‘DroneHunter’ Hunts For Unauthorized Drones
02 May 2018 Leave a comment
in economics of crime, transport economics Tags: drones
4 WAYS TO TAKE DOWN ILLEGAL DRONES
30 Nov 2016 1 Comment
in economics of crime, industrial organisation, law and economics, property rights Tags: drones
World’s first pizza delivery by drone
26 Aug 2016 Leave a comment
in economics, politics - New Zealand, technological progress, transport economics Tags: drones
BP predicted drone technology being used for deliveries
21 Aug 2016 Leave a comment
in economics, economics of media and culture Tags: creative destruction, drones
A rocket launcher to capture drones
18 Apr 2016 Leave a comment
in economics, economics of media and culture Tags: drones
This drone catches other drones by shooting nets at them – Telegraph
12 Jan 2016 Leave a comment
in entrepreneurship, transport economics Tags: drones
Tokyo police are using drones with nets to catch other drones
12 Dec 2015 Leave a comment
in economics of media and culture, entrepreneurship, law and economics Tags: drones
The Tokyo Metropolitan Police Department has introduced a fleet of interceptor drones, designed to catch suspicious-looking drones in nets
Source: Tokyo police are using drones with nets to catch other drones – Telegraph
Justice Scalia on killing terrorists with drones
27 Sep 2015 Leave a comment
in laws of war, politics - USA, war and peace Tags: drones, Justice Scalia, war on terror
#Drones and entrepreneurial alertness in thieving
27 Aug 2015 Leave a comment
in economics of crime, law and economics, technological progress Tags: creative destruction, crime and punishment, drones, entrepreneurial alertness
I welcome #amazon drones. But I also think future drone rustlers will shoot down or net them. New crime opportunity. http://t.co/KjAuqhA8Lm—
Danny Rose (@_DannyRose) July 30, 2015
The robots are coming, the robots are coming to property values
16 May 2015 Leave a comment
in applied price theory, economics of media and culture, entrepreneurship, industrial organisation, survivor principle, technological progress, transport economics, urban economics Tags: agglomeration, compensating differentials, creative destruction, driverless cars, drones, entrepreneurial alertness, land prices, land supply
A few years ago, Casey Mulligan wrote a fascinating little op-ed about the impact of drones on land prices and urban living.
As drones and driverless cars make it cheaper to move people around cities, the value of inner-city land will fall simply because their proximity to the action has diminished.
With drones and driverless cars, it will be easier to bring something in on the just-in-time basis rather than have it on hand as inventory or within walking distance because traffic congestion makes it too slow to call it up from the suburbs through the conventional commercial transport.
But we live in a world of trade-offs. More people may want to move into the city because it’s so much easier to move around and call things up by drone, driverless car and the share economy, so this may intensify agglomeration effects and increased land prices. Another big day out for the two handed economist.
Recent Comments