Skydio’s self-flying drone can now track down cars

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
Skydio‘s first major update to their crazy cool self-flying drone fixes its 13 eyes on a new object to follow at high speeds: cars. The
Bay Area startup has expanded following capabilities of its R1 drone beyond just humans, with cars now firmly within their sights.Now,
you&ll still be limited by the devices 25mph so this won&t be shooting any Nascar races, but the self-flying drone will be able to track and
follow vehicles as they move through challenging terrain that would be impossible to film previously without a skilled drone pilot. Just
don&t send this thing following after a self-driving car — unless you want the two to probably run away together and come back with a
vengeance at a later date. In our review of the R1 drone, we were struck by the strength of its core tech and excited by the promise
offered by future software updates
Well, less than two months later, new functionality is already coming to the device with this big new update. &With Skydio R1,
cinematography becomes a software defined experience,& Skydio CEO Adam Bry said in a statement
&That means we can regularly introduce fundamentally new capabilities over time for all existing and future users.& Skydio R1 review: a
mesmerizing, super-expensive self-flying drone In addition to the new car mode, Skydio has also updated its Lead mode which aims to plot a
user path before they take it and shoot footage accordingly
The company says that the new update will bring &more intelligent behavior& when it comes to navigating obstacles
New &quarter lead& and &quarter follow& modes also shift the perspective from only allowing straight-on or profile shots. The Skydio R1
Frontier Edition goes for a decently pricey $2,499 and the new update goes live today .