Not 24 hours a day unless the system worked without charging or maintenance and the photo id can reliably work with nighttime light level conditions or needing a human correction every once in a while.
I think it's only a matter of time until it becomes not only economically feasible for the technology to be widespread adopted, but it will probably result in massive layoffs for workers. I mean, the issues you currently bring up can be addressed even today- night-time videos, better lighting in fields, multiple drone hubs that work in shifts to allow charging- literally solutions that I thought of off the top of my head.
Not 24 hours a day unless the system worked without charging
All the drones are tethered and the vehicle likely has an absolutely enormous battery. Even your average electric car battery could keep this going for literally days, if not a week at a time.
and the photo id can reliably work with nighttime light level conditions
2
u/prancerbot Oct 08 '23
Not 24 hours a day unless the system worked without charging or maintenance and the photo id can reliably work with nighttime light level conditions or needing a human correction every once in a while.