Lorenz Meier is Recognized as an Honoree of MIT Technology Review’s 2017 Innovators Under 35 List

By August 17, 2017Uncategorized

SAN FRANCISCO, Aug. 16, 2017 PRNewswire-USNewswire/ — Today, MIT Technology Review reveals its annual list of Innovators Under 35. For over a decade, the global media company has recognized a list of exceptionally talented technologists whose work has great potential to transform the world. The Dronecode project is honored to announce that Lorenz Meier, the creator of the PX4 project, has been recognized by Technology Review as a 2017 Inventor for his work.

Meier created the PX4 flight stack platform for drones and released it as open source in 2011. The PX4 autopilot provides guidance, navigation and control algorithms for autonomous fixed wing, multirotor and VTOL airframes, along with estimators for attitude and position. PX4 is a project within Dronecode and is also supported by the Computer Vision and Geometry Lab of ETH Zurich (Swiss Federal Institute of Technology) and by numerous industry partners. Additional information about PX4 and Dronecode is available at http://dronecode.diyrobocars.com/ and https://www.dronecode.org/.

“Over the years, we’ve had success in recognizing young innovators whose work will change how the world thinks about what technology can do,” says editor David Rotman. “Past honorees include Larry Page and Sergey Brin, the cofounders of Google; Mark Zuckerberg, the cofounder of Facebook; and Jonathan Ive, the chief designer of Apple. We’re proud of our selections and the variety of achievements they celebrate, and we’re proud to add Lorenz Meier to this prestigious list.”

“It is a fantastic experience going from the small Pixhawk student team in 2008 to a global open source community serving thousands of developers. None of this would have been possible without the support of ETH, Dronecode and our many contributors and partnering open source projects. It is great to see the work of the development community now being available in professional and consumer products. In the next years my personal focus will be to push the safety, security and reliability of drones onto an industrial grade level. This will make the ecosystem future proof and foster broad adoption in commercial and enterprise use cases.”

– Lorenz Meier, August 2017

This year’s honorees will be featured online at www.technologyreview.com starting today, and in the September/October print magazine, which hits newsstands worldwide on August 29. They will appear in person at the upcoming EmTech MIT conference November 6-9 in Cambridge, Massachusetts (www.EmTechMIT.com).

About MIT Technology Review
Founded at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1899, MIT Technology Review is a digitally oriented independent media company whose analysis, features, reviews, interviews, and live events explain the commercial, social, and political impact of new technologies. MIT Technology Review readers are curious technology enthusiasts—a global audience of business and thought leaders, innovators and early adopters, entrepreneurs and investors. Every day, we provide an authoritative filter for the flood of information about technology. We are the first to report on a broad range of new technologies, informing our audiences about how important breakthroughs will impact their careers and their lives. Subscribe. Follow us: TwitterFacebookLinkedInGoogle+Instagram.

About Dronecode
The Dronecode project delivers a collaborative and shared open source platform for unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs). It provides a neutral place where industry and community developers can contribute technology in order to reduce costs and time to market. Member companies include Intel, Qualcomm, 3D Robotics, Yuneec and many more supporters of the platform. Dronecode is hosted by The Linux Foundation. Follow us: TwitterBlog. Learn more at https://www.dronecode.org.

Dronecode is a trademark of the Dronecode Project, Inc. The Linux Foundation has registered trademarks and uses trademarks. For a list of trademarks of The Linux Foundation, see its trademark usage page: https://www.linuxfoundation.org/trademark-usage. Linux is a registered trademark of Linus Torvalds.

For MIT Technology Review: David W.M. Sweeney
617-475-8018
press@technologyreview.com

For Dronecode: Ramon Roche
rroche@linuxfoundation.org

Hamish Willee

Author Hamish Willee

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