Arthur C. Clarke elucidates the amelioration in technology proclaimed that; any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic. It will not be counterfactual if I say that this statement of Clarke construes the prevailing panorama of progressive accession in technology. The word drone generally delineates grim reaper in the minds of Pakistani denizens by up surging the innervations of quietus, consternation and trepidation. Monotonous attacks of United States of America on terrible areas of Pakistan through stealth spy drones further augmented the perplexity about drones as scaremonger. Correlating drone only with obliteration is analogous to thinking fire solely crops ash. However the propagation of savoir faire from generations to generations eventually results in extreme procession in technology that comes up with agricultural drones. Implication of sensors and robotics in agricultural field engenders a triumph as it not only preserves time but also enhances the yield. Using global positioning system, a low-cost aerial camera platform accoutered with an auto pilot bridling standard point-and-shoot camera, the farmers can visualize brass stacks of their crops from software on the ground that stitch aerial shots into a high-resolution mosaic map. Not only affordable as compare to satellite imagery and crop imaging with a manned air craft costs $1,000 an hour, agricultural drones offers high resolution, costs $2,000 an hour and available at any time as it remains unobstructed in clouds. Small GPS modules, incredibly powerful processors, a range of digital radios and tiny MEMS sensors including accelerometers, gyros, magnetometers, and often pressure sensors makes these drones paltry, economical and manifesting for farmers.
Seeing a crop from the air can reveal patterns that aren’t available at human eye level, expose everything from irrigation problems to soil variation and even pest and