>
Mental Health Detentions and the Criminalization of Dissent
Marlow: Investigation Season--Lawfare Judge Boasberg's Russiagate Connection Revealed
PM Viktor Orbán on Hungary's Relationship with the EU
Hurricane Erin rapidly intensifies into catastrophic Category-5 monster storm:
Chinese Scientists Produce 'Impossible' Steel to Line Nuclear Fusion Reactors in Major Break
1,000 miles: EV range world record demolished ... by a pickup truck
Fermented Stevia Extract Kills Pancreatic Cancer Cells In Lab Tests
3D printing set to slash nuclear plant build times & costs
You can design the wheels for NASA's next moon vehicle with the 'Rock and Roll Challenge
'Robot skin' beats human reflexes, transforms grip with fabric-powered touch
World's first nuclear fusion plant being built in US to power Microsoft data centers
The mitochondria are more than just the "powerhouse of the cell" – they initiate immune...
Historic Aviation Engine Advance to Unlock Hypersonic Mach 10 Planes
OpenAI CEO Sam Altman Pitches Eyeball-Scanning World ID to Bankers
New Drone Rules
Reuters reports US Proposes New Drone Rules May Lead to Starbucks, Amazon Deliveries.
The U.S. Transportation Department is proposing new rules to speed deployment of drones beyond the visual line of sight of operators, a key change needed to advance commercial uses like package deliveries.
Under current rules, operators need to get individual waivers or exemptions to use drones without visual line of sight. The department said eliminating those requirements "will significantly expand the use-case for drone technologies in areas like: manufacturing, farming, energy production, filmmaking, and the movement of products including lifesaving medications."
The proposal includes new requirements for manufacturers, operators, and drone traffic-management services to keep drones safely separated from other drones and airplanes.
"It's going to change the way that people and products move throughout our airspace… so you may change the way you get your Amazon package, you may get a Starbucks cup of coffee from a drone," Duffy said.
"Industry needs this rule to make sure they can use this technology that's going to allow them to do business more efficiently and effectively."
Amazon esumed testing drone deliveries earlier this year at two locations in Texas and Arizona. Amazon has a goal of delivering 500 million packages annually by drone by the end of 2030.
Under the proposal, operations would occur at or below 400 feet above ground from pre-designated locations approved by the Federal Aviation Administration.
Operators would identify boundaries and approximate daily flights and takeoff, landing and loading areas and ensure procedures if communications with drones are lost.
Drones would yield to all manned aircraft broadcasting their position and not interfere with operations at airports.
The Transportation Security Administration would require flight coordinators and others to obtain security threat assessments and a fingerprint-based criminal history records check.