Trust Google rescue drones

[ad_1]

In case of problems, the first reflex is always to call the Samu or the fire department, but unfortunately its teams sometimes take a little time to arrive. Thus, the rumor says that Google would have decided to launch a new project to solve this problem, and announced it yesterday Tuesday April 5. Which new service has Google set its sights on yet?

(Embed) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cRTNvWcx9Oo (/ embed)

This ehealth highlights the “Wing Project”From Google, that is its drone delivery project which risks making a hit the day it is in service.

Google launches rescue drones

Quite simply, this type drone would intervene in the first place, before the rescue teams because faster, in order to first aid : bring a defibrilator, an allergy remedy or a ventoline if necessary.

These precious minutes saved may well change the response of firefighters at all, as rescue teams usually arrive in a small decade of minutes.

In this project, it was also a question of evoking the use, in parallel of the rescue drones which will be always faster, of autonomous cars and intelligent to intervene in the place in question, to go beyond the basic idea that was the displacement of people, to find a real and important utility.

How would these flying firefighters work?

Google has not talked about an app to prevent and warn of the need for drone intervention. It would then be enough to press a button present in a box set up by the world giant to see a wave of rescue drones deploy in the sky. That would alert the teams, of course, but should we place markers of this kind everywhere?

Google actually left much rumor and mystery hovered around this rumor of rescue drones, but this would be a very interesting and innovative added value to its drone delivery project called “Wing Project".

Dave Vos, the director of Google’s WIng project, assured that within one to two years, the use of drones would be largely democratized and we could very probably see them sailing with complete freedom and autonomy in the air every day.

[ad_2]