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  • James Trew / Engadget

    DJI Mavic Mini review: A tiny drone with big ambitions

    by 
    James Trew
    James Trew
    11.09.2019

    What a difference four years make in the world of drones. If you spot someone with an iPhone 6s today, you'd barely flinch. But if you see someone rocking a Phantom 3, it feels quaint thanks to the major advances in size, weight and power. Enter the Mavic Mini ($399), the company's most diminutive drone to date that boasts up to 30 minutes of flight time. It makes the Mavic Air look chubby, the Mavic 2 Pro look positively chunky and the Phantoms might as well be a different species (yes, technically they are).

  • James Trew / Engadget

    Skydio’s next self-flying drone is ready to take on DJI

    by 
    James Trew
    James Trew
    10.01.2019

    When Skydio revealed the fully autonomous R1 drone, it was truly impressive. This thing could follow you like no other drone before, or since. You didn't need to wear anything (like AirDog), and its visual tracking system was smart enough to avoid almost any obstacle in its way, even at speed. But the R1 was kinda big (like a large pizza box) and at $2,500, prohibitively expensive for the majority. You also couldn't really control it yourself in a meaningful way, so it wasn't as versatile as DJI's cheaper Mavic 2 Pro.

  • AOL

    AirDog's ADII 'follow me' drone doubles down on action sports

    by 
    James Trew
    James Trew
    07.12.2017

    In 2015, the big innovation in drones was "follow-me" mode. It wasn't new, but the technology was finally good enough for it to become a leading feature in quadcopters. A few did just that, most notably AirDog, Lily, 3DR, DJI and Hexo+. In 2017, Lily is bust, 3DR had to pivot to enterprise and Hexo+ has been "out of stock" on its website for months. DJI was already the biggest player in the game back then. The small, indie team at AirDog, on the other hand, is alive and well, and back with a new drone -- the ADII -- which takes the follow-me feature to (literal) new heights.

  • Engadget

    NYT: Snapchat built its own drone

    by 
    Daniel Cooper
    Daniel Cooper
    03.01.2017

    Snapchat's second or third reinvention was to describe itself as a "camera company," but really it wants to become a hardware maker. At least, that's the theory coming out of the New York Times, which has spoken to three anonymous employees who claim the startup has been working on a photography drone.

  • This selfie-drone recognizes, finds and auto-records its owner

    by 
    James Trew
    James Trew
    01.03.2017

    Look how happy I am in that photo below. Or am I scared? It's hard to tell. Selfie technology just took a new turn, and I'm evidently not quite sure what to make of it. The source of the photo is Zero Zero's Hover Camera. It's a foldable, lightweight, 4K camera drone that we've seen before. The new trick that helped take this picture is that I just threw the drone up in the air. It then turned around until it recognized me (passing two colleagues along the way), and I waved at it. Boom: awkward selfie.

  • Image credit: Heliguy/Digital Trends

    DJI's folding 'Mavic' drone images leak out

    by 
    Steve Dent
    Steve Dent
    09.06.2016

    DJI's Adam Najberg recently told Engadget that if the average consumer is going to buy a drone, "size is going to be an issue. Also ease of use." Judging by a recent leak, the company may not be just musing about such a product. Drone site Heliguy leaked an image of a small camera drone that collapses down for easy transport. If accurate, it could be called the "Mavic," a name DJI recently trademarked.

  • DJI exec hints at future pocket-sized camera drones

    by 
    James Trew
    James Trew
    09.04.2016

    It's a simple question: How would you sell my Dad a drone? Right now, most drone buyers are professionals, hobbyists or video enthusiasts. That leaves a pretty big number of people not currently browsing for a quadcopter. At least, not yet. My Dad is one of those people, so if you can sell him one, you're onto something. When I asked that question to Adam Najberg, DJI's Global Director of Communications, his answer was simple: "Size is going to be an issue. Also ease of use." So something smaller and simpler. No surprises there. But Najberg represents one of the biggest names in drones, so when he tells me what such a drone might look like, I listen.

  • Lily's smart camera drone racks up $34 million in pre-orders

    by 
    Jon Fingas
    Jon Fingas
    01.11.2016

    If you need proof that there's a market for camera drones that follow you around, you just got it in spades. Lily Robotics has revealed that its tag-along drone scooped up $34 million in pre-orders for 60,000 machines. That number may not sound huge next to smartphones selling in the millions, but it's gigantic for a robot in a relatively untested (and fairly niche) category. Also, none of the customers who responded to surveys had owned drones before -- these aren't just enthusiasts pouring money into their hobby.

  • GDU's Byrd quadcopter can (almost) deliver a baby

    by 
    James Trew
    James Trew
    09.11.2015

    Leaf through the pages of the tech press of 2015, and you'll see the consumer-friendly camera drone slowly evolving. GDU Byrd is the latest frame in that flip book: a foldable quadcopter with up to 25 minutes of flight time, and an enough power for an impressive 4.5-pound payload (enough for a DSLR). It also looks a bit like a PSone.

  • German video effects company builds camera drone for the Red Epic

    by 
    Daniel Cooper
    Daniel Cooper
    10.11.2011

    Red Epic + Flying drone = The sort of geek math you can't help but wish you'd come up with yourself. German VFX company OMStudios decided to mount Red's super-camera into a custom Octocopter to record footage in resolutions up to 5K. As cool as the setup is, there's a practical purpose: not only is it far cheaper than renting a crane, it can also climb up to 150 meters -- making it just high enough to fly over Hollywood's tallest man, Tom Cruise. Since it's highly unlikely we'll ever get to play with one of these, we'll just have to point you to the video after the break and hope that no catastrophic power failures take place halfway through any real-world shoots. [Thanks, Jeremias]