@Lightice1 That's a good option if the technology is there and fast enough. You could also combine both for efficiency. If it's a cold day/room, you can use the infrared sensor, if it's a hot day, nearing 35 degrees celcius, you can switch to echolocation. Echo location depends on a lot more factors though so you should use it as a near-last resort.
You're better off adding a heat/infrared sensor on the flying drone because it is prone to hitting humans in autonomous flight. You could adjust it to only avoid temperatures between 35 and 40 degrees Celsius.
Reminds me of a moth blinded ( or attracted by light).
HonorisCausa1 2 months ago
So now I can pay 0 and have a flying 0/2 artifact?
falcord 4 months ago 2
wow the flying robot looks awsome!
THISISAVERYCOOLNAME 4 months ago
So the iBird smacks straight into walls and other household objects just like a domestic budgie when it decides to fly somewhere.
ChickenHawk110 5 months ago
the ornithopters are both awesome. the first one... not so much.
Tigregalis 5 months ago
@Lightice1 That's a good option if the technology is there and fast enough. You could also combine both for efficiency. If it's a cold day/room, you can use the infrared sensor, if it's a hot day, nearing 35 degrees celcius, you can switch to echolocation. Echo location depends on a lot more factors though so you should use it as a near-last resort.
lceus 5 months ago
That's an oftly large cockroach.
endthedisease 5 months ago
@lceus Or you could use echolocating instead, and avoid all the issues of thermal cameras, such as failing to see anything in a hot day.
Lightice1 5 months ago
You're better off adding a heat/infrared sensor on the flying drone because it is prone to hitting humans in autonomous flight. You could adjust it to only avoid temperatures between 35 and 40 degrees Celsius.
lceus 5 months ago
great1! the bipadle ornithopter looks awesome ^^
mind1505 5 months ago