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Doctors Without Borders Is Experimenting With Delivery Drones To Battle An Epidemic
Drones aren’t delivering pizza just yet. But they could soon help save lives in places where health care is hard to reach
A revolutionary drone-based delivery network is being tested—in Bhutan
A Silicon Valley startup is piloting a low-cost drone-based delivery project in the remote Himalayan nation of Bhutan that could save lives in far-flung rural communities—and perhaps pioneer the system globally.
Humanitarian Drones to Deliver Medical Supplies to Roadless Areas
Greek entrepreneur Andreas Raptopoulos saw drones being used to deliver pizza and set about solving a real problem
How Matternet Wants To Bring Drone Delivery To The People Who Need It Most
A small Silicon Valley startup called Matternet has been developing drone delivery technology for several years now. The company’s co-founder and CEO Andreas Raptopoulos’ TED talk from this past summer about the potential to use small drones for delivery purposes has garnered more than 200,000 views since it was posted online last month — and perhaps helped to inspire Bezos himself
Low-Income Countries Might Get Drone Deliveries Before the U.S. Here’s Why.
A start-up called Matternet is plotting to build a drone-based package delivery service in low-income countries. Many rural roads in developing countries become inaccessible for months during the rainy season, cutting villages off from nearby cities. In those cases, lightweight, autonomous aircraft could be the fastest and most cost-effective way to move high-value cargo across the countryside.
Drones to Deliver Medicine and Food? Drones for Disaster Relief? Why Not?
Andreas Raptopoulos and his colleagues at Matternet are attempting to create a network of drones that operate like the internet, only for tangible objects.
Not Just Killing Machines: Drones Can Save Lives, Too
Drones have certainly developed a bad reputation of late. The unmanned aircraft have become known for their potential to take life. But if used properly, drones can save lives
Forget Roads – Drones are the Future of Goods Transport
In rural parts of the world, building a reliable road infrastructure seems night impossible. Andreas Raptopoulos has another idea: vast networks of drones
Drones Can Save The World, Drones Can Destroy Us All
People told Andreas Raptopoulos it was a crazy idea when he and a few of his colleagues at Matternet started talking a couple of years ago about creating invisible highways for drones to deliver critical goods. But one billon people have to deal with lousy or nonexistent roads. And billions more in urban areas are tormented by traffic congestion. So Raptopoulos and his team forged on.
TEDGlobal: Are Drones Tools of War or a Social Good? Published
Speakers at the TEDGlobal conference have been debating the positive use of drones in society. Delegates heard how drones, more usually seen as military tools, are increasingly playing a positive role in civilian life. They are offering new ways of transportation and carrying out vital conservation work
Speedy Delivery: Andreas Raptopoulos at TEDGlobal 2013
Andreas Raptopoulos wants to serve the 1 billion people on Earth with no access to all-season roads — the one-seventh of the world’s population that is too often cut off from critical medicines, supplies and goods.
Road to Nowhere: Could Drones be the Highways of The Future?
Going off-road used to mean tearing up dirt tracks in a powerful four-by-four or gigantic monster truck. For two ambitious tech start-ups however, the term has come to comprise something more subtle and potentially revolutionary. While the idea may sound far-fetched to those unfamiliar with the latest in civilian drone technology, preliminary vehicle testing has already taken place.
Drones that Do Good
Matternet wants to reframe the way the world looks at drones and use them to connect people living way off the grid
The Drone ‘Strikes’ That Spread Hope, Not Hate
The drone glides through the sky before descending silently upon a poverty-stricken community to drop its load — but this particular unmanned aircraft is delivering medicine and chocolate
Idea for Supply Chains of Flying Drones Takes Off
A fleet of small flying drones could speed up the delivery of medicines and other supplies to remote areas, and even provide a cheaper alternative to a road network, according to Matternet, a start-up company in the United States.
Flying Aid Drones Tested in Haiti and Dominican Republic
Fleet of drones could accelerate humanitarian responses and prove cheaper than roads – but research on safety needed
Tech Idea List: 5 Nerds To Watch In 2013
That is the idea behind Matternet. The drones would move matter like the Internet moves bits. Andreas Raptopoulos argues the cost would be minuscule compared with paving over a huge portion of the planet.
Q&A: Andreas Raptopoulos, co-founder and CEO, Matternet
Drones can deliver medicine and emergency supplies -- and perhaps shake up the retail world, too. So says the leader of Matternet, a startup creating a network of unmanned aerial vehicles.
Matternet: Swapping Roads for Flying Drones
Two start-ups want to replace road transport with swarms of tiny autonomous helicopters. Meet the organizations with sky-high ambitions.
Breakthrough Innovation -- Solve For X -- Bring On The Moonshots
We heard a presentation about a new mode of package transport called Matternet. MatterNet proposes to build a network of ground stations for a fleet of autonomous flying drones which can deliver packages of food, medicine ad other critical items