Local and state governments and their elected representatives in the United States are soon going to get an earful from constituents about stunts like this.
Another thought: The FAA will soon be involved regulating drone advertising. I guess they already have some oversight over skywriters and blimps and airplanes dragging banners, but this takes things to a new level.
I can't help but feel that this is more for "column-inches" advertising than the direct "eyeballs-on-billboards" advertising. I've not played with drones for a year or two, but consider that drones have a fairly short battery life, don't fly well in breezes, and need fairly close human attention, and this is a huge amount of effort to go to if it's not for the write-ups.
Of course, column-inches are still a good way to do advertising, and this is a clever way to get that.
I always wondered why they didn't use drones to warn drivers about upcoming construction. If people had miles to merge into one lane instead of hitting a wall, I suspect people may not have to come to a stop to merge, and thus everyone can keep on moving.
You underestimate the selfishness of people. Knowledge of upcoming situations is not the issue. Rather it's the "it's more important for me to get where I'm going than it is you" that keeps people from merging until the very last second.
Merging late, and using both lanes to their fullest actually improves overall congestion (per Washington state, Minnesota, and others.) Merging early can lead to differential speeds between lanes, which encourages lane changing, which causes a general slowdown for everyone.
I think the problem is that you have two sets of people when it comes to this topic. Those that know that the best time to merge is at the end, evenly dividing traffic in a 1:1 ratio. And the other group, which thinks it's best to "merge" early.
So, half the people merge early, creating a vaccum in the soon to be merged lane. And then the other half, fills it, which promptly causes the first half to think that they're taking advantage.
Worse still, there are some "road sherrifs" (in big trucks) that not only merge early, but also try to block the other lane when they see people trying drive that lane and merge at the end. At least in my country it is quite common and police does not seem to handle this properly.
Image data takes on noise/damage when it's compressed, during things like saving and uploading to the web. When you turn that noise way up, it should be even overall. When it's wildly mismatched, it indicates pieces have been chopped in, like when a crappy voiceover has a word that's obviously wrong.
Note the sharp difference surrounding the in-focus drone's text, compared to the background drones, whose signs have a much higher level of consistency across the pages they're carrying.
Bloomberg also dates the picture (17th June in Mexico City) and sources the photographer (Brett Gundlock/Bloomberg).
The explanation that this was a one-time publicity stunt for a nice photo/short video is way simpler and rational, than either the premature claim of a fake ("I see it because of the pixels!") ore the idea of battery constrained drones being used 24/7 as advertising billboards.
But without any sensible regulation or assignment of property rights to fly commercial drones, advertising drones could be buzzing around everywhere!
To limit the ability of stores to put signs wherever they want, the are both signage/billboard regulations. If a store can't secure a billboard at a desirable intersection, they sometimes pay to put a person with a sign there. That loophole is only acceptable because there is a cost of the employee that creates a natural cap on the use of unregulated signage.
With the advent of drones, the cost of will fall dramatically and the expected result is an exponential proliferation of such drone signs. Yes, current battery technology is woefully incapable of this currently and autonomous technology isn't there yet, but as soon as the drones can be 100% autonomous and can recharge themselves on charges on the roof of a nearby building, then it simply becomes a capital cost of the drones. I think at that point is won't be simply for publicity stunts anymore. Let's hope this isn't the future we find ourselves in.
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[ 3.5 ms ] story [ 72.6 ms ] threadAnother thought: The FAA will soon be involved regulating drone advertising. I guess they already have some oversight over skywriters and blimps and airplanes dragging banners, but this takes things to a new level.
Of course, column-inches are still a good way to do advertising, and this is a clever way to get that.
Source: US roads. All day, every day.
Use those lanes and zipper at the end!
So, half the people merge early, creating a vaccum in the soon to be merged lane. And then the other half, fills it, which promptly causes the first half to think that they're taking advantage.
http://www.nytimes.com/2016/10/13/us/why-last-second-lane-me...
Summary: last-second zipper merging is actually better in many circumstances.
https://i2.uploadit.ga/img/1476562202.jpg
That looks suspiciously like someone edited at least the text into the picture.
[0] https://github.com/sentenza/GIMP-ELA
EDIT: Different picture, same story: https://i3.uploadit.ga/img/1476564394.jpg
Definitely shopped in. At least the text.
Note the sharp difference surrounding the in-focus drone's text, compared to the background drones, whose signs have a much higher level of consistency across the pages they're carrying.
The OP here links to a Bloomberg article, in which the only mention of drone advertising is the caption on the same photo.
Which yoo1I tells us analyses as photoshopped: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=12715479
I think someone photoshopped it, then Bloomberg News googled for a photo to use for the story and found it, and just put it in without checking it.
Now other people are going to start 're-blogging' it as news, with Bloomberg as the source, as in OP.
I'd think this would actually be pretty big news if it was going on, but doesn't seem to be mentioned anywhere else.
Shoddy job, Bloomberg News. If this what happened, and I think it probably is, Bloomberg has failed at journalism.
https://assets.bwbx.io/images/users/iqjWHBFdfxIU/iRzJLFQi2dc...
Bloomberg also dates the picture (17th June in Mexico City) and sources the photographer (Brett Gundlock/Bloomberg).
The explanation that this was a one-time publicity stunt for a nice photo/short video is way simpler and rational, than either the premature claim of a fake ("I see it because of the pixels!") ore the idea of battery constrained drones being used 24/7 as advertising billboards.
Can't wait for brain-computer interface to get them fed right into my thoughts...
To limit the ability of stores to put signs wherever they want, the are both signage/billboard regulations. If a store can't secure a billboard at a desirable intersection, they sometimes pay to put a person with a sign there. That loophole is only acceptable because there is a cost of the employee that creates a natural cap on the use of unregulated signage.
With the advent of drones, the cost of will fall dramatically and the expected result is an exponential proliferation of such drone signs. Yes, current battery technology is woefully incapable of this currently and autonomous technology isn't there yet, but as soon as the drones can be 100% autonomous and can recharge themselves on charges on the roof of a nearby building, then it simply becomes a capital cost of the drones. I think at that point is won't be simply for publicity stunts anymore. Let's hope this isn't the future we find ourselves in.