dronescape

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English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

From drone +‎ -scape.

Noun[edit]

dronescape (plural dronescapes)

  1. (music) A soundscape or acoustic environment consisting of repetitive droning noises.
  2. A landscape as viewed or photographed by a drone.
    • 2017, Ayperi Karabuda Ecer, Dronescapes: The New Aerial Photography:
      (see title)
    • 2022 February, Nigel Clifford, Heather Viles, Andy Eavis, Rita Gardner, Jonathan Rigg, Chris Philo, Peter Kraftl, Patricia Noxolo, Emma Mawdsley, Nina Laurie, “Royal Geographical Society (with IBG) Medals and Awards celebration 2020 and 2021”, in The Geographical Journal:
      The 2021 recipient is Alice Collins for her study I've never seen it look like that: The dronescape, tentative enchantments, and a passion to fly.
    • 2022, S Lehtinen, “Urban Aesthetics and Technology”, in Shannon Vallor, editor, The Oxford Handbook of Philosophy of Technology, page 460:
      New mobility technologies can also emphasize traditional scenic beauty in cities, a good example of this being the ubiquitous dronescape photography and video.
  3. A region that is under the influence of patrolling drones or the people and technologies that make up those patrols.
    • 2015 Winter, Geoff Coliandris Coliandris, “Is anyone remotely interested?: The rise of the police drone”, in Australasian Policing, volume 7, number 1:
      In Australia, in addition to the AFP, state police departments have entered the dronescape.
    • 2015, Mark B. Salter, Making Things International 1: Circuits and Motion:
      Viewed within dronescape formations, as entangled ensembles of spaces, technologies, and human subjects, drones emerge not as mere technological effect of human cause but as actors instrumental in the very processes of shaping, conditioning, and producing new local and international spatial relations, subjectivities, and cultural practices.
    • 2021, Bruce Arrigo, Brian Sellers, The Pre-Crime Society, page 445:
      Drones, as Joseph Pugliese argues, reconfigure the practices of daily life of those living under what he terms the 'dronescape' (2015, p. 225), and they also 'establish new conceptualizations of the relation between the local and the international' (2015, p. 223).
    • 2022, Dominika Kunertova, “The Ukraine Drone Effect on European Militaries”, in CSS Policy Perspectives, volume 10, number 15:
      The European dronescape needs to reflect how drone utility – especially tactical armed drones and drone scouts – has been evolving in Ukraine now.