The Drone Network

Bryce Bladon

The Drone Network explores how drones are reshaping the world. Hosted by Bryce Bladon, the podcast documents the tech, economics and people piloting the world's largest standardized drone imagery network.

  1. Drone Imagery, Spatial Scale, and the Future of Physical AI

    MAY 4

    Drone Imagery, Spatial Scale, and the Future of Physical AI

    What makes drone data valuable — and who should be using it? Ben Kovacs is the Senior Product Marketing Lead at Spexi Geospatial, and he spent his early career inside the commercial satellite industry, helping customers navigate the gap between what space-based imaging promised and what it could actually deliver. From drones to satellites to the systems that will eventually task them automatically, this episode covers spatial data, how it's changing, and what's still misunderstood.  In this episode: The scale vs. detail tradeoff: where drones win, where satellites win, and why a distributed pilot network changes the mathWhat "data freshness" actually means and how to explain it to someone who's never thought about itWhy standardization is the unlock for drone data reaching its potentialThe industries most underserved by spatial data right now (cities and utilities)How to tell real drone use cases from hype (real business)The concept of parametric tasking: a future where sensors in the field automatically trigger imaging requests without a human in the loopThe Drone Network is sponsored by Spexi Geospatial and LayerDrone. Learn more at spexi.com and layerdrone.org.(00:00) - Drone Imagery, Spatial Scale, and the Future of Physical AI (00:38) - Ben's Background: From Space Tech to Spexi (02:03) - Selling the Abstract: Satellite Data and the Expectation Gap (04:00) - Are Drones and Satellites Converging? (06:53) - What Makes Drone Data Different (and Better — and Worse) (08:47) - Explaining Data Freshness Without the Jargon (10:40) - The Temporal Layer: Maps, Change, and Prediction (12:39) - Standardization: Why It's the Key to Drone Data at Scale (14:54) - Who's Underserved by Spatial Data? (Cities & Utilities) (16:57) - Marketing a Product That's Still Being Built (18:10) - Hype vs. Real Use Cases — How to Tell the Difference (20:17) - What's Next: Parametric Tasking and Machine-Requested Data (22:04) - What Feels Different About Geospatial Right Now (24:35) - Drone or Don't? (26:35) - Thanks for listening! Click here to view the episode transcript.

    27 min
  2. The Drone You'll Never See Is Changing the World

    APR 20

    The Drone You'll Never See Is Changing the World

    The drone you'll never see is also the most important one in the sky. It weighs 249 grams — one gram under the FAA's registration threshold, which means it barely appears in official statistics. It flies a preprogrammed grid over a suburb, takes a few hundred photos, lands, and does it again. Nobody films it. Nobody notices. And that invisibility is precisely what makes it work. This episode explores the gap between what we think drones are for — military strikes, delivery, light shows, FPV racing — and what the industry actually does. Mapping and surveying dominate commercial drone use. The energy sector spends more on drone services than any other industry. Drone-based road monitoring can generate a 980% return on investment. None of it makes exciting video. All of it is quietly reshaping infrastructure, planning, and the economics of how we understand the world. (00:00) - The drone you'll never see, and why it's everywhere (03:04) - What we think drones are for (06:37) - The data and where drone money actually goes (09:09) - Invisibility is a feature with drones (11:28) - II: The invisible fleat building the world's largest drone network (13:05) - Who's building the world's largest drone network (16:31) - Invisible work makes the visible work better (18:22) - Who buys drone data? Why upgrade the world map? (21:06) - III: Boring is the point of good infrastructure (22:33) - When technology becomes infrastructure, they stop electrocuting the elephant in the room (24:46) - Why does upgrading a map matter, anyways? (26:41) - When data becomes infrastructure Click here to view the episode transcript.

    29 min
  3. The Biggest Mistake Drone Pilots Make Has Nothing to Do with Flying | Dylan Gorman

    APR 13

    The Biggest Mistake Drone Pilots Make Has Nothing to Do with Flying | Dylan Gorman

    Dylan Gorman has flown 7,500+ drone missions, built and sold a drone business, and trained tens of thousands of pilots through PilotByte. He's one of the most experienced commercial drone operators in North America, and one of the most popular LiDAR content creators on YouTube. He shares his insights on what is actually needed to start a successful drone venture.  (00:00) - The Biggest Mistake Pilots Make Has Nothing To Do With Flying | Dylan Gorman (00:33) - How a pilot with 7,500+ missions introduces themselves (01:20) - How long does it take to fly 7500 missions? (02:47) - What's the top drone lesson from experience? (04:47) - What is the most common mistake Dylan sees from first-time pilots? (07:44) - The 3 things every successful drone business delivers (08:17) - How Dylan sold a drone business (14:40) - How a proof of concept got a client and sold a business (15:34) - What's something the drone industry gets wrong? (17:10) - "Drone Operator" is not a business; "Solution's Engineer" makes one though. (20:54) - Why niches are so important to drone businesses (23:43) - What does a "saturated" area of the LayerDrone network look like? (27:53) - What's a mistake drone operators make with their business? (32:11) - Thanks for listening 🔗 Dylan on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@dylangorman🔗 PilotByte (Dylan's training): https://www.pilotbyte.com 🔗 LayerDrone: https://layerdrone.org 🔗 Spexi Geospatial: https://spexi.com

    34 min
  4. Why Every Map You've Ever Used Is Already Outdated

    MAR 23

    Why Every Map You've Ever Used Is Already Outdated

    Every map you've ever used was already outdated the moment you opened it. In this episode, Bryce breaks down why the world's mapping infrastructure has a staleness problem — and why, until recently, fixing it was economically impossible. (00:00) - Why maps need an upgrade (01:18) - Today's episode: maps are stale, here's what it costs for drones to update them (01:33) - How maps are made today... and why it's not enough (03:34) - Why map quality matters (and why that means keeping it updated) (06:03) - Maps tied to agriculture need an upgrade too (07:32) - Why stale maps exist, and why the solution hasn't existed until now (09:25) - A drone network is like YouTube: it's about distribution (10:13) - We're upgrading the world map here, people (11:01) - Thanks for listening! Topics covered: how satellites, fixed-wing aircraft, and Street View cars each work and where each one breaks down; why stale spatial data isn't just an inconvenience but a material problem for insurance underwriting, urban planning, wildfire preparedness, and agriculture; the protection gap and what Swiss Re's flood risk research says about data freshness; precision agriculture and multi-spectral imaging; and why the drone network solution isn't a technology breakthrough — it's a cost structure change, the same kind that made YouTube possible. Hosted by Bryce Bladon. Edited by AJ Fillari.  Theme: Lately - Kicktracks  Sponsored by Spexi.com and LayerDrone.org

    12 min
  5. Why 249 Grams Is the Key to Drones as Infrastructure

    MAR 16

    Why 249 Grams Is the Key to Drones as Infrastructure

    In 2018, pilot Alec Wilson was on approach to Vancouver's low airspace when he spotted something that shouldn't have been there: a small consumer drone in a corridor used by manned aircraft. This episode is about what happened next, and why it was shaped by a number: 249 grams. Specifically, why that single weight threshold — set by regulators for narrow safety reasons — became the enabling condition for a global aerial data network nobody planned. (00:00) - Why 249 Grams Is The Key To Drones As Infrastructure (00:41) - Show introduction (01:30) - It's time to talk about sky law! (02:55) - How do you regulate drones? (04:38) - Why a 249 grams is the the key to everything (05:58) - How drone infrastructure came to exist (07:41) - How a policy decision can change everything, like GPS (09:06) - A reminder: regulations are not set in stone (10:27) - How important infrastructure is actually built In this episode: How aviation authorities worldwide converged on the 250-gram threshold after ballistic testing and risk analysisWhy DJI engineered the Mavic Mini to 249 grams — and why that one gram of margin was a deliberate product decision, not an accidentThe regulatory category that 249g unlocks: simplified airspace access, no commercial certification in most jurisdictions, dramatically lower operational overheadWhy the LayerDrone Network depends entirely on that weight class — and what happens if the threshold movesThe GPS selective availability parallel: how a 2000 Clinton administration policy decision accidentally powered Uber, Pokémon Go, and precision agricultureThe difference between infrastructure built on purpose and infrastructure assembled around regulation — and why the latter is faster to build but harder to defendDJI's 84% global market share as both LayerDrone's greatest operational advantage and its biggest latent geopolitical riskHosted by Bryce Bladon. Edited by AJ Fillari.  Theme: Lately - Kicktracks  Sponsored by LayerDrone.org and Spexi.com

    13 min
  6. How One Person Creates Missions for Thousands of Drone Pilots

    MAR 9

    How One Person Creates Missions for Thousands of Drone Pilots

    What does it take to turn a client request into a flyable drone mission — safely, at scale, across thousands of pilots worldwide? Mason Pahl, Geospatial Data Lead at Spexi Geospatial, is the human layer that makes it happen. In this episode, Mason breaks down the end-to-end geospatial data pipeline: from mission planning and airspace safety checks to data processing and client delivery. He also traces his own path into the field — from scanning forests on snowmobiles with a generator strapped to the back, to designing autonomous flight plans for pilots he'll never meet, in places he's never been. What geospatial data actually is (and why you already use it every day)How a mission goes from "we need imagery of this city block" to a pilot-ready flight planThe safety and liability challenges of designing missions for a distributed networkReal-world data applications: digital twins, infrastructure monitoring, and crowd management at live eventsMason's drone journey — from DJI Inspire in remote forestry to Mavic Air 2 for weekend 3D modelingDrone... or don't! (00:00) - How One Person Creates Missions For Thousands of Flying Robots (00:51) - What does a Geospatial Data Lead do? (02:26) - How a data lead got started with drones (04:37) - Mason's first drone (05:36) - Mason's drone kit for fun and work (06:08) - How a mission is created on the LayerDrone network (08:01) - Where does drone network data go? (09:37) - How do you design missions for thousands of pilots? (11:01) - How do you explain geospatial drone data to your parents? (11:55) - Drone... or don't! Which ones the lie? (13:30) - Thanks for listening! The Drone Network documents the tech, economics, and people piloting the world's largest standardized drone imagery network. New episodes every week. Sponsored by Spexi Geospatial and LayerDrone. Learn more at Spexi.com and LayerDrone.org.Hosted by Bryce Bladon. Edited by AJ Fillari.  Theme: Lately - Kicktracks

    14 min
5
out of 5
4 Ratings

About

The Drone Network explores how drones are reshaping the world. Hosted by Bryce Bladon, the podcast documents the tech, economics and people piloting the world's largest standardized drone imagery network.

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