Skydio Accelerates Part 107 Drone Businesses Thanks to Autonomy

SOURCE Skydio : In case you missed it, Skydio recently hosted a webinar in partnership with our friends at Commercial UAV News. The webinar, named “Accelerating Your Part 107 Business with Skydio”, featured our Product Marketing Manager, Guillaume Delepine, moderating an engaging customer panel with Sam DeLong, CEO of Accurate Drone Solutions and Trevor Ragno, Chief Real Estate Officer for Aeronyde Corporation.

Danielle Gagne, Editorial Analyst at Commercial UAV News, wrote the following article that nicely summarizes the conversation and findings presented at the webinar. I encourage you to take a look a the actual webinar to listen about the way that Skydio Autonomy is helping Part 107 pilots and their businesses achieve new levels of efficiency and safety. However, if you are time constrained, keep on reading. The original article is posted here.

Image © Skydio

Skydio, a leading US-based drone manufacturer, proposes that autonomy is one of the most important developments for the drone industry today. In their latest webinar, “Accelerating Your Part 107 Business with Skydio” they explained why.

“Everyone agrees that drones are ten times more effective and 100 times cheaper and safer than heavy machinery,” pointed out Guillaume Delepine, Product Marketing Manager at Skydio. “If you compare drones against the cost, time, and the risk to safety and life of traditional methods it seems like a no brainer that we would be using drones all the time, but that hasn’t totally happened yet. Why? For starters, if you look at a lot of the most developed programs, even at scale, about 80% of your budget will end up consumed by pilot training and salary.”

Because manually piloted drones are so easily crashed, they require a hefty investment in qualified pilots and visual observers, as well as pilot training to try to lower the risk of pilot error that would lead to loss of equipment, property damage, or worse. This cost is prohibitive to scaling many drone programs to their full potential, which is one of the reasons why heavy equipment like helicopters and snooper trucks are still being used despite their cost and safety risks.

“The cost of the pilot in the field and a visual observer is substantial,” explained Trevor Ragno, Chief Real Estate Officer of Aeronyde Corporation, whose company runs a multi-pilot program that has started to ramp up their use of the Skydio 2 system. “We found it took up to 82% of our operating budget. This is why we saw autonomous systems as an essential component to a full enterprise solution.”

Seeing this large operational cost as a blocker to industry growth, Skydio is working to bring about “the age of AI-driven autonomy,” where drones are no longer powered by manual operations but are defined by software and AI with native obstacle avoidance. Skydio argues that fully automated workflows and integrated solutions, where drones can make split second decisions in the air to keep operations safe, will reduce operating costs, thereby enabling the enterprise.

To this end, Skydio has developed a full suite of enterprise solutions designed to usher in an autonomous workflow for drone operations.

Onboard every Skydio 2 aircraft are six 4K cameras with 200-degree fisheye lenses that collect 45 megapixels of visual sensing, making them the eyes of the Skydio Autonomy™ engine. The brains of the Skydio consists of a NVIDIA Tegra TX2 processing chip, which is capable of doing 1.3 trillion operations a second.

“The NVIDIA TX2 board is essentially a supercomputer on wings,” said Ragno. “To put that into perspective, if you were to spend a million dollars for the last 2,000 years, you wouldn’t be halfway to 1.3 trillion today.”

These combined features enable the Skydio 2 platform to see, understand, predict, and act on the world using artificial intelligence. It creates a real-time, three-dimensional model of the world as it flies through it with 360-degree obstacle recognition and avoidance, and motion prediction.

“By recognizing objects and their context, it fills in the gaps that a sensor might not pick up,” explained Delepine. “It can predict your motion for accurate path planning or predict the motion of other subjects it is following, gathering data that pilots can use to get the job done, and then it is automating entire workflows — all of these factors are absolutely critical, without it, it can’t be called an autonomous drone.”

On top of the Skydio Autonomy™ core engine, Skydio offers an add-on solution for AI pilot assistance they call Skydio Autonomy™ Enterprise Foundation, which includes super zoom, vertical view, and Close Proximity Obstacle Avoidance, among other features, all of which help the pilot increase the level of situational awareness, as well as help them fly into tighter spaces where a manual pilot or human couldn’t, shouldn’t, or don’t dare to go. Skydio’s AI powered flight software according to Delepine can “turn anyone into an expert pilot.”

Leave a Reply

Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:

WordPress.com Logo

You are commenting using your WordPress.com account. Log Out /  Change )

Twitter picture

You are commenting using your Twitter account. Log Out /  Change )

Facebook photo

You are commenting using your Facebook account. Log Out /  Change )

Connecting to %s