Skip to main content

It’s like a flying marshmallow: Say hello to the world’s safest drone

Fleye - Your Personal Flying Robot - Now on Kickstarter!
A Belgium-based startup has designed what it’s claiming is “the world’s safest drone.”

The flying machine landed on Kickstarter this week and sports a unique design that means anyone touching it mid-flight can do so secure in the knowledge that no part of their anatomy is at risk of being inadvertently sliced off. With that in mind, international singing superstar Enrique Iglesias should seriously consider backing this project.

fleye drone
Fleye
Fleye
Recommended Videos

Resembling a levitating lampshade or giant marshmallow, camera-equipped Fleye is about the size and weight of a soccer ball and can be flown remotely or autonomously by selecting one of several pre-programmed “missions” via its accompanying iOS and Android smartphone app.

Autonomous flying modes include Selfie, Panorama, Hover, and Manual, the last of which lets you pre-program a route. Remote control is possible via its virtual gamepad or a bluetooth game controller. It also features an open API and SDK giving developers the chance to come up with their own specific uses for Fleye.

The machine tips the scales at only 1 pound (453 grams) and includes an HD camera offering 1080p, 30fps video and 5-megapixel photos. Fleye can stay in the sky for 10 minutes on a single charge, and can reach speeds of up to 10 mph.

Fleye is the creation of a team led by electrical engineer Laurent Eschenauer, who describes himself as “the kind of guy who writes software on Sunday afternoon because it’s fun,” and aerospace engineer Dimitri Arendt who “started building planes when he was eight [and has] never stopped flying stuff since then.”

If the newly launched Kickstarter project can reach its €175,000 ($190K) funding target, the team says it can start shipping the drone in September 2016. Early backers can get their own Fleye with a pledge of at least €699 ($760), which offers a 40 percent off the expected retail price of €1250 ($1,365).

Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
Watch this FPV drone video open Stephen Colbert’s Late Show
The exterior of the Ed Sullivan Theater in New York City.

Stephen Colbert’s Late Show welcomed back its first live audience in 15 months this week, marking the occasion with a snazzy opening sequence shot by a drone at New York City's Ed Sullivan Theater where the show is recorded.

Footage created using first-person-view (FPV) setups in which the drone operator uses a real-time video feed delivered to a headset has been gaining in popularity, with mainstream broadcasters and even Hollywood getting interested in hiring the best pilots. Such drone kits usually use specially built flying machines that are faster and more versatile than regular consumer drones.

Read more
Wing names the drone-delivery capital of the world
A Wing delivery drone in flight.

Drone-delivery specialist Wing has been running trial services in parts of the U.S., Australia, and Finland for several years now, lowering groceries and other provisions from its specially designed drone into the yards of customers who minutes earlier placed an order on their smartphone.

2 Years of Drone Delivery in Logan Australia | Wing

Read more
Watch this FPV drone take on the world’s highest waterfall
watch this fpv drone take on the worlds highest waterfall angel falls video

Action-packed and artfully shot first-person-view (FPV) drone videos are all the rage just now, though most of them seem to be shot in and around buildings and urban areas.

Keen to take his own high-speed drone into nature, ace FPV drone pilot Ellis van Jason recently headed to Venezuela to shoot a dramatic dive down Angel Falls, which at 3,121 feet (979 meters) is the world’s highest waterfall.

Read more