The world looks different from 400 feet. Borders disappear. Patterns emerge. A colonial plaza in Bogotá becomes a point cloud. A hillside in Albania becomes a 3D mesh. That's not photography — that's data with altitude.
I'm Victor Chaidez. US Army veteran. Former UH-60 Blackhawk crew chief. A decade of data analytics at Genesys Cloud. Now I fly a DJI Mini 5 Pro across continents and turn what I see into something you can actually use.
This isn't a travel blog with pretty drone shots. It's a remote-first aerial data operation — built to function from a café in the Andes, a rooftop in Tirana, or a train cutting through the Balkans. The work doesn't stop because the timezone changed.
All services delivered remotely. No site visit required on my end. You get the data. I handle the altitude.
The drone goes where I go. Every city is a new dataset.
Most drone content is either a real estate reel or a sunset clip set to lo-fi music. That's fine. That's not this.
DroneView Insights exists because aerial data has real utility — for architects, historians, developers, and documentary filmmakers who need more than a pretty shot. They need accurate spatial data, delivered clean, processed remotely, and explained by someone who actually understands what the numbers mean.
Ten years of building analytics dashboards for contact centers taught me one thing: raw data without context is just noise. The same applies at 400 feet. I don't just fly. I interpret.
◈ This site is intentionally lean. It loads fast on a 4G signal in the Andes and over a café connection in Tirana. That's by design. If you came here for animations and parallax scrolling, you're in the wrong place. If you came here for honest aerial data work — welcome aboard.
Between deployments, the hangar stays open. The Arcade Hub hosts drone-based interactive tools, vector simulations, and field data visualizations — built for the technically curious.