If you're reinventing the camera, why not make it fly? That's the concept behind Lily, a drone that puts flying photography at its core, but doesn't require a pilot's license to use. Promising not ...
Self-driving drone Lily has had quite the success in sales and it’s not even on the market yet. The startup pulled in a whopping $34 million in pre-orders by the end of 2015, with 60,000 units already ...
SAN FRANCISCO - With his hand outstretched, a small drone resting in his palm, Antoine Balaresque looks like a falconer. When he tosses the drone in the air, its propellers start spinning and a ...
While it shares many similarities with the drones we have become used to seeing, the Lily calls itself a flying camera instead. Weighing in at 2.8 lbs., Lily is designed to be thrown into the air when ...
Managing Editor Josh Goldman is a laptop expert and has been writing about and reviewing them since built-in Wi-Fi was an optional feature. He also covers almost anything connected to a PC, including ...
If wearing a helmet-mounted GoPro or carrying around a camera on a stick seems like too much of a hassle, then Lily may be the robot for you. Lily is a self-flying camera that is capable of following ...
Ill-fated camera drone startup Lily has shuttered without delivering a single device, blaming a lack of financing despite having raised millions in preorders. The project, which made headlines back in ...
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With selfies more popular than ever, it’s no coincidence that technology is advancing so that both extreme athletes and the average Joe can take the best self-photos possible. So why not use a drone ...
RIP Lily: Makers of the “world’s first throw-and-shoot camera” are closing their business and refunding customers who pre-ordered one. Unable to secure financing to manufacture and ship its drone, the ...
One year is a long time in Silicon Valley. The star of last year’s CES, the promising flying Lily Camera, is no more. Antoine Balaresque and Henry Bradlow, the co-creators of $799 Lily Camera ...
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