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Where Are the Drones? Not In the Sky & Here's Why

2023-01-11 03:10:57
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Where Are the Drones?
Illustration: © IoT For All

In 2013, Jeff Bezos revealed plans for Prime Air – Amazon’s drone delivery service. 2014 saw announcements of major logistics companies partnering with emerging drone startups. By 2017, there was radio silence. The hype largely fizzled out and drone delivery never really materialized beyond basic proof of concept tests. Only a few companies were the exception, such as Zipline, which thrived on highly-specific use cases.

'The drone itself is just a small cog in a much larger machine. The real hurdle is developing the rest of the ecosystem to support the drone's safe flight.' -Gints JakovelsClick To Tweet

Now in 2022, nearly a decade after the initial announcement, Amazon promised that the first drone deliveries will begin in cities such as California and Texas before the end of the year. Admittedly, some companies are further ahead. Google’s Wing came up alongside the early hype and found some traction in Australia, completing over 100,000 deliveries in 2021. Still, the commercial feasibility of drone delivery is shaky at best, as it continues to face a slew of technological, cost, and infrastructure challenges. For instance, the cost of a single delivery during recent trials amounted to $484, with Amazon hoping to bring this down to $63 by 2025. This is about 20x more than it costs for ground delivery.

So, are drones dead in the water? Not quite.

Use Cases

While widespread drone delivery is still in the works, commercial drone use has exploded over the last decade, just not in a way most people would notice. From inspecting power lines to servicing wind turbines, there is an ever-growing number of industrial use cases to accelerate processes, improve safety, or otherwise make various elements more efficient.

Infrastructure monitoring and crisis response are among the most popular applications. And while the public’s eye is fixed firmly on deliveries, the rest of the industry is actively developing the hard and soft infrastructure required to enable and broaden all these other various value-added use cases. Which, notably, will also lay the groundwork for increased delivery feasibility. That means building out drone management systems, working with air traffic authorities on integrating them into the common airspace, fleshing out legal and technical frameworks, figuring out how to practically and safely enable BVLOS (Beyond Visual Line of Sight) autonomous flights, and so much more.

The drone itself is just a small cog in a much larger machine. The real hurdle is developing the rest of the ecosystem to support safe flight. Let’s take a look at what is currently happening behind the scenes to give you a better idea.

BLVOS Projects & Cellular Networks

My team at LMT recently completed a cross-continent drone flight demonstration as part of a European project called Comp4Drones, which aims to provide a framework for key technologies enabling safe autonomous drone flights. The aim of our demonstration was to test command and control functions for beyond-the-visual line of sight (BVLOS) flights using a cellular network as a communication channel. In this particular demonstration, the pilot was in Spain, whereas the drone itself was located in Latvia 3,500km away. To put it simply, we piloted a drone on the other side of the continent via cell towers. If drones are to see widespread commercial use, they need to be able to fly BVLOS. Be it automatically or manually, drones must be able to fly considerable distances without someone physically watching over them.

But the main question that arises is one of safety. Because the moment drones start raining out of the sky or get lost, it will set the industry back another 10 years. No business wants to be on the front page news because a drone carrying their package fell out of the sky and hurt somebody, or worse. This is why cellular networks are so crucial for the future. We need to reach the drone at any phase of the flight. Cellular network-connected drones are able to use mobile networks with their high reliability, existing infrastructure, and wide coverage.

Accordingly, in our experiment, piloting the drone from 3,500km away was just one of the parameters in this chain of variables. My team already proved possible at a 5G Techritory demonstration back in 2019. Instead, the main idea was to demonstrate the possibility to pilot a drone located far away, using tools that allow the pilot to forecast cellular network coverage in the preflight phase and in real time. If you take a trip to the countryside, you will see just how spotty mobile coverage can be. A drone can’t afford to lose signal, so a safe flight requires the drone to take the best route, namely one with optimum coverage. One way to guarantee that would be to do on-site network measurements. But that is just not scalable.

The really interesting thing about this experiment was that we did fully remote network forecasting. During the flight, we followed network parameters such as network strengths, interference, and other network KPI parameters in real time. We demonstrated, among other things, that a BVLOS flight using a cellular network is viable. This brings us one step closer to broadening the possibilities of drone use.

Keeping Drones in the Sky

So, if you’re wondering why drone deliveries aren’t here yet, it is because we’re still figuring out how best to keep the drones in the sky. But once we do, and the infrastructure is in place, the floodgates will open. Not just for drones, but for all types of big and small manned and unmanned aerial vehicles. With the advent of Urban Air Mobility, it is not just packages that may be flying overhead, but passengers too. We just have to build the sky roads first.

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  • Cellular
  • Connectivity
  • Drones

  • Cellular
  • Connectivity
  • Drones
  • IoT Business Strategy

参考译文
无人机在哪里?不是在天空&这是为什么
插图:© IoT For All --> 2013年,杰夫·贝索斯透露了Prime Air的计划——亚马逊的无人机送货服务。2014年,各大物流公司在与新兴无人机初创企业合作方面发表了重要公告。到了2017年,却突然陷入沉寂。热潮基本消退,无人机送货也未能真正实现,除了基本的可行性测试之外,几乎毫无进展。只有少数几家公司是个例外,比如Zipline,它专注于高度特定的应用场景,并取得了成功。“无人机本身只是更大系统中的一个小小的齿轮。真正的挑战在于开发出支持无人机安全飞行的整个生态系统。” — Gints Jakovels 点击推文 Now in 2022,距离最初宣布之日已经过去近十年,亚马逊承诺今年年底前将在加州和得州等城市开始首批无人机送货。不可否认,一些公司已经更进一步。谷歌的Wing在早期热潮期间就崭露头角,并在澳大利亚取得了一定进展,截至2021年,其已完成了超过10万次送货。尽管如此,无人机送货的商业可行性仍然十分脆弱,因为它仍面临着一系列技术、成本和基础设施的挑战。例如,近期测试中,单次送货成本高达484美元,亚马逊希望到2025年能将其降至63美元。这差不多是地面送货成本的20倍。那么,无人机送货真的无望了吗?并非如此。 应用场景 虽然广泛的无人机送货仍在探索之中,但过去十年里,商业无人机的应用已经大幅扩展,尽管大多数普通人都注意不到这一点。从巡检输电线到维护风力发电机,越来越多的工业应用场景在涌现,用于加速流程、提高安全性,或者以其他方式提升效率。基础设施监测和危机响应是其中最受欢迎的应用之一。而当公众的目光牢牢聚焦在送货上时,其他行业正在积极开发用于实现和拓展这些多种附加价值应用场景的硬性与软性基础设施。值得一提的是,这些努力也为未来的送货可能性打下了基础。这意味着要构建无人机管理系统,与空管机构合作,将无人机纳入公共空域体系,完善法律和技术框架,研究如何在实践中安全地实现BLOS(超视距)自主飞行,等等。无人机本身只是更大系统中的一个小小的齿轮。真正的挑战在于开发出支持其安全飞行的整个生态系统。接下来,我们来看看幕后正在发生些什么。 BLVOS项目与蜂窝网络 我所在的LMT团队最近完成了一项跨大陆的无人机飞行演示,这是欧洲一个名为Comp4Drones项目的组成部分,其目标是为实现安全的自主无人机飞行提供关键技术框架。此次演示的目标是测试在超视距(BVLOS)飞行中,通过蜂窝网络进行指挥与控制功能。在这项演示中,飞行员位于西班牙,而无人机则位于3500公里外的拉脱维亚。简单来说,我们通过蜂窝塔远程操控了远在大陆另一端的无人机。如果无人机要实现广泛商业应用,它们必须具备超视距飞行能力。不论是自动飞行还是人工操控,无人机必须能够在没有肉眼监看的情况下飞行相当长的距离。但随之而来的主要问题就是安全性。一旦无人机频繁坠落或迷路,整个行业可能倒退十年。任何企业都不希望因为它们的无人机在空中掉下来伤到人而登上新闻头条,更糟糕的情况更是难以想象。这就是为什么蜂窝网络对未来发展至关重要。我们需要在飞行的任何阶段都能与无人机保持联系。与蜂窝网络连接的无人机可以利用移动网络的高可靠性、现有基础设施和广泛的覆盖范围。因此,在我们这次实验中,从3500公里外操控无人机只是众多变量之一。我的团队早在2019年的5G Techritory演示中就已证明这是可能的。此次实验的主要目的是展示如何利用工具在飞行前和实时阶段预测蜂窝网络覆盖情况,从而远程操控远距离的无人机。如果你去乡下走一走,就能体会到移动网络的覆盖有多不稳定。无人机不能承受信号的丢失,因此安全飞行要求无人机选择最佳路线——即覆盖最优的路线。其中一种方法是进行现场的网络测量,但这并不具备可扩展性。这次实验真正有趣的地方在于我们实现了完全远程的网络预测。飞行过程中,我们实时监测了诸如网络强度、干扰和其他网络KPI参数等网络性能指标。我们展示了,包括在蜂窝网络上执行超视距飞行是可行的。这使我们向拓展无人机应用的可能性迈出了一步。 让无人机稳稳飞行 所以,如果你在思考为什么无人机送货尚未到来,那是因为我们仍在研究如何才能最好地让无人机稳稳飞行。但一旦我们解决这一问题,并建立起相关基础设施,闸门就会打开。不仅是无人机,还包括各种大小型有人或无人飞行器。随着城市空中出行(Urban Air Mobility)的到来,不仅包裹可能从你头顶飞过,乘客也可能如此。我们首先要做的,是先建设好天空中的“道路”。 推文分享邮件 CellularConnectivityDrones --> CellularConnectivityDronesIoT 企业战略
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