicopters.

    If you want to see something really cool, check out AeroSonde, an ultra-long-range model airplane.

    I have fantasized about loading up a model with flyers and then leafletting north korea or some other freedom-of-information deprived hole.

    1. Re:Into north korea--airplanes by mumblestheclown · · Score: 1

      I dont know what idiot marked you a troll, but of course you're right. hence, my use of the term "fantasized." If i thought it would actually do any good, i'd do it.

  40. Re:What about blades on the rotors? by BigBadBri · · Score: 1
    Whoah! Hang on, Boadicaea!

    Next thing you know, they'll actually be putting rotors on it (it's a prop driven minature Predator, if you RTFA).

    --
    oh brave new world, that has such people in it!
  41. Scary thought by gentoo_is_hyped · · Score: 1, Redundant

    Am I not the only one who immediately considers the harm these could be put to?

    --
    [Gentoo is hyped. Modded into the ground to suppress opinion]
  42. missle by minus_273 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    i wonder how effective these would be a simple guided missles.

    --
    The war with islam is a war on the beast
    The war on terror is a war for peace
  43. still thriving - Re:Area 51? by Slowtreme · · Score: 2, Informative

    I think the whole Area 6413 has been debunked many times. Point by point and Google can help too.

    --
    Post: Sigged, for your pleasure.
  44. heh. try the US by TheUberBob · · Score: 1
    i mean, do NPR or PBS really combat the corporate controlled distribution and content creation systems? We live in a country where people go apoplectic because an independent wants to RUN for office. perhaps we could drop leaflets about instant run-off voting over washington dc.

    bleh. end of rant.

    --

    All your preview button are belong to Hello Kitty.
  45. Re:yeah, let's fly some UFO's of our own by randomaxe · · Score: 1

    Um... how will you know it's yours if you can't identify it?

  46. it IS amazing by TheUberBob · · Score: 1

    the amount changes/restriction created without congressional approval is a bit disturbing. I recently read that the FDA banned non-THC maryjane in food products for six months before a lawsuit made it through the courts to overturn the ruling. The judge said something about banning poppyseed on bagels while they were at it :) Interestingly enough we import all our hemp from canada and elsewhere... randomness

    --

    All your preview button are belong to Hello Kitty.
  47. About 70g by reality-bytes · · Score: 4, Informative

    Its about 70g for a single round of SPAS12/Benelli/M203 ammunition. (A 12 guage shell).

    Now, when you consider the autopilot for the predator only weighs 10g, that 70g shell looks pretty heavy. - The predators battery is probably 70g so you'd probably be hard pushed to balance/make it fly.

    Then there's the issue of how to trigger, rather than just deliver the shell. You'd need some sort of trigger.

    Now a complete shotgun mechanism would weight a hell of a lot (probably as much as the predator) so you'd need something else - probably 1 of three options:

    1) A mechanical pin trigger which is activated by a servo. Drawbacks: can't be fired remotely so very inaccurate.

    2) Same as above but the craft flies to a GPS point then dives in to strike the ground (and a firing pin). Drawbacks: Hard to target with GPS and minimal shot-dispersal on the ground.

    3) An electronic (Battery and filament) trigger but you still can't target remotely and a shell fired without a (heavy) barrel is very inefective.

    All of the above assume that you'd want to be out of radio range (hence retaliation range).

    Your best option would just be to fit it with a sharp point and try to hit someone in the head with it (for all the luck you'd have) :D

    --
    Ripping an new rectum in the fabric of spacetime.
    1. Re:About 70g by gykh · · Score: 1

      How about two predators with the payload on some twine strung between them?

  48. Area 51: Tinfoil Hat Production Facility by ValourX · · Score: 1

    I'll save the poster the effort of finding out with an RC helicopter: Area 51 is a tinfoil hat production facility.

    -Jem

    1. Re:Area 51: Tinfoil Hat Production Facility by Cruciform · · Score: 1

      Don't be silly! The only effective tinfoil hat is the one you make yourself!

      But then, what if they're sneaking into our homes and replacing our working tinfoil hats with ones created by the government. Recalibrated to broadcast our every thoughts.

      Just a second, there's someone at the door.

  49. Reason behind PopMech article still valid? by istewart · · Score: 1

    The Popular Mechanics article uses the X-33 as a major justification for Area 6413. But according to this article, the X-33 is dead, at least as far as NASA is concerned.

    Are there indications that the Air Force has the X-33, or any other supposedly dead NASA projects, on life support?

    Also, the Popular Mechanics article makes Area 51 out to be totally dead (7 years ago, at least). I force myself to take this with a grain of salt, since Popular Mechanics wants to sell magazines. All my web searches have turned up little about A51 that isn't sensationalistic, so does anybody know any concrete info about recent activity at Area 51?

  50. You'll get fed up of... by baldcamel · · Score: 1

    Waiting to be checked against your biometric passport. Internal flights only then. (And setting someone up for the body cavity search joke..)

  51. This is way cooler by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    You should check out the reaplayer/wmv stream from
    http://tv.seattlewireless.net/august/august2 003.ht ml
    with Risto Koiva showing off his RC Helicopter equipped with a 2.4ghz camera that streams a live feed to the pilot.

  52. Re:whoa by exhilaration · · Score: 1

    No, the remote controlled one is under US$1000, they don't actually list the price of the autonomous GPS-guided option. This guy says that it's US$5000.

  53. C'mon... by I7D · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Its pretty lame to think up all the different ways you could attack somebody or spy on the neighbors or get back at people. What will this plane do that you couldn't do before?

    Want to spy on nikki sunbathing next door, get some binocs, want to shoot somebody with a big shakey 2 shot plane? Just throw a mask on and do it in person. Want to get back at the neighbor across the street? go knock on their door and ask them to quit, or get to know them. Half the things mentioned earlier to do with the plane could be done now without the plane. I don't meant to troll, the plane is great, but sometimes it looks like people post on here just to post.

    --
    Neil is that you? Yeah yeah, it's me... Neil...
  54. ot much... by YrWrstNtmr · · Score: 1

    Just think about this: How much does a shotgun shell weight?

    Not much, but how much does the gun needed to fire it weigh?

    1. Re:ot much... by sphariss · · Score: 1
      You could do a couple diffrent things.

      Up the engine power

      design a light (Plastic?) one shot system. After all it is not like you would want it returned

      Optimize the control systems for wieght
      Or you could just use it as a distraction while your hit squad attacks.

  55. My first thoughts... by KurdtX · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Maybe it's because I just came from discussion boards on a different site talking about radar detectors (the ones that help you avoid the cops), but my first thought was it'd be cool if you could wire a radar detector / camera up as the payload and fly it out ahead of your car by a 1/2 mile or so. Hey, it'd even help to spot traffic jams up ahead. Too bad it only goes 50mph - anyone into modding hobby planes? ;-)

    --

    Kurdt
    I'm not anti-social. Just pro-technology.
  56. Model jet planes! by Jeppe+Salvesen · · Score: 1

    I've seen a few of those (I live right by a place the model plane fans like to come to fly their planes). They seem to be going quickly enough to be able to intercept a plane during takeoff or landing. And they're largish, so they're probably able to carry enough explosives to do a bit of damage.

    I mean - why use a rocket when you can use a model jet plane that can turn and have another go if it misses in the first attempt? And just land and refuel if you fail altogether?

    --

    Stop the brainwash

  57. Area 51 !! by mantera · · Score: 2, Funny


    You geek!... who cares about area 51... i want it to have a good look at all the sunbathing chicks in the area...

  58. Buying your own affordable UAV by Attaturk · · Score: 1


    Quick links here

  59. Scaramouche,scaramouche will you do the Fandango by Attaturk · · Score: 1


    Thunderbolt and lightning-very very frightening me
    Galileo, Galileo
    Galileo figaro magnifico.

    But I'm just a poor boy and nobody loves me.

  60. The Future Wars by severoon · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Does anyone see war 50 years from now as a sort of Attack of the Clones affair? We'll have fleets of UAVs, the enemy will have them, it'll just be hoardes of them flying into each other and shooting each other down before any make it to tactical targets. War will amount to how much junk you can throw up into the air. Then we'll start using huge EMP weapons or nukes because they're not employed against actual people, so what's the big deal. The beginning of the end, taking the human risk out of war sort of implications...

    sev

    --
    but have you considered the following argument: shut up.
    1. Re:The Future Wars by Quixadhal · · Score: 1

      Sorry, I can't reply to this comment. I've been declared a casualty and have to report to the nearest disintegration chamber.

      ST:TOS did this long before Attack of the Clowns :)

  61. Well, we all have played our flight sims.. by superhoe · · Score: 1
    .. but flying an UAV is damn hard.

    Try flying a basic radio-controlled aircraft. You'll crash it a dozen times.

    Add $500-2000 worth of cameras and GPS stuff (on your own expense) and fly it somewhere over 10 miles of distance. Would make me nervous.

    --

    -el

  62. The boys at langley were on to it in the '80s by Dan+B. · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Nearing the end of the Afghan vs. USSR conflict in the '80s, Former US Congressman Charlie Wilson's "Tinkerers" (Their secret-ish building is now named after him) were working out ways simple Afghan tribesmen, often referred to as Muj, or Mujahadeen, could terrorise the Soviets without risking their lives. Many of the fiendish ploys were put in to practise whereby CIA men would train the Muj and the poor Russian soldiers would be the ones on the receiving end.

    One of the ploys the tinkerers came up with was using RC planes to deliver explosives (or other payloads) in to airfields from a safe distance, however this idea was never passed on to the Muj by the CIA, for fear that the terrorist they were training might one day become OUR enemy, and having such an easily accessable and relatively risk free weapon was deemed 'unacceptable risk'.

    And yes, all these terror plots that al-Queda are coming up with now are stemming from the things the Muj were taught by the CIA back when they were 'My Enemy's Enemy, and therefore My Friend'.

    And 2 books for you people reading this comment before you label/flame me. "Charlie Wilson's War" (also has other titles) - George Crile, and "Sleeping with the Devil" - Robert Baer. Go on, educate yourself about US Foreign Policy in the Middle East!

    --
    Dan. -- So what if it's spelt wrong, nobody's perfect
  63. too expensive. by deblassc · · Score: 1

    even with the radio gear that price is way over what I would pay for an electric RC just to get myself thrown in jail.

    for that money I can probably set up a larger glow fuel powered version out of foam or balsa.

    hell for a few bucks more I might be able to get the stuff to construct a fiberglass version (would have to learn how to glass first)

    Dragan's stuff is neat but overpriced.

  64. Serbian origins? by saigon_from_europe · · Score: 1

    Why is the name "Dragan"? It is a common Serbian name (and in Serbian it does not have any relations with dragons or dragonflies).

    --
    No sig today.
  65. OSS == Open Source Society? by Westech · · Score: 1

    Perhaps we'll end up living in a transparent society...

    Yes, and because everyone will have access to examine the inner workings of every part of society, it will end up being more stable, more efficient, and more secure.

  66. Re:whoa by Jim_Maryland · · Score: 1

    Sure, the DIY model is not very expensive, but I'm sure the capabilities of the real model far exceed the ones of the this toy.

    Video is probably higher quality (and larger camera I'd guess - adding to weight)
    Range/duration of flight (more fuel - adding to weight)
    Communications (security and range - adding to weight)

    And probably a bunch of other things that are not publically available. I'm sure the price tag of the real one is high, but research cost has to be made up somewhere.

  67. OB Python Quote by Halthar · · Score: 1
    How about two predators with the payload on some twine strung between them?
    "What, held under the dorsal guiding feathers?"

  68. African or European? by el_gregorio · · Score: 2, Funny
    "Wait a minute! Suppose that two [Predators] carried it together!"

    "No, they'd have to have it on a line..."

    --
    "You want a toe? I can get you a toe by three o'clock... with nail polish."
  69. Not quite by turgid · · Score: 1

    That might involve revealing the pot-belly and two-peas-and-a-shrivelled-carrot. On a related note: never venture out into the Essex countryside at night, without a barf-bag, that is.