Monday, January 11, 2010

Parrot AR.Drone turns you and your iPhone into the Red Barron

Parrot AR.Drone turns you and your iPhone into the Red Barron

The Parrot AR.Drone lets you achieve your life long dream of piloting a remote control drone – and you don’t even have to join the military. Jokes aside, the AR.Drone is one of the coolest gadgets I’ve seen in while – it’s a quad-rotor helicopter, which is controlled by an iPhone or an iPod touch. In case you were wondering what the AR stands for – yes, it stands for Augmented Reality or in other words really cool looking games (including multiplayer ones).

big Parrot AR.Drone turns you and your iPhone into the Red Barron

Okay, before I go on, here’s a promo video to give you a better idea of what the whole AR.Drone deal is about if my overexcited explanations don’t do the trick.

The way the AR.Drone works is by setting up a connection between your iPhone (or iPod touch) and itself over Wi-Fi. It uses the multi-touch display on the iPhone (same with the iPod touch) to give the user several controls for flying the drone – pitch and yaw I guess, I’m no aviation expert. The device accelerometer also comes into play for the more complex maneuvers.

There’s a front-facing camera on the AR.Drone, which streams video in real time, which is actually what earns it its “drone” moniker – you can fly it remotely, you don’t have to keep it within line of sight. But you need to fly the Droid within Wi-Fi reach of your phone.

If the drone does get out of range, the limited autopilot kicks in – it lands the AR.Drone softly and safely on the ground. It’s also used when starting the drone (it auto lifts off and hovers a meter over the ground until you take control) and also keeps the drone level and stable when hovering.

Now for the bit that surely must have caught your attention – the Augmented Reality gaming. There are two modes – single player and multiplayer. In single player mode, you have two options – one, use a “3D tag” to position a giant robot and fight it, dodging its missiles all the way, or two, “Drone War”, which pits you against waves of enemy drones.

The multiplayer mode uses a colored, removable tag, so that two drones can visually recognize one another. That enables aerial combat between two drones, controlled by two people.

There’s a developer’s SDK so I fully expect additional games to become available after the AR.Drone is released.

Speaking of releasing, “release date: 2010” is all I’ve seen for now. So, soon enough I suppose, but the real question is how much it will cost (I can’t imagine an iPhone accessory, a flying drone no less, can be cheap in any conceivable way).

Before I go, here’s the motherload of videos. Enjoy.



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