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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.
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A DJI Phantom quadcopter drone in flight Typical racing quadcopter with carbon fiber frame and FPV camera. A quadcopter, also called quadrocopter, or quadrotor [1] is a type of helicopter or multicopter that has four rotors.
The free software approach to ArduPilot code development is similar to that of the Linux Operating system and the GNU Project, and the PX4/Pixhawk and Paparazzi Project, where low cost and availability enabled hobbyists to build autonomous small remotely piloted aircraft, such as micro air vehicles and miniature UAVs. The drone industry ...
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]
Any Windows version starting from Windows 95 or later. Large File support (greater than 4 GB which requires an exFAT filesystem) for the huge wikis (English only at the time of this writing). It also works on Linux with Wine. 16 MB RAM minimum for the WikiTaxi reader, 128 MB recommended for the importer (more for speed).
After the success of the Phantom 2 Vision, DJI released a camera-equipped version of the Phantom 1 as the Phantom FC40. [6] The drone features a FC40 camera on a fixed mount capable of capturing 720p video at 30 FPS. The aircraft uses 5.8 GHz for control allowing the 2.4 GHz band to be allocated for FPV downlink. [7]
1993: A widely cited version of the paper above is published in Communications of the ACM – Special issue on computer augmented environments, edited by Pierre Wellner, Wendy Mackay, and Rich Gold. [40] 1993: Loral WDL, with sponsorship from STRICOM, performed the first demonstration combining live AR-equipped vehicles and manned simulators ...