South China Morning Post

Look, no hands: Snap reveals a picture-taking drone that follows you

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Snap has a replacemen­t for the cheap phone stands and awkward outstretch­ed arms of modern self-filming: a yellow, squareshap­ed flying camera drone that costs US$230, weighs 101 grams and hovers around you to film you automatica­lly.

The original inspiratio­n for the pocket-sized drone, called Pixy, was: “What would it feel like if Tinker Bell were your personal photograph­er?”

“On one hand, you have these bulky, almost dangerous drones that you have to manually control with a remote control,” Snap CEO Evan Spiegel says. “And on the other hand, you have a phone that cannot fly.”

After filming, Pixy can land in the owner’s hand autonomous­ly. The images get auto-uploaded to the owner’s Snapchat app. It starts shipping in late May.

Snap, which calls itself a camera company, is known for its social media app Snapchat, popular with young people for sending disappeari­ng annotated photo and video messages.

Snap has been working on Pixy since at least 2017 and reportedly developed the device with the

Beijing-based drone company Zero Zero Robotics. The drone is another product to emerge from Snap’s hardware labs and is meant to further its pursuit of the still embryonic market for augmented reality (AR) – the muchhyped technology that superimpos­es digital graphics on images of the real world.

Last spring, the company announced a fourth version of its camera-equipped glasses, called Spectacles, with augmented reality technology built in, but those remain available only for developers.

Apple, Meta Platforms and Amazon.com are also all working on glasses featuring augmented reality as well as products devoted to virtual reality and mixed reality, which combines the two.

Spiegel says Snap’s focus is solely on AR. “Our bet is firmly on the real world. We just believe that people enjoy the real world and enjoy being together with their friends, but also that it makes computing a lot more familiar, approachab­le and easier to use.”

The company announced a deal with concert giant Live Nation Entertainm­ent to develop augmented reality experience­s for performanc­es and music festivals such as Lollapaloo­za. Special effects can extend from the stage and appear on the phones and eventually the Spectacles of concertgoe­rs. Concertgoi­ng fits with the app’s demographi­c: Snap says it reaches more than 75 per cent of the 13- to 34-year-olds in more than 20 countries.

Snap also disclosed that it acquired a San Francisco-based AR company called Forma, which developed technology to let people create photoreali­stic avatars of themselves.

Snap is using Forma’s technology to let its users visualise themselves trying on clothes, part of a broad push to bring augmented reality tools to retailers, fashion brands and users and help them shop on the app.

Snapchat users are already familiar with avatars, after the company in 2016 acquired the maker of Bitmoji, the personalis­ed cartoon stickers people can send in their messages to react to one another’s content.

Snap, which has been remarkably free of the drama dogging competitor­s like Meta and Twitter, also used its annual event to give an update on its user growth. It says its Snapchat app now has over 600 million monthly active users, up from 500 million a year ago, making it bigger than Twitter but not as large as Instagram or another surging rival, TikTok.

Of the turmoil surroundin­g Twitter and its planned purchase by Elon Musk, Spiegel says: “I think Elon is a power user with a lot of great insight on Twitter and where to take it in the future. I’m optimistic that they’ve got a lot of great success ahead.”

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