

The Parrot ANAFI UA - The Perfect Drone For Search And Rescue Operators?
Check out the Parrot ANAFI UA. Could this be the perfect drone for first responders and search and rescue operators? What do you think?

You really think so?[...]
DJI is being pushed away by the trade war and if only a competitor could step up. [...]
You really think so?
My guess is that DJI will cooperate to the fullest with the US-gouvernment.
To keep the US- drone market.
I work in Public Safety. We have received guidance from the state that Chinese drones (DJI mentioned specifically) should not be connected to any network until further notice. There is also speculation that any Federal grants in the future will most likely will not be able to be used for Chinese drones in the future if certain pending legislation is passed. When we look for USA made alternatives the competition unfortunately offers solutions that have some or all of the following: far higher costs, inferior workflows, higher complexity, few people using for opinions of how they work.You really think so?
My guess is that DJI will cooperate to the fullest with the US-government.
To keep the US- drone market.
[...]When we look for USA made alternatives the competition unfortunately offers solutions that have some or all of the following: far higher costs, inferior workflows, higher complexity, few people using for opinions of how they work.
[...]
Thats actually the thing I thought reason could overcome
Ok, but still the customer market is "in DJI hands", even in the US, right?
That may be so now with DJI, but I can guarantee that was not the case when the Mavic Pro first came out. We had clear evidence that DJI was actually sending back data to numerous Chinese servers, which is why U.S military put the brakes on.This is really not about security as it is more about a administration trying to bring down a government to a level playing field. It has been proven that DJI drones do not send data back to China a couple of times and just recently in this article. They are doing the same thing to Chinese telecommunications giant Huawei.
Booz Allen Hamilton's latest report finds that DJI systems do not send data to DJI, China or any other unexpected third party.
Exactly why I said it was proven a couple of times and not the 50 or so DJI claims. The ones that count are the independent one being performed and not paid by DJI to hide the facts.That may be so now with DJI, but I can guarantee that was not the case when the Mavic Pro first came out. We had clear evidence that DJI was actually sending back data to numerous Chinese servers, which is why U.S military put the brakes on.
The evidence was very clear and could not be disputed, so much so that DJI actually agreed to bring out a commercial version of DJI Go for their military customers, which would NOT transmit the data.
Hopefully they learned their lesson from that. I have been off the DJI scene since the Parrot came along, so a little out of touch on that side now, but certainly 2yrs back they were definitely harvesting data.