Flying a drone makes you smarter because it forces you to connect thoughts (drone trajectory) with neural pathways that extend from your fingers to your brain.
True or false?
Flying a drone makes you smarter because it forces you to connect thoughts (drone trajectory) with neural pathways that extend from your fingers to your brain.
True or false?
I think you’ve had enough of whatever you’re on.
I fly drones and play video games… I must be a genius!
Lol what?
Thmarter.
Same person asking if it makes you a better driver…
I got one for you—are you a child for asking these true/false questions?
True or false?
Jesse said:
Same person asking if it makes you a better driver…
I got one for you—are you a child for asking these true/false questions?
True or false?
Wouldn’t be surprised if this is a bot account. Their post history is… interesting.
They seem to spam random questions in one forum for a bit, then move to another and do the same thing.
Smarter than who?
Sorry, what?
By that logic, sniffing your own farts would make you smarter since it ‘creates neural pathways from your nose to your brain.’
Also, considering how many dumb things pilots do, I’d say that’s not a great argument. FPV flying is like gaming—it has some cognitive benefits, but if you’re finding neural pathways in your hands, you might want to see a doctor.
Or ask your developer if they can reprogram you to be human.
@Finch
Not the same logic.
Farts are passive, drones are active. You don’t remote control farts.
If you build and program your own drone, then yeah, you’d probably learn something in the process.