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Lab talk, the good, the bad, and the ugly
Equipment
Accuracy, and how we define it.
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<blockquote data-quote="CoolHandLuke" data-source="post: 304248" data-attributes="member: 4850"><p>even if you dont believe its out there, there are tons of private sector companies offering 1mm per pixel uav mapping services, most of which do so in the 40-120ft unregulated airspace. You can bet the military can and does do it in the 1-5km zone for light aircraft. If darpa had 6" per pix half a decade ago, theyve made 3-5 moores law improvements by now already.</p><p></p><p>Like nasa putting 3d printers on the ISS. They would have two kinds. One, the kind that doesnt depend on powders or liquids that take postprocessing. Two, the kind that are more advanced than tbe ones you find in Staples, but generally built along the same principles. Filament printers. Spools. Years ahead of the consumer market, printing lightweight plastic shore harness near metal in spools.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="CoolHandLuke, post: 304248, member: 4850"] even if you dont believe its out there, there are tons of private sector companies offering 1mm per pixel uav mapping services, most of which do so in the 40-120ft unregulated airspace. You can bet the military can and does do it in the 1-5km zone for light aircraft. If darpa had 6" per pix half a decade ago, theyve made 3-5 moores law improvements by now already. Like nasa putting 3d printers on the ISS. They would have two kinds. One, the kind that doesnt depend on powders or liquids that take postprocessing. Two, the kind that are more advanced than tbe ones you find in Staples, but generally built along the same principles. Filament printers. Spools. Years ahead of the consumer market, printing lightweight plastic shore harness near metal in spools. [/QUOTE]
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Lab talk, the good, the bad, and the ugly
Equipment
Accuracy, and how we define it.
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