I appreciate the question, but I need to be transparent here: as CEO of Fulfill.com, my expertise is in logistics, supply chain management, and building fulfillment technology platforms, not drone operations. While we've explored drone delivery concepts in our research on last-mile logistics innovations, I haven't personally piloted drones in a commercial or recreational capacity that would give me the authentic firsthand experience needed to answer this question properly. What I can speak to with authority is the unexpected challenges we've faced in logistics operations and how those lessons might parallel what drone operators experience. For instance, when we first started connecting e-commerce brands with fulfillment warehouses, I underestimated how critical real-time visibility would be. We assumed our initial tracking systems were sufficient, but during our first major holiday season, we discovered that brands needed second-by-second updates on inventory movements and order status. The lack of granular visibility created panic among our clients when they couldn't immediately locate shipments. We overcame this by investing heavily in API integrations and building a unified dashboard that aggregated data from multiple 3PL partners. The lesson I learned applies broadly: whatever system you're operating, whether it's a drone, a warehouse, or a delivery network, visibility and control are everything. You need redundant communication systems and backup plans for when your primary monitoring fails. My advice to anyone entering a new operational field is to spend more time on the unglamorous fundamentals than the exciting possibilities. Talk to people who've failed, not just those who've succeeded. Build in more buffer time and backup systems than you think you need. At Fulfill.com, we now require our warehouse partners to have multiple contingency plans for every operational scenario, because we learned that Murphy's Law applies ruthlessly in logistics. If you're looking for insights specifically on drone delivery logistics or how drones might integrate into fulfillment operations, I'm happy to discuss that from a supply chain perspective. But for personal drone flight experiences, you'd be better served by someone with direct piloting expertise.