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DJI announces a new drone, but it’s not for shooting video
On the same day as the Insta360-backed Antigravity A1 is officially launched to the skies, DJI fires back hard with a new drone of its own. The battle for aerial cinematography supremacy is heating up!
An American defense company, SpektreWorks, has produced a cheap drone that is similar to Iran’s Shahed device.
The Low-Cost Uncrewed Combat Attack System (LUCAS) drones are intended to mirror Iran 's Shahed-136 uncrewed aerial vehicles (UAVs), providing a low-cost, scalable capability for autonomous, swarm-style operations.
Action camera company Insta360 initially unveiled new drone brand Antigravity in July. At the time, the company teased that its first product would not only offer unprecedented 360-degree 8K aerial recording, but would be designed so that even amateurs could easily use it.
Antigravity A1 launches as world's first 8K 360 drone. Features 249g design, 24-39 min flight time, immersive goggles. Starting $1,599.
Russia's turbojet Geran-3s are much faster than the usual Shaheds, but Ukrainians that their cheap interceptors took several down for the first time.
So Nasa has been testing new drone technology in a part of the Death Valley National Park, in California, USA. The area, which is known for its extremely dry and hot conditions, has been used by the space agency for tests since the 1970s.
I've been reviewing the Antigravity A1 – is this revolutionary world's first 360-degree drone a change for the best (should the other drones be worried?)
Business Insider observed US, Polish, and Romanian forces learning to use the Merops system, which has been combat-proven in Ukraine.