Aeronyde to develop infrastructure for autonomous flying cars

December 20, 2017  - By
Image: GPS World

Aeronyde has received $4.7 million in seed financing to develop its end-to-end infrastructure for self-flying vehicles.

Aeronyde is an aerial systems company aimed at enabling safe autonomous urban flight. The company is working to integrate artificial intelligence and augmented reality into a full-service system for the safe and secure operation of commercial drones.

The investment was led by Korean electronics manufacturing giant JASTech Co. Ltd, best known for flexible OLED/QLED display. Aeronyde is applying the strategic investment to the development of hardware and systems software for autonomous fleet management.

“In the 21st century, drones will shape global transportation and distribution and redefine the urban landscape, however we’re not there yet,” said Edgar Muñoz, CEO of Aeronyde. “Adoption of unmanned aerial vehicles (UAV) platforms depends wholeheartedly on the public’s acceptance of the technology. As an industry, we must ensure public safety is addressed prior to the commercial unmanned aerial system (UAS) industry boom. This is what Aeronyde is working on.”

Through data collection and partnerships with national, state and private stakeholders, Aeronyde aims to deliver a turnkey UAV service for emergency responders, disaster relief and commercial transportation and logistics in urban areas.

“The market is growing rapidly as more countries are looking at developing UAS regulations,” said Jason Chung, Chairman of JASTech. “We are excited to invest in Aeronyde, a leader in this revolution, as they innovate UAS technology. Aeronyde is helping to build the future of Autonomous Aerial Systems with software and hardware that ensure the responsible management of drones in urban environments.”

Other Partnerships

The Aeronyde team is also working with U.S. regulators and international associations to define standards and protocols for the safe implementation of commercial drone technology. Key partnerships include:

  • IBM Watson: Aeronyde is conducting rigorous testing, working with IBM Watson to run millions of flight simulations, and collecting data on the security of the system.
  • Leading technology, systems and regulatory partners: Unifly, the Police Foundation, iSENSYS and the Global UTM Association (GUTMA), a consortium of public and private entities working on unmanned traffic management (UTM) technology.

The Aeronyde system provides flexible infrastructure for aerial logistics, transportation and data collection including:

  • real-time data analysis to contextually apply sequencing, tasking, local environment, and weather.
  • machine learning to build situational awareness.
  • live flight and testing in Aeronyde research and development centers.

The end-to-end Aeronyde hardware and software system includes:

  • autonomous flying vehicles and processors
  • airspace and flight path management
  • unmanned traffic management (UTM)
  • user interface and training programs

About the Author: Tracy Cozzens

Senior Editor Tracy Cozzens joined GPS World magazine in 2006. She also is editor of GPS World’s newsletters and the sister website Geospatial Solutions. She has worked in government, for non-profits, and in corporate communications, editing a variety of publications for audiences ranging from federal government contractors to teachers.