TED Talks Daily - The invisible infrastructure in the sky | Adam Bry
Episode Date: May 28, 2026Drones aren't just weapons of war; they're becoming first responders, infrastructure inspectors and guardians of the grid. Adam Bry, who leads the top drone manufacturer in the US, shows how autonomou...s drones are transforming emergency response and public safety — from detecting faulty power lines and preventing wildfires to catching crime in real time. During his talk, he demos the technology live from the TED stage, piloting a drone in Tokyo from his laptop in Vancouver. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
You're listening to TED Talks Daily, where we bring you new ideas to spark your curiosity every day.
I'm your host, Elise Hu.
It's safe to say that for good reason, nearly everyone seems to have an opinion when they hear the word drone.
What you may not know is that drones are becoming more and more integrated into the infrastructure of our societies.
I want to use my time today to talk about an entirely different kind of drone use, much closer to home, that's already having life-saving impact.
That's Adam Bree, who leads the U.S.'s top drone manufacturer.
In this talk, he acknowledges that most of us think of warfare when we think of drones.
But he shows how autonomous drones are also transforming everything from emergency response to public safety,
preventing wildfires, detecting faulty power lines, and catching crime in real time.
To showcase this, he ran a live demo on the TED stage where he launched a drone in Tokyo by piloting it from across the Pacific.
in Vancouver.
We're building towards a future
where the default expectation
for every emergency
is that a drone shows up
in a few seconds
to provide targeted information,
get better outcomes for everybody.
For Adam, the future is one
where flying robots
work seamlessly in the background
responding to emergencies
before a human possibly could.
Stick around after the talk.
We caught up with Ted's curator
Bilafil Sidu,
who shared a few more thoughts
and takeaways on Adam's work
for us to consider.
That's all coming up
right after a short break.
And now our TED Talk of the day.
My guess is for many of you, drone is a scary concept.
It might evoke images of weapons in Ukraine, in the skies over the Middle East,
where these things are creating damage and devastation at a massive scale.
The Ukrainians reported last month 96% of the casualties they inflicted on Russian forces were done via drone strikes.
Now, this is a terrifying.
new reality on the battlefield.
It's also one that we can't afford to ignore in the West.
But I want to use my time today to talk about
an entirely different kind of drone use,
much closer to home that's already having life-saving impact.
And I think the best way to understand it
is just to show it to you.
So I'm going to demonstrate the robotics technology
live here on stage.
So we are in Vancouver,
but I am connected to a drone in Tokyo.
So I'm going to click the launch button,
and a real drone, this is all live,
a real drone is going to launch itself
on the other side of the Pacific,
and I can just control it right here for my laptop.
So it's a little bit like playing a video game,
but I can fly around,
I can look and see whatever I want to see.
So the thing that it allowed me to do this
is called a dock.
It looks like kind of an intergalactic grill,
So it's got a bunch of advanced technology in it,
but it turns the drone into a fully autonomous device.
It can be flown remotely.
I don't need a person on scene,
and it turns the drone into a software-defined thing.
So I can fly it here, and the software will keep me safe.
So I can just cruise under this awning or over its choice.
I can tap on an object that I might be interested in.
So now the drone is flying itself.
It's autonomously tracking that car.
So this is hands-off.
It's a very powerful capability.
So I'm going to stop this now
and initiate an autonomous patrol of the area.
So that's cool, but why does it actually matter?
Well, I'm going to share with you a couple of stories.
So Oklahoma City Police Department
has placed docked drones all over their city,
and they're using them to respond to emergencies.
So in this instance, a train operator called 911 in a panic,
afraid that he might have hit something or someone on the tracks.
Now, this is very difficult to access.
On the ground, this is probably an hour search,
but the drone got there in seconds.
It was able to find that, unfortunately, there was somebody on the tracks.
But because of the drone, they knew exactly where he was.
They were able to guide in first responders,
and they saved this guy's life.
Another example.
This is from San Francisco.
Very different application, but same concept.
Responding to a 911 instance.
Here, there's a stolen vehicle.
So they're able to follow the stolen vehicle from the air.
They know exactly where he is.
They know what he's doing.
So I don't know about you when I steal a car.
I like to steal a license plate to go along with it.
So SFPD knew that this happened,
but they never actually caught anybody in the act.
With the drone, they're able to get this asymmetric advantage.
Now he's got stolen plates.
He's going to put the plates on his vehicle.
Conveniently holds it up so we can read it from the air.
He's got stolen vehicle, stolen plates.
He's tinting the windows.
So this is the beginning of a crime spree.
He's probably going to go off and steal a bunch more stuff.
But the cops know exactly where he is.
They know exactly what he's doing.
So they roll a plane-clothes unit out.
They roll spike strips.
He's got flat tires.
Can't go very far.
They take him into custody.
So this is safer for everybody involved.
It's certainly safer for the community.
It's also safer for the officers.
Honestly, it's even safer for the suspect
because they know exactly where he is and what he's doing.
So since SFPD has implemented this technology,
They've seen a 30% drop in crime, 40% drop in auto theft.
I can't say that I blame the auto thieves.
I probably wouldn't want to steal a car either.
And this concept of drone is first responder
is taking off across the country.
So it started with a few agencies.
Hundreds of agencies are now using it.
By the end of this year, it'll be thousands.
And right now, about 5% of the U.S. population
lives within a two-minute flight of a Skydeo drone
to respond to an emergency.
But there's 240 million 911 calls everywhere in the U.S.
And we're building towards a future where the default expectation for every emergency
is that a drone shows up in a few seconds to provide targeted information,
get better outcomes for everybody.
That's one example.
I'm going to show you a different category of use, though.
We have energy utility customers that are installing these in their substations.
So this is American Electric Power in Ohio.
They've got a great pioneering program.
So they have the dock in the substation.
They can use it to perform both proactive and
reactive inspections, and on one of those flights, they spotted this. So this is a distribution
pole with signs of a short and a fire that they wouldn't have caught any other way. So thanks
to the drone footage, they knew exactly where it was. They went in, they repaired it. Why does this
matter? Well, some of the most devastating fires that we've had in the U.S. have been the result
of energy utility faults, where something breaks, something goes wrong, there's a short, it starts
a fire. Drones enable us to have a complete digital picture of the grid to prevent this kind of thing
from happening. And if it does happen, we can know about it sooner and faster and mitigate the response.
So flying cameras all over the place to get better information is super impactful. But this same
kind of concept applies to drone delivery. So companies like Zipline and Wing are using docked
drones to make it safer and faster to get a burrito delivered to your doorstep.
So there is a mountain of technology under the hood that makes this stuff.
work. Drones are deceptively small, but they're actually on par with self-driving cars and rocket ships
in terms of the technical complexity it takes to make them work. There's vibration and thermals and
aerodynamics, and the hardest part is making all this stuff work reliably when and where you need it.
But the key enabling technology is actually eyesight, giving drones the same ability that people
have to look out and see the world. Our drones have very powerful computers built in that parallel
all our brains. They've got deep neural networks that parallel our biological neural networks.
And the output is very similar to how humans see the world. They know where things are,
they know what they are, and they can use all of that information to make intelligent decisions.
So you might have noticed that I left a drone flying in Japan. We should go ahead and check in on that.
So this drone is performing an autonomous inspection. So this is a water tower that's in the area.
So I'm going to somewhat rudely interrupt it here.
So I click stop.
I click return and land and dock.
So it will now go back up, autonomously find its way back to the dock.
Doc opens up.
It uses vision and AI to detect its landing spot,
and it will come in and do an automated landing.
So the dock, in some ways, turns the drone into something like a cloud server,
where these things can be just running autonomously, continuously in the background,
and doing useful work on our behalf.
So what did we actually accomplish with this mission?
On an autonomous patrol like this,
we can inspect the infrastructure,
we can look for intruders,
and generally have a complete digital picture
of everything that's happening.
So in the 20th century,
we built transportation infrastructure,
we built power infrastructure,
we built communication infrastructure,
and I think drones have the potential
to fundamentally advance and transform
how we operate all of this infrastructure.
but I actually think infrastructure is a pretty good way
to describe what the drones themselves are becoming.
These things are dynamic, they're intelligent,
they can run in the background,
do useful work for us constantly 24-7.
This is a future that we're incredibly excited to build at Skydeo.
Thank you.
That was Adam Brie at TED 2026,
and now here's TED's tech curator, Bola Vl Sidi,
to share more about the complex
and sometimes unsettling conversation surrounding drones.
Hey, I'm Belaville, the tech curator for TED 20206.
Hopefully you enjoy that conversation.
I mean, look, drones can be scary.
We see them on the battlefields of Ukraine.
We also see them as toys and tools of entertainment.
But there's actually a very useful function for this technology to go where people can't go or go faster to a place before people get there.
And that's this whole idea about drone as first responder and drone as like, you know, essentially infrastructure monitoring.
Like, we got these crazy fires in L.A.
that could have been prevented if we had drones that were surveying power lines and infrastructure
that clearly caused that blaze. But again, like most things, this technology is very dual use.
And that's why we want to have these conversations. You ought to know about what the technology is
capable of, how it's being used in every facet of society, so we can have the discussion about what we want to do with it.
I hope you enjoyed.
If you're curious about Ted's curation, find out more at ted.com slash curation guidelines.
And that's it for today. Ted Talks Daily is part of the
TED Audio Collective. This talk was fact-checked by the TED Research Team and produced and edited by
our team, Martha Estefanos, Oliver Friedman, Brian Green, Lucy Little, and Tonicaa Sunmar Nivong.
This episode was mixed by Christopher Faisi Bogan. Additional support from Emma Tobner and
Daniela Balezzo. I'm Elise Hugh. I'll be back tomorrow with a fresh idea for your feed. Thanks for listening.
