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Build Technology

Project Ryptide Drone Flies Life-Rings To Distressed Swimmers 62

Zothecula writes The speed that drones can be deployed makes them ideal for delivering items when time is of the essence. The Ambulance Drone and Defikopter, for example, are used for transporting defibrillators to those in need. Now, Project Ryptide plans to use drones to deliver life-rings to swimmers in distress. From the article: "The project, which is at pre-production prototype stage, was conceived by Bill Piedra, a part-time teacher at the King Low Heywood Thomas (KLHT) school in Stamford, Connecticut. Piedra began working on the design in January 2014 and then began developing it further with students at KLHT in September 2014. 'Ryptide was designed so that anyone can be a lifeguard,' Piedra tells Gizmag. 'We had the casual user in mind when we designed the basic model; someone that might take their drone to the beach, boating, a lake, or even ice skating. It could be useful in the case of someone falling through the ice while skating, for example.'"
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Project Ryptide Drone Flies Life-Rings To Distressed Swimmers

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  • by fisted ( 2295862 ) on Monday January 05, 2015 @12:56PM (#48737437)

    It could be useful in the case of someone falling through the ice while skating

    ..but not in this scenario.

  • by RealGene ( 1025017 ) on Monday January 05, 2015 @01:03PM (#48737497)
    The ring is a large but lightweight foam torus. Why not just embed the rotors directly, and fly the ring itself out to the swimmer?
    • Because that turns the from a lightweight simple torus into a heavy and complicated mechanism - and introduces the problem of ensuring that nobody gets tangled in or injured by the rotor system. Not to mention that with the added weight, the torus now needs to be larger in order to support the weight of the equipment as well as the weight of the swimmer.

      Just dropping a bog standard torus makes everything simpler.

  • I was hoping the new year would bring some sanity to the drone conversation. Sorry but just because you think your quad-copter is really cool does not translate to it being terribly useful for everything under the sun.

    I for one do not welcome out new drone overlords. It will take a few failed startups, but I expect the fad notion of these things to fade away as their utility is explored and found to be rather wanting compared to the hype.

  • by MouseTheLuckyDog ( 2752443 ) on Monday January 05, 2015 @01:13PM (#48737607)

    The image of three buxom ( female ) lifeguards running on the beach in skintight swimsuits with their assets bouncing up and down is so much more appealing then a minature helicopter flying over the beach.

  • A defikopter does what, now?

  • Which is Perry King's attempt to pitch an "Exciting and hip sequel to the classic and beloved 80's "Riptide" TV series--starring me, Perry King!" Hopefully, this one will have more success, since "Project Riptide" mostly resulted in Perry King being banned from several studio lots and offices in L.A.

  • if these used a second 'y'. Rypetyde.

  • Isn't part of the reason we need lifeguards because often victims are either unresponsive or panicky? Lifeguarding is dangerous, sure, and faster responses are good, but just dropping rings on people in danger doesn't seem like it's going to help all that much. Maybe one day robots can do this sort of work, but right now humans are still the best, I'd think.

  • Drone to fly falling people a parachute,
    drone to fly "man on fire" a bucket of water
    and thirsty guy in desert a beverage.
  • by Anonymous Coward

    In various incarnations. Getting the flotation devices, while of value, is of limited value.

    Panic, unconsciousness, weak swimmers, low visibility - the number of things that kill this idea is enormous.

    I worked surf rescue for 7 years and have seen these ideas come and go.

    • While not addressing all concerns, I wonder if it would be more effective to automate it through the use of a swimmer-worn panic button. I envision a situation where the swimmer hits the button, and the Ryptide copter flies to the swimmer automatically. Not sure if GPS is accurate enough for that though. A life-ring dropped four feet away from a swimmer in panic is probably useless.

      • A ring dropped ON a swimmer might be bad, too.
      • I wonder if it would be more effective to automate it through the use of a swimmer-worn panic button.

        At the point you're having the swimmer wear a 'panic button', you might as well have them wear an inflatable vest to begin with, perhaps built into the body suit. Just have some sort of system that can tell the difference between 'I'm deliberately swimming under water' and 'I'm drowning!!!', which is probably a good trick to manage for a relatively lightweight and inexpensive system. It detects drowning(or the guy pulls the panic cord) and inflates.

        One thing about life vests to remember is that they only

    • I worked surf rescue for 7 years and have seen these ideas come and go.

      Did you ever get the cannon launcher for flotation devices? I thought that was a hilarious idea.

    • I think this is meant as a support tech, not a replacement for lifeguards. Something to potentially buy the person time if they're able to use it while the lifeguard works their way there. In that role it might be useful. Still won't help the unconscious, but weak and panic swimmers could still benefit by something dropped within arm's reach. I'm guessing most of the ideas you saw come and go were far less accurate, like an apparatus that flung a ring out from the beach and the ring would hopefully land

  • You appear to be drowning. Would you like a life ring?

  • Riptide? Who cares when a drone can cover me? Surf THAT wave? Sure! There's a drone to keep me from drowning. i wonder how far I can swim out before I get too tired to swim?

    Humanity's utter stupidity in seeking the very newest thrill almost guarantees two new sports and many new deaths from this. But that's what makes us human [cheerblogg.no].
  • Don't worry corpse eating bottom-feeding fish...

    uncle FAA will kill this!

  • As we saw with Firefox and Windows 8 is that change for the sake of change is bad. Especially in a corporate environment.

    You all do know the professional slow releases of Windows will go EOL every 2 to 3 years right? Be prepaired to do nothing but upgrade all day at large corps so hipsters can have their latest and greatest

  • by Anonymous Coward

    From the limited water rescue training I've had, I've always understood the biggest risk to the rescuer is the panic of the individual being rescued. I recall instructors literally telling me it is almost better to wait for the victim to fall unconscious, THEN, drag them back to shore because of the risk they pose in the panicked state they are in (i.e. grabbing, clawing and pulling you under).

    There was a local lifeguard who died last year from this very issue, not to mention a young woman that died a few

  • Could someone please drone one to me?

  • Is it just me, or does Defikopter sound like something that flies around and shits on people?

  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • Is there going to be a militarized version which drops other things?
  • ... drops brandy to skiers stuck in snow drifts (or long lift lines).

  • Is anyone else getting a laugh out of this?

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