Wednesday, October 3, 2012
Journalism Drone Development: aerial photo mosiacs, and what's the spatial resolution on this drone, anyway?
Above is an aerial mosaic -- a series of 11 photos taken from a small unmanned aerial vehicle (colloquially known as a drone) that have been stitched together in a mosaiking program.
That program, Microsoft Image Composite Editor, is normally used to stitch together a series of sweeping photos taken from the ground to make a single panoramic image. However, the algorithm used to find and match the edges of a series of sweeping photos of, say, the Grand Canyon, is the same algorithm needed to fit photos together to make a map or similar map-esque image from aerial photos.
So, what kind of drone journalism could you do with this kind of image? Aerial photographers have been able to capture a breathtaking, panoramic view of Moscow protests from drones. These drones offer a perspective that is especially helpful at documenting the scope or extent of protests, political rallies, construction projects, landmarks, geographic features, and natural and man-made disasters.
But what kind of data journalism can you do with these drones? That's to say, what kind of hard data can you obtain from these images to launch investigations? How about proving the existence of or extent of something, such as oil spills, wild fires, droughts, or lax construction codes following a disaster, with actual metrics?
Monday, September 10, 2012
Muck Rack hosts Drone Journalism Q&A
What are the rules on drone use right now? What would you use one for in journalism? What about ethics? Last week, the Muck Rack
invited Nebraska Drone Journalism Lab's Matt Waite and
DroneJournalism.org's Matthew Schroyer to a Twitter Q&A on drones to
help answer those questions and more.
Read more on Muck Rack's site, which documented the fourteenth installment of their #muckedup chat.
Reposted from DroneJournalism.org
Read more on Muck Rack's site, which documented the fourteenth installment of their #muckedup chat.
Reposted from DroneJournalism.org
Tags:
#muckedup
,
drone journalism
,
dronejournalism.org
,
Matt Schroyer
,
Matt Waite
,
Muck Rack
,
Nebraska Drone Journalism Lab
,
QA
,
Twitter
Wednesday, August 29, 2012
Drone Development In Progress: Aerial Photos and Videos
Despite JournoDrone 2 still being in the shop after its maiden flight, drone development is continuing onward and upward. Above is an aerial photo taken from my latest drone project, which has caused that previous drone to collect dust in the basement.
However, this new drone is superior in at least a couple of ways. One, it's much more stable in flight, thanks to its 68.5" wingspan. Its size also means it can loft a larger payload. The photo above was taken using an 11Mpx GoPro Hero 2, which is small, but has a not insignifcant weight penalty.
JournoDrone 2 was a plastic shell that I wrapped in carbon-fiber and epoxy, which could take a crash on the nose without much harm. This newest drone is made of balsa wood, but it's such a docile aircraft that the need for crash resistance is minimal. All that balsa, some 5 or so pounds of it, is also pretty good at flexing and absorbing a hard landing.
Tags:
aerial photography
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APM 2.0
,
ArduPilot Mega
,
drone journalism
,
UAS
,
unmanned aerial systems
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