드론의 확장성; 자유로운 사진 및 동영상 촬영을 지원합니다.
Beijing tech startup Zero Zero Robotics has launched a self-flying dronecamera that uses facial recognition to record video while hovering in the air.
Designed for the consumer market, the camera uses built-in artificial intelligence software to navigate, and is powered by four propellors that allow it to fly as soon as the user releases it.
"We want to combine radical AI technology and small flying robotics to create products that empower people to enhance their livelihood, and Hover Camera is a very exciting first step towards accomplishing our larger mission," said the company's CEO Meng Qiu Wang, a former Twitter software engineer who co-founded the company in 2014.
Zero Zero Robotics has since raised $25 million (£17 million) in investment. The company is now accepting people onto a wait list for the camera, which it says will retail for under $600 (£415).
Drone technology is advancing rapidly, with Amazon using self-piloted drones for deliveries and Foster & Partners unveiling its first full-scale prototype for a droneport at this year's Venice Architecture Biennale.
However, drones have also created problems of regulation as they fly into sometimes busy airspace. The UK is moving to put in place safe-usage rulesfor both commercial and personal drones following a number of collisions, while a Dutch company has trained eagles to pull drones from the sky when needed.