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New alliance aims to standardize drone light show safety

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Drone light shows have moved fast over the past few years. What started as a novelty at tech expos and city celebrations is now a full-blown alternative to fireworks — quieter, reusable, and capable of pulling off visuals pyrotechnics never could. But as the sector has scaled, one thing hasn’t always kept pace: shared, industry-wide safety standards. That gap is exactly what the newly launched Drone Light Show Alliance (DLSA) is aiming to fix.

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Weather drones move from testing to US forecast operations

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For decades, weather forecasters have had a blind spot. It sits in the lower atmosphere — roughly from 50 feet to about 20,000 feet above the ground — where many of the most disruptive weather events actually begin. That’s where fog forms, storms organize, smoke spreads, and low-level winds turn dangerous. And until now, it’s been one of the thinnest areas in the US weather observing system.

That’s starting to change, thanks to drones.

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Walmart’s drone delivery service is about to hit your neighborhood

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Alphabet-owned Wing and Walmart have announced plans to expand drone delivery to 150 additional Walmart stores over the next year, setting the stage for what they’re calling the largest residential drone delivery network in the world. Once fully built out, the partnership aims to reach more than 40 million Americans, with over 270 drone-enabled Walmart locations by 2027, spanning from coast to coast.

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Chinese drone ban update: Why DJI is still stuck, when many others are not

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If you’re a US drone pilot trying to figure out whether DJI drones are banned, unbanned, half-banned, or just politically inconvenient, you’re not alone. In the latest twist, the US Department of Commerce has quietly withdrawn its proposed rules to restrict Chinese-made drones, even as the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) continues enforcing a sweeping ban on new foreign-made drone models, including those from DJI.

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How new US rules may sink HoverAir’s waterproof drone Aqua

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The HoverAir Aqua is designed to survive something consumer drones usually fear most: water. Marketed as the world’s first waterproof selfie drone, Aqua promised carefree flying over lakes, pools, and oceans — no emergency landings, no panic over splashes. That pitch helped the drone raise more than $2 million on Indiegogo from over 1,800 backers. However, the Aqua now faces a very different challenge.

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End of an era: DJI dropping support for Mavic Mini drone, Osmo Pocket

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If you’ve been flying DJI gear for years, this spring brings a bittersweet milestone: two iconic devices that helped define modern consumer drones and compact cameras are officially heading into retirement. DJI has announced that support services for the original DJI Mavic Mini will end on April 1, 2026, and for the DJI Osmo Pocket on February 5, 2026 — meaning no more product inquiries, technical support, or repairs after those dates.

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UK introduces class marks and Remote ID for drones

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Starting January 1, 2026, the United Kingdom is rolling out major changes to how drones are regulated — and that includes pretty much anyone flying a drone, whether it’s for fun or work. These updates tighten safety rules, broaden who must register and test, and introduce a brand-new classification system. DJI, the world’s largest consumer drone manufacturer, explains what pilots from both the UK and abroad should know.

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DJI 2025: Drones, cameras, and a year that changed everything

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For DJI, 2025 began with uncertainty baked in. A legally required US security review had yet to begin, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) loomed as the gatekeeper for future product approvals, and the clock was quietly ticking toward restrictions that could reshape how, or whether, new DJI gear reaches American buyers. In that environment, the Chinese tech giant didn’t want to spend 2025 waiting for Washington to make up its mind. The strategy was clear from the start: keep releasing, keep certifying, and keep moving while the door remained open.

That mindset defined everything DJI did this year.

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Rewind 2025: Every Insta360 camera and gadget released this year

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As 2025 wraps, creators everywhere are hitting play on the year’s most memorable moments, and a lot of them were captured with Insta360 gear. The company’s end-of-year video shows everything from skiing, snowboarding, diving, surfing, fishing, skydiving, hiking, traveling, vlogging, cycling, mountain biking, motorcycling, base-jumping, and everything in between — all shot with Insta360 gear. Here’s every key product Insta360 released in 2025 and what made them stand out…

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FCC makes it official: New DJI drones won’t enter US

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The day much of the US drone community has been dreading is officially here. The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) has taken its most decisive step yet against foreign-made drones, adding DJI, Autel, and other overseas manufacturers to its national security “Covered List.” The move effectively blocks new drone models from entering the US market, marking the end of weeks of uncertainty, reviews, and waiting, as federal agencies ran out the clock on whether companies like DJI would ever clear long-promised security audits.

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DJI drone scrutiny in the US just took a new turn

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For years, Washington’s concerns about DJI have largely played out at the policy level: bans, warnings, executive orders, and legislation aimed squarely at the world’s largest civilian drone manufacturer. Now, that approach appears to be shifting. Instead of focusing only on DJI, US lawmakers are now publicly calling out individual American companies they believe may still be using Chinese drones at some of the country’s most sensitive sites.

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Feds charge drone pilot after MLB stadium no-fly violation

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A Georgia drone pilot ignored a no-fly warning, launched anyway, and ended up with a federal criminal conviction. That’s the short version of what happened when Mitchell Parsons Hughes flew a drone over Truist Park during the Major League Baseball All-Star Game in July 2025, despite the stadium being protected by a Temporary Flight Restriction (TFR). For drone pilots across the US, the case is a blunt reminder that flying into restricted airspace isn’t a minor slip-up; it’s a federal offense.

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