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SunFlower Labs Wants Drones to Protect Your Home

We caught up with Alex Pachikov, CEO of Sunflower about a month ago as he was getting ready for his announcement at CES this week.

Here is what Alex had to say,  but first a little about his product from their recent press release.

Here is what Alex had to say when we caught up with him:

 

DroneLife:  You and I spoke about a year ago,  and you told us about your plans for the system.  At a price point of almost $10K, what market are you looking to service?  Who is going to be your client?

Alex:  We are focusing on high end residential – that’s where we had the most interest,  it is a high end product.

DL:  How did you come to this price point?

Alex: It is expensive to build autonomous drone security systems .  Home systems run up to $50 grand.  Wiring and mounting camera’s are much of the costs.  People have to do that no matter what type of system you choose.  If you need more than half a dozen cameras, we are cost competitive.  More than that, we are mostly cheaper.

DL: What stage are you in the development cycle?

Alex: We are now finishing beta: a year ago we were in alpha test.  In the last year we have redefined our systems with a larger propeller that has a better noise level than smaller ones, in addition to being more stable.  We changed the design of the Hive as the doors used to slide upwards.  We’ll demo at CES,  and will deploy by mid next year when  we ship our first productions systems.

DL:  You have added some functionality since we last spoke.  How did you decide what to add and what to leave out in a first release?

Alex:  Monitoring will be done by the client.  We have interest from monitoring companies to monitor our system and will announce that as a phase 2.

DL:  Are you going to sell direct or through a channel?

Alex:  Initially direct and later channels.

DL:  What are the issues regarding privacy both now and in the future?  Where will it ship first?

Alex:  US first and maybe NA.  We provide more privacy than normal security cameras:  we are geo-fenced going inward, while most security cameras are mounted and facing outward. 

DL: What was harder than you thought it would be?

Alex: The single most difficult thing is the landings,  the ability to land precisely and in bad conditions to the base station for recharging.  There is a video of us doing resiliently testing with our system.   There is a lot of IP doing, and I tried with using a leaf blower and power washer.  One day I grabbed it and threw it to try to break it, and now it is something that we test for every release.

 

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