3D Robotics

3689610532?profile=originalWe've covered most of these already here (and our Droneshare uses the MapBox No-fly Zone data), but good to see mainstream press picking up on the potential of collaborative drone mapping projects.  Here's the LA Times.

With the proliferation of these privately operated drones, several online map projects have been launched. One of them allows users to see the world, another to survey disaster areas –  if only through shared drone footage – while a third helps hobbyists and others keep track of where they can and can’t fly.

TravelByDrone.com lets users who upload drone videos to YouTube and Vimeo drop a virtual pin on a map to show where their footage was recorded. Red dots indicate places where multiple pins have been dropped.

Jan Hiersemenzel, the Switzerland-based creator of the site, said it provides a "drone view" -- something between

Google's Street View and a satellite image -- letting visitors travel virtually to anywhere they want to go. The map features crowd-sourced video from locations on every continent, including Antarctica, where polar cruise line Quark Expeditions and Paris-based Freeway Drone have flown their drones. 

Visitors to the UAViators Crisis Map can get a birds-eye view of the aftermath from disasters such as a tornado that devastated Washington, Ill., last year or a fire that tore through an apartment in San Francisco’s Mission Bay neighborhood this spring.

Like TravelByDrone, the Crisis Map uses virtual map pins to show locations reconnoitered by drones and provide links to videos. The Humanitarian UAV Network, a network of drone pilots who seek to use the technology for humanitarian missions, says the map is intended to help give “greater situational awareness” to organizations and communities in disaster areas. The site also provides pilots with a code of conduct, an operational checklist and a list of drone-makers and humanitarian organizations using UAS technology. 

Don’t Fly Drones Here, a project by mapping start-up Mapbox, charts no-fly zones for drones in the United States. The map shows places where the aircraft are not allowed nationally: over military bases, above national parks or within five miles of medium- to large-size airports.

The map doesn’t contain data on all locally restricted airspace, but the company is crowd-sourcing those details through a public repository on the code-sharing website GitHub.com.

Bobby Sudekum, an engineer at Mapbox, said the map is not likely to map no-drone zones outside the U.S. because rules vary sharply from country to country.

Hiersemenzel of TravelByDrone.com said Switzerland recently enacted rules governing drone use in response to rapid adoption of the technology there.

Unlike in the U.S., where federal rules are still forthcoming and not expected until 2015 or later, Swiss officials reacted quickly to give drone users "very clear lines -- what you can do and what you can't do," Hiersemenzel said. "Play safe and the government won't try to stop you."

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  • Possibly incorporated something similar to what is in the WUndergroud.com applications/sites as personal observations that can affect the map views.. Such as these many flying fields to be reported by the community and if corroborated by a number of users it could be updated?  

    http://WUndergroud.com/
  • Thanks for posting, Chris. We'll be launching the next version of the UAViators Crisis Map next month. We're also going to launch a "TripAdvisor" site for UAV/drone travel on August 12th.

  • That "don't fly drones here" sure needs a lot of work. I looked at my area and a whole strip of land on either side of an old canal (which is a state park) 5 to 10 mile thick. It contains three legit flying field at first glance. The park area encompasses a lot of real airports, kind of masking them in the bogus park no fly zone. They need to work on that if it is to be seriously relied on.

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