NEC develops unmanned, self-flying drone for civilian use

Serkan Toto

Dr. Serkan Toto is an independent consultant and advisor focusing on Japan’s web, mobile and social gaming industries. Based in Tokyo, he works together with financial institutions and startups worldwide. Serkan has been the Japan contributor for TechCrunch.com since 2008. He is sept-lingual, holds an MBA and is a PhD in economics. → Learn More

Monday, June 8th, 2009

nec_drone

NEC has announced the development of an unmanned drone [JP] that can fly by itself to a specific location and send back positional information and video images. The company says it’s the first drone made for civilian applications that can transmit both kinds of data at the same time.

The small plane (overall length: 1,29m, weight: 3kg, wing span: 2m) is equipped with gyro sensors, two video cameras (one conventional model, one infra-red) and GPS. Users can let it fly for 20 minutes and are able to receive information within a 2.5km radius of the receiver.

nec_drone_2

NEC plans to charge $250,000 for the whole set (you also get a launcher and other accessories with the drone), hoping to sell up to 100 systems by 2014.

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