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The Parrot AR.Drone is a discontinued remote-controlled flying quadcopter, built by the French company Parrot.. The drone is designed to be controlled by mobile or tablet operating systems, such as iOS or Android [1] within their respective apps or the unofficial software available for Windows Phone, Samsung BADA and Symbian devices.
Learn how to download and install or uninstall the Desktop Gold software and if your computer meets the system requirements.
In January 2010, Parrot introduced at CES Las Vegas the Parrot AR.Drone flying hardware piloted over Wi-Fi with a smartphone and Open API game development platform, ARdrone.org. [6] [7] Parrot AR.Drone 2.0 take-off, Nevada (CES 2012) In 2012 Parrot bought 57% of Swiss drone company SenseFly as well as 25% of the Swiss photogrammetry company Pix4D.
Using a Parrot AR.Drone 2, a Raspberry Pi, a USB battery, an Alfa AWUS036H wireless transmitter, aircrack-ng, node-ar-drone, node.js, and my SkyJack software, I developed a drone that flies around, seeks the wireless signal of any other drone in the area, forcefully disconnects the wireless connection of the true owner of the target drone, then ...
Flying prototype of the Parrot AR.Drone Parrot AR.Drone 2.0 take-off, Nevada, 2012 Airbus is developing a battery-powered quadcopter to act as an urban air taxi, at first with a pilot but potentially autonomous in the future.
Software versioning is the process of assigning either unique version names or unique version numbers to unique states of computer software. Within a given version number category (e.g., major or minor), these numbers are generally assigned in increasing order and correspond to new developments in the software.
Crazyflie 2.0 is the second iteration of the open source Crazyflie nano quadcopter released in 2013 by Marcus Eliasson, Arnaud Taffanel, and Tobias Antonsson. [1] The Crazyflie platform specifications are open source and available to anyone through the Bitcraze wiki [2] and the Bitcraze GitHub repo [3]
The software suite is automatically built nightly, with continuous integration and unit testing provided by Travis CI, and a build and compiling environment including the GNU cross-platform compiler and Waf. Pre-compiled binaries running on various hardware platforms are available for user download from ArduPilot's sub-websites.