What's new

As Chinese Drones Are Grounded On US Soil, Skydio USA Soars To $1 Billion Value Overnight

F-22Raptor

ELITE MEMBER
Joined
Jun 19, 2014
Messages
16,980
Reaction score
3
Country
United States
Location
United States
Drone company Skydio has recently announced that it has raised $170 million in funding, which brings the total to over $340 million.
This makes the California-based firm the first US drone maker to be valued at more than $1billion in fundraising.

This can be seen as one of the most note-worthy fundraisings ever since the U.S. Government has started to systematically ban drone models that are “subject to or vulnerable to extrajudicial direction from a foreign government.”
For instance, in 2017, the U.S. Army banned Chinese drones because of security issues, with the Department of Defense doing the same in 2018.

A year after that, the U.S. Department of Homeland Security explicitly warned U.S. companies against the use of Chinese drones citing spying concerns, while in 2020 the Interior Department grounded its entire fleet of aerial drones over potential cybersecurity risks.


“This is an important milestone for us as a company, but also for the U.S. drone industry,” said Adam Bry, CEO, and Co-founder of Skydio. “Together with our customers, we’re proving that a U.S. company can lead the way in this industry through AI and autonomy. Things are already pretty exciting, but we are just scratching the surface of what autonomous drones can do.”

From a small startup founded in 2014 by three friends who met at MIT, it became an impressive robotics and artificial intelligence company that operates on the premise that autonomy is the answer to unlocking a drone’s full potential.

February 2018 brought the launch of its first product, Skydio R1, a drone that focuses on an autonomous flight while using no less than 13 onboard cameras to analyze and navigate its environment.

The then $1.999 device was powered by an Nvidia-made onboard computer that made it possible for it to map its surroundings so it could then plan and predict its flight path while avoiding obstacles as it tracked and filmed a subject.

Skydio’s latest drone model, the X2, was awarded a Best of Innovation Award at CES 2021 with the device scheduled to be available from Q4 this year at a price yet unannounced.

One of its configurations, the Skydio X2D, has been build specifically to meet U.S. Army requirements and has already been selected as a trusted drone platform for one of the Department of Defense and Federal’s projects. The Skydio X2E on the other hand has been designed for enterprises, first responders, and civilian agencies.


The initial wave of hype around enterprise drones passed many years ago, but we’re now seeing these markets really mature,” said David Ulevitch, General Partner at Andressen Horowitz, a venture capital firm in Silicon Valley.

“Autonomy is the key for drones to reach scale, and Skydio has established themselves as the defining company in this category. We’re excited to continue to invest in this magical combination of breakthrough technology, rapid growth, and an incredible team in a market that’s going through an inflection point.”

An analysis from market researcher Valuates Reports predicts that the global market for commercial drones is projected to reach as much as $35billion by 2026, from the $6.5billion in 2020.

And as the report shows, it seems that one of the advantages of the Covid-19 pandemic is that it made the growing necessity of touch-less technology, as well as its safety, stand out in stark relief, something which in return gave a visible boost to the drone market.

https://techthelead.com/as-chinese-...kydio-usa-soars-to-1-billion-value-overnight/
 
. .
Communist Soviet Russia spent billions subsidizing uncompetitive industries to keep employment numbers up and out of paranoia.
$2000 for a high quality autonomous flying and surveillance drone.. How is this uncompetitive?

Alternative supply chains and manufacturing infrastructure are being developed to better compete with sweatshop workers.
 
.
$2000 for a high quality autonomous flying and surveillance drone.. How is this uncompetitive?

Alternative supply chains and manufacturing infrastructure are being developed to better compete with sweatshop workers.

ah, this creature knows how to form words and pound away at a keyboard.
 
.
Drone company Skydio has recently announced that it has raised $170 million in funding, which brings the total to over $340 million.
This makes the California-based firm the first US drone maker to be valued at more than $1billion in fundraising.

This can be seen as one of the most note-worthy fundraisings ever since the U.S. Government has started to systematically ban drone models that are “subject to or vulnerable to extrajudicial direction from a foreign government.”
For instance, in 2017, the U.S. Army banned Chinese drones because of security issues, with the Department of Defense doing the same in 2018.

A year after that, the U.S. Department of Homeland Security explicitly warned U.S. companies against the use of Chinese drones citing spying concerns, while in 2020 the Interior Department grounded its entire fleet of aerial drones over potential cybersecurity risks.


“This is an important milestone for us as a company, but also for the U.S. drone industry,” said Adam Bry, CEO, and Co-founder of Skydio. “Together with our customers, we’re proving that a U.S. company can lead the way in this industry through AI and autonomy. Things are already pretty exciting, but we are just scratching the surface of what autonomous drones can do.”

From a small startup founded in 2014 by three friends who met at MIT, it became an impressive robotics and artificial intelligence company that operates on the premise that autonomy is the answer to unlocking a drone’s full potential.

February 2018 brought the launch of its first product, Skydio R1, a drone that focuses on an autonomous flight while using no less than 13 onboard cameras to analyze and navigate its environment.

The then $1.999 device was powered by an Nvidia-made onboard computer that made it possible for it to map its surroundings so it could then plan and predict its flight path while avoiding obstacles as it tracked and filmed a subject.

Skydio’s latest drone model, the X2, was awarded a Best of Innovation Award at CES 2021 with the device scheduled to be available from Q4 this year at a price yet unannounced.

One of its configurations, the Skydio X2D, has been build specifically to meet U.S. Army requirements and has already been selected as a trusted drone platform for one of the Department of Defense and Federal’s projects. The Skydio X2E on the other hand has been designed for enterprises, first responders, and civilian agencies.


The initial wave of hype around enterprise drones passed many years ago, but we’re now seeing these markets really mature,” said David Ulevitch, General Partner at Andressen Horowitz, a venture capital firm in Silicon Valley.

“Autonomy is the key for drones to reach scale, and Skydio has established themselves as the defining company in this category. We’re excited to continue to invest in this magical combination of breakthrough technology, rapid growth, and an incredible team in a market that’s going through an inflection point.”

An analysis from market researcher Valuates Reports predicts that the global market for commercial drones is projected to reach as much as $35billion by 2026, from the $6.5billion in 2020.

And as the report shows, it seems that one of the advantages of the Covid-19 pandemic is that it made the growing necessity of touch-less technology, as well as its safety, stand out in stark relief, something which in return gave a visible boost to the drone market.

https://techthelead.com/as-chinese-...kydio-usa-soars-to-1-billion-value-overnight/
Drone technology shows how powerful the Chinese are in drones.
Huawei is the best until western put sanction on it.
Darpa used million $ and decades for , human robot china did all this in a decade.
Land on mars.
Shame on western that can not level with china came with sanctions.
 
.
Drone technology shows how powerful the Chinese are in drones.
Huawei is the best until western put sanction on it.
Darpa used million $ and decades for , human robot china did all this in a decade.
Land on mars.
Shame on western that can not level with china came with sanctions.
DJI is still the best by far.
 
.
ah, this creature knows how to form words and pound away at a keyboard.
Thank you, my dear. It is such a pleasure to gain acknowledgement from the one of the CCP's foremost keyboard warriors on this forum.
 
.
Drone company Skydio has recently announced that it has raised $170 million in funding, which brings the total to over $340 million.
This makes the California-based firm the first US drone maker to be valued at more than $1billion in fundraising.

This can be seen as one of the most note-worthy fundraisings ever since the U.S. Government has started to systematically ban drone models that are “subject to or vulnerable to extrajudicial direction from a foreign government.”
For instance, in 2017, the U.S. Army banned Chinese drones because of security issues, with the Department of Defense doing the same in 2018.

A year after that, the U.S. Department of Homeland Security explicitly warned U.S. companies against the use of Chinese drones citing spying concerns, while in 2020 the Interior Department grounded its entire fleet of aerial drones over potential cybersecurity risks.


“This is an important milestone for us as a company, but also for the U.S. drone industry,” said Adam Bry, CEO, and Co-founder of Skydio. “Together with our customers, we’re proving that a U.S. company can lead the way in this industry through AI and autonomy. Things are already pretty exciting, but we are just scratching the surface of what autonomous drones can do.”

From a small startup founded in 2014 by three friends who met at MIT, it became an impressive robotics and artificial intelligence company that operates on the premise that autonomy is the answer to unlocking a drone’s full potential.

February 2018 brought the launch of its first product, Skydio R1, a drone that focuses on an autonomous flight while using no less than 13 onboard cameras to analyze and navigate its environment.

The then $1.999 device was powered by an Nvidia-made onboard computer that made it possible for it to map its surroundings so it could then plan and predict its flight path while avoiding obstacles as it tracked and filmed a subject.

Skydio’s latest drone model, the X2, was awarded a Best of Innovation Award at CES 2021 with the device scheduled to be available from Q4 this year at a price yet unannounced.

One of its configurations, the Skydio X2D, has been build specifically to meet U.S. Army requirements and has already been selected as a trusted drone platform for one of the Department of Defense and Federal’s projects. The Skydio X2E on the other hand has been designed for enterprises, first responders, and civilian agencies.


The initial wave of hype around enterprise drones passed many years ago, but we’re now seeing these markets really mature,” said David Ulevitch, General Partner at Andressen Horowitz, a venture capital firm in Silicon Valley.

“Autonomy is the key for drones to reach scale, and Skydio has established themselves as the defining company in this category. We’re excited to continue to invest in this magical combination of breakthrough technology, rapid growth, and an incredible team in a market that’s going through an inflection point.”

An analysis from market researcher Valuates Reports predicts that the global market for commercial drones is projected to reach as much as $35billion by 2026, from the $6.5billion in 2020.

And as the report shows, it seems that one of the advantages of the Covid-19 pandemic is that it made the growing necessity of touch-less technology, as well as its safety, stand out in stark relief, something which in return gave a visible boost to the drone market.

https://techthelead.com/as-chinese-...kydio-usa-soars-to-1-billion-value-overnight/

 
.
Communist Soviet Russia spent billions subsidizing uncompetitive industries to keep employment numbers up and out of paranoia.
The "free market" already decided it sucks by 2020 when it turned out as low quality junk, then the company got some helping hands from the usual US regime linked and subsidized companies and the US regime itself, because as bad as it was its still the best their industry could produce and they really want to push this wreck through and make it a thing. Suddenly for the revival you have US regime interventions pulling the competition out of the race and US regime mouthpieces and US regime keyboard warriors pump out ads about it to kick them back into the market.

Of course its underhanded and dishonest how they lie about it, but not playing fair is another thing and its their decission its their market. At the the end of the day Americans living in their propaganda bubble wil neither hear about it nor care how a company survived or came to be or about subsidies making inferior American products and production lines competitive. Apple is known as the American design trendsetter for phones not as the design and IP thief the are. Google is best known for a product they didnt invent or innovate Americans still love them and buy into it.
 
.
The "free market" already decided it sucks by 2020 when it turned out as low quality junk, then the company got some helping hands from the usual US regime linked and subsidized companies and the US regime itself, because as bad as it was its still the best their industry could produce and they really want to push this wreck through and make it a thing. Suddenly for the revival you have US regime interventions pulling the competition out of the race and US regime mouthpieces and US regime keyboard warriors pump out ads about it to kick them back into the market.

Of course its underhanded and dishonest how they lie about it, but not playing fair is another thing and its their decission its their market. At the the end of the day Americans living in their propaganda bubble wil neither hear about it nor care how a company survived or came to be or about subsidies making inferior American products and production lines competitive. Apple is known as the American design trendsetter for phones not as the design and IP thief the are. Google is best known for a product they didnt invent or innovate Americans still love them and buy into it.

LOL! As if China has never banned US software, websites, and other things...
 
.
when US can't compete, it turn to same tactics it's accusing others are doing. US accusing others of unfair subsidy when it's in the #1 position, but when it's behind others, it does exactly the same thing, subsidize its own industries.
 
. .
LOL! As if China has never banned US software, websites, and other things...
If US complied with China censorship, they can always do business in China. But some Chinese software and business no matter what , cant gain foothold in US becos local cant compete competitive with Chinese.

Another orange and apple comparison from you.
 
.
when US can't compete, it turn to same tactics it's accusing others are doing. US accusing others of unfair subsidy when it's in the #1 position, but when it's behind others, it does exactly the same thing, subsidize its own industries.

WTF? Why are the Chinese here being so thick headed?????

The Chinese drone ban is only for the US Government using Chinese drones not consumers.

Look DJI is still sold in stores..here see...can the Chinese in this thread get a brain please and actually read the article!!!


Geez how do you guys cross the street without being runover by cars???

Oh and speaking of cars and government bans about gps/cameras..

So obviously China can't compete at all in the EV market and the usual tripe spewed in this thread by the hypocrites....blah..blah..blah...blah..blah..blah...blah..blah..blah...blah..blah..blah...blah..blah..blah...blah..blah..blah
 
Last edited:
.
WTF? Why are the Chinese here being so thick headed?????

The Chinese drone ban is only for the US Government using Chinese drones not consumers.

Look DJI is still sold in stores..here see...can the Chinese in this thread get a brain please and actually read the article!!!


Geez how do you guys cross the street without being runover by cars???

Oh and speaking of cars and government bans about cameras..

So obviosly China can't compete and the usual tripe spewed in this thread by the hypocrites....blah..blah..blah...blah..blah..blah...blah..blah..blah...blah..blah..blah...blah..blah..blah...blah..blah..blah
This ban is learnt from US. What's your complained? Don't forget, it's u who started ban based on national security excuse first. Not China.. :enjoy:
 
.

Pakistan Defence Latest Posts

Country Latest Posts

Back
Top Bottom