A Silicon Valley for Drones, in North Dakota

by klonckson 12/25/2015, 1:40 PMwith 30 comments

by jmspringon 12/26/2015, 1:18 AM

I think a serious benefit ND has, aside from the established reputation and money put in is space. I can't really think of somewhere in Silicon Valley (or near by) that has the lack of population, lack of airspace traffic, and lack of local / state / federal ordinances that would allow this degree of freedom.

Silicon Valley has it's strengths, but it can't be ground zero for everything.

Honestly, if the NUMI plant wasn't in Fremont, I could see the majority of Tesla being not in the bay area (one could argue the battery plant in NV is such a shift).

by rebootthesystemon 12/26/2015, 5:42 PM

Stupid behavior like this is the reason for which drones will find progressively more regulation and resistance:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lmD3rXUR1Tw

The supply of idiots seems limitless.

by protomython 12/26/2015, 12:45 AM

The aviation school at Grand Forks, ND is well known and the article is not kidding about the number of countries it attracts. It was a natural fit to move into drone piloting.

by modfodderon 12/26/2015, 2:23 AM

Maybe Stillwater, OK with the first UAS graduate program will vie for that title.

https://unmanned.okstate.edu

by wtvanheston 12/26/2015, 1:44 AM

Embry-Riddle in Daytona Beach Florida seems far more likely. http://daytonabeach.erau.edu/

Also tons of near by land and open ocean, as well as NASA and government contracting engineers already co-located and a bunch of other great universities nearby or with satellite campuses in and around Orlando / Daytona.

Being able to fly 365 days a year helps too.

Realistically, the Pacific Ocean and insanely high concentration of engineers in sv seems like the most likely place for long-term drone innovation.

by jokoonon 12/26/2015, 11:03 AM

Weren't quadcopters formerly developed by boston dynamics ?

Article is behind paywall.