Drones to be used for this advance technology bringing a new revolution

Drones to be used for this advance technology bringing a new revolution

*NEW DELHI - *

More than 13 per cent of drones will support embedded SIMs and advanced cellular connectivity by 2022 globally, a new report has said.

The drone market is expanding owing to the rise in number of commercial applications and cellular connectivity will be essential for emerging use-cases like live-video streaming, real-time monitoring and delivery through drones.

Cellular connectivity would help in remote identification, tracking flight path and supporting law standards defined by regulatory bodies globally.

link: by Taboola link: Sponsored Links link: . link Ultimate Way to Get Cheap Hotel Rooms!Save70.com link

"Further, eSIMs (embedded SIMs) would play an important role in cellular connectivity of drones to mitigate privacy, safety and security concerns," said Anshika Jain, research analyst at Counterpoint Research.

The embedded cellular connectivity will be driven by two major factors -- regulation for basic connectivity to share location, sensor data and analytics and operators who are increasing their efforts in this direction to add LTE capabilities to drones. Promoted: In Stores

- Amazon Fire TV Stick with Voice Remote | Streaming Media Player link

link ₹ 2,799* link₹ 3,999 link Buy link Flat Rs. 1200 off* link [image: Amazon] link - 1MORE Piston Fit Earphones with MIC- Gray link

link ₹ 799 link₹ 999 link Buy link [image: Amazon] link - Mi Redmi Note 5 Pro 64 GB (Gold) link

link ₹ 15,995 link₹ 15,999 link Buy link [image: Paytm Mall] link - Amazon Echo (Includes 1 Year Prime Membership) - Black link

link ₹ 6,999* link₹ 9,999 link Buy link Flat Rs. 3000 off* link [image: Amazon] link - Mi Band HRX Edition (Black) link

link ₹ 1,299 link₹ 1,799 link Buy link [image: Amazon] link - Samsung Galaxy A6 Plus 64 GB (Gold) link

link ₹ 20,990* link₹ 28,000 link Buy link Includes ₹ 3,000 cashback* link [image: Paytm Mall] link

Operators are working with the DFS (German Aviation Authority), EASA (European Aviation Safety Agency) and FAA (Federal Aviation Administration) to leverage LTE connectivity to make drones visible to air-traffic controllers.