CASA to kill ‘Can I fly there?’ drone app, offer API
The Civil Aviation Safety Authority is decommissioning its ‘Can I Fly There?’ drone safety app after two years.
The Civil Aviation Safety Authority is decommissioning its ‘Can I Fly There?’ drone safety app after two years.
Air New Zealand is using drones to inspect difficult to reach parts of its aircraft during maintenance stops.
Melbourne has been selected by Uber as a pilot city for its flying taxi service Uber Air.
Drivers could earn cryptocurrency credit by enabling their vehicles to report road condition data, in a trial being run by manufacturer Jaguar Land Rover (JLR).
Fortescue Metals Group is launching an autonomous vehicle research and development hub in the Pilbara region town of Karratha.
CSIRO’s Data61 has launched a 600-square-metre test facility, for researchers and industry to put robots through their paces in a variety of environments.
Data61 spin-out start-up Emesent has released its ‘plug and play payload’ Hovermap, which allows drones to fly underground and in other GPS-denied locations.
The Civil Aviation Safety Authority (CASA) is seeking views from the drone pilot community on its proposed remotely piloted aircraft (RPA) registration scheme.
None of the 11 teams that flew in this year’s Medical Express Challenge for unmanned aerial vehicles was able to complete the mission, leaving the potential $75,000 prize money unclaimed.
The CTO of Mobileye has claimed the company’s advanced driver assistance system (ADAS) software would have seen the pedestrian killed by a self-driving Uber car last week.
The price you pay for not using the tolled express lane on Washington DC’s Interstate 95 highway is frustratingly apparent.
The Rio Tinto Brockman 4 mine's truck fleet will “run entirely” in autonomous mode, following a retrofit of driverless technology scheduled for completion in mid-2019.
One hundred illuminated drones will light up the sky in a seven-minute choreographed routine as part of Vivid Sydney, considered the world’s largest festival of light, music and ideas.
An iPad app that may soon play a pivotal role connecting soldiers on the street with airplanes hovering high above will be shown for the first time next month at the National Association of Broadcasters convention in Las Vegas.