Of Unmanned Aerial Vehicles

It is all over in the newspapers these days that Pakistan has developed its first indigenous drones. It is much hyped in the news and it is quite encouraging as well. Drones are supposed to help in conducting military operations. Had it not been for their potential use against terrorism activities, the news is also quite daunting as such. Consider drones planes flying all over the place where you live and delivering catastrophic ballistic missiles in your neighborhood. The idea is quite fearsome indeed. The idea of using drones in anti-terrorism campaigns comes across as a relieving one instead. And their development starts sounding quite sensible all of a sudden.

Drones are also being developed in Pakistan and elsewhere in the world because technology has become quite contagious for the times we live in. One company, or a country, develops something and the others start following the lead. As a matter of fact, in so many ways it becomes incumbent upon other groups, nations and countries to catch up with the technological gap so as not to be left out as an outdated clan.

At OptimumT we propose technology with ideology. We believe in developing technical gadgets that would help in ameliorating the human condition in one way or the other. However, we believe that exploiting the potential of science and technological to threaten life in any way is vice and despicable.

In wake of this spirit we have written a research proposal for design and development of fully autonomous, self-coordinating and cooperative unmanned aerial vehicles too. Our research proposal is particularly aimed at civilian applications of unmanned aerial vehicular systems. Our research proposal is also quite ahead of time in terms of its ideas. And the ideas we propose are quite thrilling. In order to get a feel of what we believe we can do in this realm, please read up on our research proposal as follows.

Photo by San Diego Air & Space Museum Archives

CC BY-ND 4.0 Of Unmanned Aerial Vehicles by OptimumT is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.