Lifesaving Drone Makes First Rescue In Australia (yahoo.com) 45
Zorro shares a report from Yahoo News: A pair of Australian swimmers on Thursday became the first people to be rescued in the ocean by a drone when the aerial lifesaver dropped a safety device to distressed teens caught in rough seas. In what is believed to be a world-first drone surf rescue, two boys on Thursday got caught in three-meter (10-foot) swells while swimming off Lennox Head in New South Wales, near the border with Queensland. Beachgoers onshore raised the alarm to the lifeguards who then alerted the drone pilot, and the aerial lifesaver was deployed in moments.
Along with their ability to spot swimmers in trouble and deliver life saving devices faster than traditional lifesaving techniques, like launching surfboards or rubber dinghies, drones are being used in Australia to spot underwater predators like sharks and jellyfish. Artificial intelligence is being developed using thousands of images captured by a drone camera to build an algorithm that can identify different ocean objects. The software can differentiate between sea creatures, like sharks which it can recognize with more than 90 percent accuracy, compared to about 16 percent with the naked eye.
Along with their ability to spot swimmers in trouble and deliver life saving devices faster than traditional lifesaving techniques, like launching surfboards or rubber dinghies, drones are being used in Australia to spot underwater predators like sharks and jellyfish. Artificial intelligence is being developed using thousands of images captured by a drone camera to build an algorithm that can identify different ocean objects. The software can differentiate between sea creatures, like sharks which it can recognize with more than 90 percent accuracy, compared to about 16 percent with the naked eye.
Not that we're keeping score (Score:1)
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AI crap again... (Not AI) (Score:2)
Artificial intelligence is being developed using thousands of images captured by a drone camera to build an algorithm that can identify different ocean objects. The software can differentiate between sea creature...
There we go, AI crap again! (Not AI) ;-)
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I remember they trialled this on Bondi Rescue (Score:3, Interesting)
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Not only did the jetski win, the victim can be taken back to shore with the jetski. All the drone can do is drop a floatation device that the victim must catch and use to keep afloat while real help arrives. If they miss, too bad, it only has one shot.
The person on the jetski can also help people who have started drowning and are unconscious.
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Yes.
It's never going to be a replacement for a lifeguard though. If would always need to be sent out in addition to a lifeguard as it can't actually bring anyone back to shore. Even if it deployed a harpoon, it wouldn't have enough thrust to keep itself in the air and pull them back at the same time.
Re: I remember they trialled this on Bondi Rescue (Score:1)
You don't actually need to bring most people back to shore. Most people drown due to physical exhaustion trying to fight the ocean. If you give them a flotation device they can rest a little and recompose and then make their own way to the shore, as which is what happened in this case.
Even if they do need retrieval, the flotation device can buy a lot of time for a life saver to respond.
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Re:I remember they trialled this on Bondi Rescue (Score:4, Interesting)
You could of course do drones on rotation, so one is always up in rescue position and of course they would be enormously cheaper. So race ignores logical application and the drone could have a strong cord attached to the flotation device and ensure the flotation device is delivered to the person being rescued, whilst a board makes it's way out there. Depending upon the power output of the drone, it could also tow the person holding onto the flotation device back into shore. Now if you have three on rotation, so one is always up in the air, all three can be deployed at the same time if necessary, more than one rescue at a time, and nearby beaches.
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Sounds very expensive to me.
Half a dozen drones, a hundred or so batteries, a crew of pilots, a fully stocked set of spare parts. And a new drone no one has invented yet that won't fall out the sky and kill some poor swimmer when something fails while it's hovering over their head "patrolling".
I still don't really see the need for this. If you want to patrol for sharks, a drone with fixed wings is much more efficient and safer.
Re:I remember they trialled this on Bondi Rescue (Score:4, Insightful)
It's obvious the jetski is by far more useful. But if it's a speed test, this doesn't seem fair. 1) They made the drone operator run from the watch tower 100ft to waterline. 2) The jetski was sitting there 8ft from water, 3) with a 4-wheeler 4) and a driver waiting to help him launch.
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I think where the drone would beat the jetski would be when they have difficulties locating the victim. There have been other Bondi Rescue episodes showing the rescuers searching the ocean for a person who, for all they knew, may have dropped below the surface. Even in the cases when dropping a floatation device would be of minimal value, being able to provide guidance to other lifeguards would be invaluable.
I can't believe it!!!!!!!! (Score:2)
So, they knew WHERE they must go and the FASTEST won!!!!! Unbelievable!!!!
Now, on MORE REAL SCENARIOS, where you don't have a f*c*ing idea WHERE YOUR TARGET IS... How would win?
Fastest or the one with WIDEST POINT OF VIEW?
Re:I remember they trialled this on Bondi Rescue (Score:5, Insightful)
The ideal situation would be to have a drone for spotting, with the capability to drop a flotation device, and have the jetski driver make use of the drone to determine where to go in rough seas.
Image recognition (Score:2)
So it can detect Shark or Not Shark?
Like Hotdog and Not Hotdog?
This story is not what it seems (Score:2, Interesting)
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I've done a quick and fairly limited search for a source for this, but everyone seems to be gushing about the rescue.
The boys don't look to be in distress in the drone's footage (in my totally unqualified opinion), and seem perfectly capable of heading to shore once the flotation device is dropped, so your description of events seems plausible. I presume that there are already shark spotting drones in the area, and that this new drone was mistaken as being one of those by the boys.
Where did you find/see the
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From Seven News Queenland broadcast: https://youtu.be/4hAbTH9zQ_Y?t=44
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A lot of rescues are done for reasons not needing a rescue. Question: 2 swimmers are 700m from the shore in 3m swells and someone worried has reported them. What do you as a lifesaver do?
Frankly dropping a pod from a drone sounds like a better alternative than getting a team of 2 people to swim / boat out. This has happened to me frequently. I grew up on the beach but now live in Europe where people's ability to swim leaves a bit to be desired. I was happily swimming down the coast in the north sea when I g
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Adding to my previous reply, you mentioned based on your unqualified opinion they may have made it back to shore. Unfortunately that's the same opinion of most people who get pulled out of the water. Very few people are able to recognize signs that they are in trouble until it's waaaaay too late.
There's been cases of lifeguards rushing into water to save drowning children while their parents were right next to them not realising they were in distress. It's a hard thing to differentiate too. Something as sim
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Late reply, just wanted to acknowledge that the comments that you and @thegarbz (above) made are appreciated. Being shown points I hadn't considered or properly appreciated in a civil manner is refreshing.
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Fair and reasonable comments, all.
I realise that I'm coming back to this a couple of days later, but on the chance you see this - thanks.
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You're welcome.
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When interviewed the boys said they were not drowning but distressed because the drone is used to spot sharks and it scared them.
Completely irrelevant. They were reported to life savers by others which prompted a response. Whether or not they were drowning doesn't change that 2 people were in 3 meter swells some 700m off the coast. One way or the other they would have been fetched by lifesavers, the difference is the response time of the drone was much faster than traditionally launching the boat or worse, swimming out on a board.
It's also worth noting that it has been a nasty few weeks for drownings in Australia. Whether or not they
RPAS (drones) could save millions of lives if (Score:2)
A lot of traffic in cities, up to 50%, is delivering small parcels, often just papers, between business. And we are breathing all that toxic fossil fuel exhaust from traffic jams.
All that anti-drone neo-luddism is not coming free.