3D Robotics

Qualcomm announces Snapdragon-based drone platform

This is a very powerful new compute platform for drones, optimized for computer vision. It ships with P4X/Dronecode flight code. (Qualcomm is an investor in 3DR. Now you know why ;-)

Official press release here. Article from Fast Company:

Qualcomm, the world’s leading developer of chips for smartphones, today unveiled a platform for consumer drones that it says can make the flying vehicles lighter and less complex while supporting the camera functionality of the most sophisticated offerings on the market today.

The Qualcomm Snapdragon Flight (which gets its name from Qualcomm’s premium tier Snapdragon 801 processor) is the reference platform developed over the last six months by the San Diego-based chip giant’s research and development lab, and features support for a 4K camera for video, two cameras for depth, and a fourth camera for indoor stabilization, Fast Company has learned.

In short, Qualcomm says it has created the basis for the world’s smallest flying 4K cameras, capable of 1080p video at 60 frames per second, drones that are in their entirety lighter than the gimbals on many existing drones with 4K cameras.

The first known customer is Yuneec, a Chinese rival to drone industry giant DJI.

Qualcomm hopes the Snapdragon Flight will be adopted by both existing drone manufacturers and newcomers to the burgeoning space. Given that a January report from Radiant Insights suggested the global commercial drone market is expected to expand from $609 million in 2014 to $4.8 billion by 2021, Qualcomm is betting its new platform could bring it a substantial amount of business in the coming years.

That seems likely, said one drone industry expert.

"The integration of Qualcomm’s Snapdragon processors in drones will have the same effect that it’s had on mobile devices," said Colin Snow, founder and CEO of Drone Analyst. "Drones will get even sharper image capture and post-processing, improved performance, and better communications. Combining chips will not only improve imaging and imaging options, but will also improve precious battery power as overall weight of the drone drops."

Added Snow, "4G LTE connectivity will benefit drones since they can use that network to transfer images and eventually use it for communicating to a yet-to-be-developed unmanned traffic management system."

All that said, it is notable that the platform isn’t launching with DJI or other industry heavyweights like 3D Robotics, as customers. For Snapdragon Flight to provide a substantial financial windfall to Qualcomm, it will need to be adopted by companies that sell significant numbers of drones.


3D Robotics's IRISPhoto: 3D Robotics

"The interest level has been great from everybody including the big companies and small companies," said Raj Talluri, senior vice president of product management in Qualcomm’s Internet of Things business unit. "We are hoping that all the companies making drones will be interested in this….The goal of our launching the platform is to make it easy for everybody not to have to develop from scratch. It’s a good starting point and then [manufacturers] can differentiate."

Those that do adopt the new platform, Talluri said, should be able to start selling drones based on it by the first half of 2016, and possibly sooner.

Snapdragon Flight will support Sony IMX camera sensors for video, and Omnivision OV7251 sensors for computer vision. All the processing of the data coming in from those cameras is done on the board, said Talluri.

The board has built-in 802.11n and Bluetooth LE communications as well, and will in the "near future" offer support for 4G LTE dongles, a company spokesperson said. All told, the board is 58 millimeters by 40 millimeters and weighs less than 13 grams.

"The vast majority of a drone’s power consumption goes to the motors," Chad Sweet, the director of engineering in Qualcomm Research’s R&D Lab, told Fast Company,"and the size of the motors and the drone are dictated by the payload weight. So when you can shrink the payload size and weight, you can effectively make a smaller drone. And smaller drones are safer and much more consumer friendly."

Further, Sweet said, the Qualcomm approach should significantly simplify the electronics inside drones incorporating Snapdragon Flight. "Many of the popular [drone] platforms have between 10 and 12 [printed circuit boards]," he said. "On a platform such as ours, you would have two PCBs without a mechanical gimbal, and possibly a third PCB with a mechanical gimbal. So it drastically reduces the complexity of the system."

Qualcomm’s drone work came out of research it’s done on using its smartphone chips in robotics. The company has determined that the sensors it embeds on boards in mobile devices are perfect for integrating with one of today’s hottest consumer products.

"The most interesting area of robotics that’s kind of taken off from the market perspective," Sweet said, "are the drones….The main use case is really flying cameras. The camera’s one of the most important features of a smartphone, so as part of Snapdragon, we’ve put a huge effort into developing a high-quality image-processing pipeline."



The new platforms also offers a wider scope for customization. Drone manufacturers can control flights on the application side and determine what kind of processing they want, Sweet said.

"Having this much processing power really opens up the differentiation substantially," he said. "They now have the compute capability to do different things. On many contemporary products, there’s not much compute capability."

Those that do have decent on-board processing power, he said, include 3D Robotics’ Solo, and DJI’s Matrice.

Lastly, the Snapdragon platform also offers support for very-low-latency first-person view that can be done in parallel while recording 4K video, Sweet said. The goal in Qualcomm’s R&D lab has been lag of less than 150 milliseconds, what he called the "video game threshold."

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Comments

  • Was there an anticipated price tag mentioned anywhere or did I just miss that?

  • Technicus

    What is that the spec of? A mobile?

    It says its using the 801 in the text (same as Note 3 and Oneplus One). Much better silicone than the 400.

    @ Randy

    Provided the internet stays "open" I believe nearly everything will transfer to an "open source" mentality. The key is that everyone can share and contribute, without those principles it will go back to the dark ages.

  • Really seriaous base for modern SMARtphoneDRONE!

    CPU

    Up to 2.5 GHz quad-core Qualcomm® Krait™ 400 CPU

    GPU

    Qualcomm® Adreno™ 330 GPU

    DSP

    Hexagon™ V50 DSP (up to 800MHz)

    Modem

    Integrated 4G LTE Advanced World Mode, supporting LTE FDD, LTE TDD, WCDMA (DC-HSUPA), CDMA1x, EV-DO Rev. B, TD-SCDMA and GSM/EDGE

    CAT4 speeds of up to 150 Mbps with support for up to 2x10 MHz carrier aggregation

    3rd Generation integrated LTE modem, with support for LTE-Broadcast and LTE multimode dual-SIM (DSDS and DSDA)

    RF

    4th gen power efficient LTE multimode transceiver with Qualcomm RF360™ Front End solution for world mode bands, lower power and PCB reduction

    USB

    USB 3.0/2.0

    Bluetooth

    BT4.0 † Integrated digital core

    WiFi

    Qualcomm® VIVE™ 1-stream 802.11n/ac with MU-MIMO † Integrated digital core

    GPS

    Qualcomm® IZat™ Gen8B

    NFC

    Supported

    Video

    4K playback and capture with H.264 (AVC)

    1080p playback with H.265 (HEVC)

    DASH is supported

    Camera

    Up to 21MP Dual ISP

    Display

    2560x2048 + 1080p and 4K external displays supported

    Memory/Storage

    LPDDR3 933MHz Dual-channel 32-bit (12.8GBps)/eMMC 5.0 SATA3 SD 3.0 (UHS-I)

    Quick Charge

    Quick Charge 2.0

    PM8941

    Chipset SW

    Voltage In = 9V, 2.5A out

  • Developer

    I think Ravi's point is that this new board is not open source hardware and that he worries that the standard boards that everyone uses will, in the future, tend to be more closed than open.  The APM2, the Pixhawk, the Pixhawk2 are all open source hardware and that has led to many cheap copies and innovative derivatives that have given more options to all of us.

    My own view is that at this moment at least, there are more open source versions of the hardware than ever before.  I personally hope that continues... and it probably will.

  • Developer

    @Rob maybe some of the parts, but others are avaiable from mouser like the BBB processor http://ca.mouser.com/ProductDetail/Texas-Instruments/AM3358BZCZA100...

    You can get an RPi computer module https://www.raspberrypi.org/products/compute-module/

    The Edison comes in the same 'compute module' type format. 

    I don't think the big companies are try to stop innovation, but foster the use of their wares.

  • the bad part is that only OEMs have access to that stuff

  • Developer

    @Ravi Seems like an odd thing to say, none of the open source autopilots running have been on anything but proprietary silicon, from ATMEL to ARM. From Ivensense to ST chips.  The RPi and BBB are Broadcom and Texas Instrument chipsets (also based on ARM cores) Having the Snapdragon processor on board bring CPU power for complex task, with cost savings of scale. These chips are in a gazillion smartphones, it's how the MPU6000 sensors became so cheap in the first place!

  • friends, do not forget that Pixhawk is still a very powerful flight controller and we can do miracles with it. support pixhawk 1. we all love it.

  • only wish was that  it bore a name something like "3DR Pixhawk2 vision". but alas it bears a name like qualcomm. I started with the blog in 2008.  what was needed was open source with low level technology and not a slave of a big company with closed doors. my time to bid good bye to this blog. al vida! (search google)

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