Using drone imagery and AI to rapidly assess damage after hurricanes and floods
7 comments
·August 1, 2025drcode
pjmlp
A matter of time, people in power will take care of that.
Then a flight plan will be uploaded to the Tet style drones to carry on their duties.
imoverclocked
I love that we are doing this but I hate that we aren't fixing the root cause of most natural disasters we will be seeing in the coming centuries.
pjmlp
Like the current increase in wars and their impact on destroying what is left of the planet, after we all started using paper straws?
yieldcrv
That’s valid, different people are working on that
vouaobrasil
Are they, though? Last time I checked, CO2 is going up without any "flattening of the curve". And whenever mainstream environmentalists annonce X megawatts added to the grid, a tech company announces that they need Y > X megawatts for AI. Plastic production goes up steadily without cessation every year, and there's still immense amounts of deforestation.
No, people "working" on it are intellectually amusing themselves with technology that could be a workable solution if only everyone actually took action and reduced their consumption, which doesn't need that technology in the first place. Pretty much all mainstream solutions are just psychological salves to make us think we are doing something.
Working on it, yeah right. We simply need to make significant reductions in CO2 output and no one is doing that.
Furthermore, technologies like this will make people less likely to do something about the root problem because it ameliorates it.
imoverclocked
Agreed. Though, at some point humanity would likely benefit from seeing itself as just humanity and not "us vs them" on this front.
great to learn from the headline that this tech only works for disaster response maps, and isn't usable for other types of maps, like mapping out the front lines of a war