由於消費性無人機的拍照效果實在是太「業餘」了(在高空拍攝的圖片連手機都比不上),很多無人機愛好者開始期待這種可更換相機的無人機。無人機配備的相機最開始是可以換的,後來大疆好像是在精靈3開始就固化了相機配置,不能更換,其他品牌也跟隨不更換相機。
https://www.eettaiwan.com/20200515nt61-camera-changeable-drone-for-the-consumer-market/
同時也有1部Youtube影片,追蹤數超過1萬的網紅Maxer Khan,也在其Youtube影片中提到,While China's Xiaomi is best known for its budget-friendly phones, the company has recently branched out into all sorts of other tech products. From a...
consumer drone market 在 Kristie Lu Stout Facebook 的精選貼文
The rise of consumer drones may have started in China with flying hobbyist cameras, but the "drone age" will soar ahead with or without DJI.
Watch and read my CNN report...
consumer drone market 在 Kristie Lu Stout Facebook 的最佳解答
Let's go inside the company that defined the consumer drone market -- the Shenzhen-based DJI.
#drones #dji #riseofdrones #cnn
consumer drone market 在 Maxer Khan Youtube 的最佳解答
While China's Xiaomi is best known for its budget-friendly phones, the company has recently branched out into all sorts of other tech products. From action cameras to smart weighing scales to water purifiers, the $60 billion startup has been building a diverse ecosystem around its core business.
Xiaomi's latest product, the Mi Notebook Air, isn't quite as novel as a hoverboard or the company's latest drone, but it does have one thing most other ultraportable laptops lack -- a discrete graphics card (discrete graphics cards are typically faster than their embedded brethren). A Nvidia GeForce 940MX, to be exact.
Other specs include a 256GB solid state drive and 8GB of RAM, and if you need more space there's an additional SATA slot available to boost storage by up to 256GB.
Unveiled at a press event here in Beijing alongside the dual-camera wielding Redmi Pro phone, the 13.3-inch Mi Notebook Air was designed to fill a niche, Xiaomi's CEO Lei Jun said. Similar ultraportables, such as the Razer Blade Stealth, lack discrete graphics and rely on Intel's integrated graphics to do the legwork, which means their gaming capabilities are limited. Xiaomi says you can play games like Dota 2 at 85 frames-per-second at full-HD resolution on its Notebook Air.
Clad in aluminium, the device lacks any exterior logos. It's a very clean look. Only when you open up the laptop do you find a Mi logo. While Xiaomi is selling the Mi Notebook Air under its own branding, the laptop is actually made by a partner called Tian Mi.
Xiaomi's making an interesting bet in the laptop segment, though. IDC Research analyst Bryan Ma isn't too optimistic about the Chinese notebook market, saying that IDC "expects China's consumer notebook market to contract by 10.4 percent this year versus the -7.7 percent in the US and -9.3 percent worldwide."
But if anything could help turn things around, perhaps it's this high quality notebook from Xiaomi. I tried out the notebook at the press event and came away impressed with the build quality. There are some things that could still be better, though, such as the flex of the notebook at the keyboard area. It just doesn't feel as solid as the Apple MacBook Air that it imitates.