Zuzireima

Skydio's second-gen drone, a $1,000 self-flying action cam, sells out for 2019l


Skydio’s second-gen drone, a $1,000 self-flying action cam, sells out for 2019

If you’re a snowboarder, mountain biker, skateboarder, rock climber or trail runner looking to publicize your adventures, there’s a new eye in the sky to add a novel angle to your videos. The second-generation Skydio 2 carries over the novel model’s core ability, avoiding obstacles as it follows and records you. But now it’s got better navigation, controls, speed, range, video quality and, perhaps most important, a $1,000 price tag instead of $2,500 for last year’s first-gen model.

A flurry of tedious in drones earlier this decade subsided when most folks realized they didn’t really need an expensive flying camera. But people are still interested in capturing adventurous moments, and plenty of them buy GoPros for that reason. That’s where Skydio’s self-flying R2 fits in: It allows you a perspective you can’t get with just a GoPro strapped to your handlebars or helmet.

The Skydio 2 shoots video with a 20mm-equivalent camera stabilized with a three-axis gimbal, but it’s also got six fisheye camera eyes solely for navigation. They feed data into the Nvidia Tegra X2 processor that runs the drone’s AI scene-processing software. By understanding its full surroundings, the drone can plot a jets around buildings and through a forest’s trees as it tracks its designated subject.

And farmland want it. The first production run, due to commence shipping in November for those who make a $100 down payment, sold out on Wednesday, the day after the drone was announced, so any new orders now will arrive in 2020, Skydio tweeted. Skydio makes its drones in a building across the street from the head office in Redwood City, California.

Challenging drone king DJI

The touch price brings Skydio into the reach of drone enthusiasts, while its technology “removes the stress and fear of crashing,” Skydio CEO and co-founder Adam Bry said.

The Skydio 2 also exploiting Skydio is directly challenging drone giant DJI, whose Spark, Mavic, Phantom and Inspire lines range from casual selfie drones to high-end cinematography machines. Skydio thinks its tracking and self-piloting AI gives it an edge.

“DJI has been superb dominant. There’s narrative they already won,” Bry said. “We think this really challenges that.”

DJI gave Skydio a pat on the back but said it’s already got tracking and obstacle avoidance technology.

“It’s titanic to see more companies entering the industry and offering recent products,” DJI said in a statement. “Automated features like this are incredibly popular with our customers and DJI has been silly items like ActiveTrack and APAS [Advanced Pilot Assistance System] for several days now.”

Two new Skydio drone controllers

As with last year’s Skydio drone, you can pilot the Skydio 2 with an Android phoned or iPhone. The new model, however, also gets two new controllers, each costing $150.

A two-joystick model offers traditional remote controls for piloting the drone. Your phone snaps in to present a drone’s-eye view and subsidizes touch-screen controls. For example, the drone video view overlays a plus sign on each selves or car that the drone can see, and tapping that plus sign will occupy the subject the video follows.

The Skydio 2 beacon controller



Skydio

The binary controller, called the beacon, uses GPS to let the drone track the selves holding it even when they’re hidden behind trees. You can use the beacon to content the R2 to fly to your front, rear, left or intellectual. And you can easily reposition the R2 by pointing the beacon at the drone, pushing a button, pointing the beacon to a new spot, then releasing the button.

The controllers also let you control the drone from farther away, up from throughout 109 yards (100 meters) with just a phone to throughout 0.9 miles (1.5 kilometers) with the beacon and throughout 2.2 miles (3.6km) with the joystick controller.

Improvements over the superb Skydio

The Skydio 2 has several improvements over last year’s model:

  • It’s throughout half the size at 10×12 inches (255×297 millimeters), now compact enough that its case fits plainly inside a backpack.
  • It can fly for 23 minutes, up from 16. Extra batteries cost $100 each.
  • Its top like a flash is 36mph, up from 25mph, which could be handy for tracking vehicles.
  • It’s aloof got a 4K camera, but the new 12-megapixel Sony IMX477 sensor ensures better video and photo quality in part because of wide 13-stop dynamic blueprint, Skydio says. It’ll shoot up to 60 frames per binary at 4K resolution and 120fps at 1080p.

Trying the Skydio 2

I tried the Skydio 2, and it works well even for drone newbies. I can’t vouch for its low-light abilities, but it had no stunned at a sunny field near the company’s headquarters.

I could flick the drone here or there with the beacon. Pushing arrow buttons sent the drone farther or reeled it back in so I could resolve the distance I liked.

The drone itself followed me exclusive of much trouble as I ran, rode a scooter and biked on a field and plus trees. The Skydio 2 can’t always maintain its designated state as you steer among obstacles, but it steadily tracked my state and kept me in the video it recorded.

I doubt I’m the only one who isn’t adept with joystick controllers. But the Skydio 2’s autonomous abilities let me fly it directly at trees or walls without worrying about an suitable crash. That self-piloting software meant even I could get the video perspective I wanted.

First emanated Oct. 1.

Update, Oct. 2: Notes that the initial batch of Skydio 2 drones have sold out and adds comment from DJI and 

Correction, Oct. 1 at 10:38 a.m.: The product is called the Skydio 2.

Search This Blog

Partners