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Why We’ve Been Flying Drones Around Moments of Change
Most aerial documentation runs like clockwork. Weekly updates. Monthly reports. Milestone checklists. The calendar picks the day, the drone goes up, and everyone checks the box. But active job sites don’t evolve on anyone’s schedule. They explode into new realities in sudden, irreversible moments: A trench rips open. A traffic pattern flips. Material staging shifts overnight. Concrete starts pouring. Temporary access becomes permanent. An exposed condition vanishes forever be

THE FLYING LIZARD
4 days ago2 min read


The Anti-Digital Twin Reality: Why Your Point Cloud Can’t Remember Tuesday
T he construction industry has fallen hard for the phrase digital twin . The promise is seductive: a perfect, living digital replica of the built environment — one you can explore, analyze, simulate, and even predict the future with. Marketing imagery sells the dream perfectly: glossy, high-resolution point clouds, watertight meshes, fully navigable 3D models that seem to capture every last detail of a building or site. In theory, this digital counterpart lets project teams u

THE FLYING LIZARD
Mar 293 min read


The Hidden Infrastructure of Tomorrow: How Drones Quietly Keep the World Running
The Aerial Perspective Series | Vol. 1 A t 400 feet above the sleeping city, a small hum cuts through the dawn. Below, traffic lights blink in rhythm, sprinklers hiss across manicured lawns, and the skyline glows like a pulse. Up here, in the thin layer between earth and sky, a new kind of infrastructure hums quietly — invisible to most, indispensable to all. Drones. They don’t carry passengers or deliver our groceries (at least, not yet). Their true work happens in silence —

THE FLYING LIZARD
Nov 5, 20252 min read
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