If you’re just getting started in aerial photography, a sport action camera is your best bet: you won’t break the bank while you learn the ins and outs of filming with a drone. This guide includes our favorites, shown in order of price. The small powerhouses we highlight here can all capture amazing video footage and impressive bird’s-eye-view photos, and they start at just $7o. Get started by clicking on the image.
I am pleased that here are magazines like yours coming on the market, but I’m not interested in renewing my subscription. Everytime I read your magazine I come away frustrated and annoyed. First of all you need a standardized panel so we can rationally compare the drones you test, think car magazines. I would like to see all up weight, battery used, flight times maximum AUW etc. If you do an article about the largest drone operator in NYC it’s interesting to hear about there interaction with the FAA, or the kind of jobs they do, but it would be better if you actually talked about the drones they fly, what cameras they use, are they building there own, what frames do they use, is a 6s battery good or do they have to go to 8S or 10S to make them work. You do an article on flight controllers but do even mention which ones are GPS compatible. Maybe you could do a build from scratch so your readers could understand the process. Maybe you need to hire some editors that are actually working in the industry rather than just putting out articles on companies doing work with drones without talking about the drones.
I am a commercial photographer now working with drones, since almost everything on the market is geared toward video I now have to build my own to get my cameras up in the air without spending a fortune, but reading your publication is of little to no use to me.