Some breathtaking video of Mr. Wolf’s trip down the Baja California peninsula.
Category Archives: YouTube
Drone view of corn harvest
My buddy George has been flying drones —and using them to record video— pretty much since drones have been available for the consumer market. He has become quite proficient.
The video below –the work of Jack Dodson, a friend and client– is a fascinating look at the corn harvest (from combine to truck) on the Steck farm in the Missouri River Bottom near Jefferson City. The video was captured with the DJI Mavic 3 Pro Cine.
Black Hornet Drones
Is that a Russian tank in that tree line? Before clearing that line of trenches, it would be nice to know how many Russians are there?
Drone Romance
“Directed by speculative architect Liam Young and written by fiction author Tim Maughan, In the Robot Skies is the world’s first narrative shot entirely through autonomous drones. In collaboration with the Embedded and Artificially intelligent Vision Lab in Belgium the film has evolved in relation to their experiments with specially developed camera drones each programmed with their own cinematic rules and behaviours. In this near future city drones form both agents of state surveillance but also become co-opted as the aerial vehicles through which two teens fall in love.”
Drone footage of canyons of Moab, Utah
Stunning drone footage of the picturesque landscape within the canyons of the Moab, Utah, by award-winning drone filmmaker Airplaster.
Gentle snow captured with a DJI Phantom 4
George Kopp and his friend Jack Dodson produced this beautiful bit of video. Jack was controlling the drone and George edited the video. I like the overhead shot (no sweeping zooms) and kept thinking of pen and ink drawings as I watched this.
Drone speeding up a snowy mountain
Competitive FPV drone racer Gabriel Kocher filmed an incredible video of his drone speeding up a snowy mountain.
Drone video of Missouri State Capitol
Shot from DJI Inspire quadcopter by George Kopp.
Drone video of New York City
The three days I spent in NYC last May were great. (One day with an experienced native-NY’er guide.) But the video below shows a NY I didn’t see. Couldn’t see. But one day will.
What would I be willing to pay for a real-time virtual drone tour of NY (or Paris or Rome or Tokyo)? I thinking high-quality goggles with nat sound (drone motors someone filtered out) or real-time voice-over by pilot/guide. Or just music bkg if I choose.
[Stipulation: There is no substitute for being there. “Real” experiences are superior to “virtual” experience. For now.]