3D Robotics


Here's the press release:

The first quadricopter for video games and piloted by Wi-Fi will be available in the U.S. in September under $300

Los Angeles, June 15, 2010 /PRNewswire/ — Parrot, leader in wireless peripherals for mobile phones, today unveils at E3 Expo in Los Angeles the final version of the Parrot AR.Drone, a quadricopter using augmented reality and piloted with an iPod touch®, an iPhone® or an iPad™.

With super intuitive handling, Parrot AR.Drone achieves spectacular flights and enables consumers to play video games in augmented reality.

You are piloting a one-of-a-kind quadricopter, where real and virtual worlds meet to offer unparalleled gaming experiences…

The front-camera broadcasts and streams what the drone is seeing onto the iPod touch or iPhone screen; and the image processing allows integrating real-time special effects of augmented reality.

Pattern Ergonomic piloting

With its shaped cockpit driven by four propellers with brushless motors, the Parrot AR.Drone offers excellent maneuverability and stability during piloting.

Parrot AR.Drone generates its own Wi-Fi network (no need for an Internet connection nor a router) at which you simply connect an iPod touch or iPhone. Once the “AR.FreeFlight” application has been downloaded, the iPod touch/iPhone turns into a true piloting station.

Two piloting modes are available:

  • Beginner: two tactile piloting buttons to control the accelerometer / the direction of the drone and to maneuver.
  • Ace: expert mode with a single tactile button to pilot the AR.Drone.

Touch the take-off button on the screen of the iPod touch/iPhone and the Parrot AR.Drone starts its engine, takes-off, stabilizes a few feet from the ground and waits for the pilot’s instructions.

The player needs to put his/her left thumb on the screen and a control button will position under it. The accelerometer of the iPod touch/iPhone is detecting movements. Parrot AR.Drone moves forward, back or sidewise depending on the inclinations of the iPod touch/iPhone.

Another command button on the right of the iPod touch/iPhone screen enables the pilot to make the AR.Drone rise, go down or rotate.

In Ace mode, a single button enables the pilot to fully control and pilot the AR.Drone.

Touch the landing button and the quadricopter will land and stop its engines.

A unique high-tech quadricopter

Parrot AR.Drone is made of carbon fiber and high resistance PA66 plastic.

The heart of the AR.Drone contains MEMS (Micro Electro Mechanicals Systems), three axes accelerometer, two gyrometers [one axe & two axes], one ultrasound sensor and two cameras:

  • The first camera, located underneath, is connected to an Inertial Measurement Unit. Thanks to this unit, the AR.Drone is capable of measuring its horizontal speed and performing mind-blowing stationary flights. The system of images comparison enables it to compensate turbulences due to the wind during outside flights.

    These technologies are usually used for professional or military applications and have been adapted to gaming universe for the first time.
  • The second camera, at the front of the quadricopter, broadcasts and streams on the iPod touch/iPhone screen what the drone is seeing as if the player was in the pilot’s position.

    This camera plays a major role for video gaming thanks to the use of form recognition: it enables augmented reality.

    For example, the front camera will recognize another AR.Drone in the game battle between two quadricopters, or tags which will turn into obstacles, monsters or robots on the screen of the iPod touch/iPhone.

    Video streaming has been enhanced compared to the development version of AR.Drone introduced at CES. Also, the front of the hull has been strengthened to better protect the camera.

    The players can choose the camera they prefer or display the two cameras simultaneously on the screen of the iPod touch/iPhone.

New rules for games

With the AR.Drone, Parrot is combining the worlds of video gaming and radio-controlled models.

This one-of-a-kind quadricopter enables consumers to recreate a large number of video games in the real world and also offers a multi-player possibility thanks to augmented reality.

To offer pilots unprecedented gaming experiences, three games will be available for download in the App Store℠:

  • AR.FreeFlight
    • Application that is mandatory to fly and pilot the AR.Drone.
    • Two piloting modes: beginner or expert.
    • Downloadable for free on App Store.
  • AR.Dronegate
    • Solo game using augmented reality.
    • Requires the two tags provided in the box.
    • Story: After the successful downloading of photons, scientists try the same experience with matter. The first try is a catastrophe, a number of scientists disappear and a black hole forms accidentally. This is the “Grey Zone”. Military-researchers create a radio-commanded device able to bear the extreme conditions of the Grey Zone. But since, unexplained attacks occur on the facilities.
    • Mission: Protect your military base and destroy “enemies”.
    • $2.99 USD on App Store.
  • AR.FlyingAce
    • Story: For the first time, you will be able to use a radio-commanded quadricopter to conduct aerial battles of World War II aces proportions.
    • $2.99 USD on App Store.

A new look for inside and outside flights

Parrot AR.Drone is designed for flying inside and outside.

For a flight outside, a shaped hull reduces the area to the wind and offers an extreme maneuverability of the quadricopter.

Three hulls are available:

  • orange and yellow
  • orange and green
  • orange and blue

These vivid colors enable the pilot to easily follow the movements of his/her AR.Drone. They are also easily recognized by the front-camera of the AR.Drone, which enables the AR.Drone to identify a competitor for two-player battles.

For indoor flight, a specific hull – with a white, gray and black cockpit- surrounds and protects the propellers if the AR.Drone hits an obstacle. Stickers, with colors similar to the shaped hull, can be fixed on each arch to enable drone battles inside.

Finally, electroluminescent diodes (green at front, red on the back), are positioned on the landing gear and enable the pilot to easily position his/her AR.Drone for piloting. These diodes also activate and react according to the action from the game.

A community of pilots

Available via www.ardrone.com, AR.Drone-Pilot Academy will be a website dedicated to Parrot AR.Drone users and fans.

This website will showcase approximately 20 videos and detailed information on the AR.Drone.

  • Training Zone
    This area of the website accompanies the pilot, from the first encounter of the AR.Drone to tips for piloting.

    How to prepare your AR.Drone (installation of the battery, configuration Wi-Fi / iPod touch - iPhone…), pilot (control of the accelerometer…), do sophisticated maneuvers (circles, figure-eight, half-turn, slalom, obstacles race…), practice aerial battle (offensive and defensive maneuvers, indoor and outdoor battles…).
  • Community Zone
    Here pilots will be able to post their videos, share and discuss on forums, follow AR.Drone news (via Facebook, Twitter…).

An open development platform

Since the introduction at CES 2010, the Software Development Kit, which was updated in May 2010, is available for developers to create games for the AR.Drone. Source code porting on other platforms is also feasible from the SDK.

To date, more than 450 developers around the world have registered on Parrot AR.Drone platform.

The only bounds of the forthcoming games for the AR.Drone are the imagination and ingenuity of the fans of Parrot’s quadricopter.

To download the SDK or get more information, visit http://projects.ardrone.org.

Parrot AR.Drone: a technological first

The development of the AR.Drone required more than four years and the creation of about 20 patents.

For the first time, a consumer product encompasses:

  • A quadricopter made of carbon fiber and high resistance PA66 plastic, with 4 brushless engines embedded.
  • An inertial unit with MEMS (Micro-Electro-Mechanical Systems) combining video processing with an automatic piloting software to ensure a very intuitive piloting of a radio controlled object.
  • Wi-Fi and video streaming for a modern gaming interface with an iPod touch/iPhone.
  • Images processing software for augmented reality.

Parrot has worked for 15 years on wireless technologies. Engineering is the keystone of the work of Parrot and the R&D department of the company consists of 150 engineers.

Parrot concentrates on the maintenance of its investments in R&D to a high level, with an important focus on the software and the signal processing. Parrot develops complete products in taking care of their use; because of this, software, electronics, design and also manufacturing costs are the daily work of the research department.

Parrot AR.Drone Invasion Plan

Parrot AR.Drone will be available for purchase at selected retailers* in September in the United States for $299 MSRP.

Availability in Europe and Asia will be announced in the following weeks.

*For more information, please go to www.parrot.com

* * *

For more information, visit www.parrot.com or contact:

Media Contacts:

Vanessa Loury
PARROT
+33 (0)1 48 03 60 58
+33 (0)6 8656 8133
Fabien Laxague
PARROT
+33 (0)1 48 03 89 83
+33 (0)6 8090 9759
Tim Wieland
AIRFOIL for Parrot
248-304-1414
E-mail me when people leave their comments –

You need to be a member of diydrones to add comments!

Join diydrones

Comments

  • 3D Robotics
    @Martin: Optical flow (using the downward-facing camera for position hold) is done on board.
  • Chris, so even the ventral camera stabilization is done on the ground?
  • 3D Robotics
    @will.y. Parrot already offers an open Linux desktop program to control it. The data communications protocol is open and part of the devkit. The onboard computer/code is not open, however. The only onboard image processing is MPEG4 compression. Everything else needs to be done on the ground.
  • Since it runs linux, I'm sure you can hack it pretty easily to do other stuff. The question is how to control it. My guess is someone will throw together something that runs on a laptop and can send whatever, eg. custom data packets. And I wonder how well an ARM can do advanced image recognition, remember it's less than 600mhz.
  • They'll be $30 from mall hustlers soon enough. Just realized it could probably be programmed to fly to waypoints based on image recognition yet they didn't think of implementing it. The other thing they didn't implement is having it follow you based on image recognition, making a video.
  • I wonder what kind of range you can possible get with wifi... I also wonder if this (natively or otherwise) supports autonomous movement and control, eg. without an ipod operator. And what happens on loss of connection?
  • It uses wifi 802.11 whatever. So you don't need the phone, just an Ipod touch with wifi.
  • Admin
    nope , you are suppose to have a IPhone I guess and buy the parrot. For 300 , the parrot is all you get , next You will want the latex thing in pic too :)).
  • is this controller over audio? does this include the transmitter if so? because $200 for an ipod is a great deal compared to a standard controller.....
  • Admin
    The real question is: Can the Chinese reverse engineer it and sell it for less than $300 USD in the USA?

    Just a thought.

    Regards,
    TCIII
This reply was deleted.