
A battery for the Bebop has enough juice for 11 minutes of flight. For one, Parrot still hasn’t completely fixed the issue with mediocre battery life. Unfortunately, the drone has its downsides. You can buy the P arrot Bebop for around $500 for the drone alone, while the price is at less than $800 with the Skycontroller. This gadget has HDMI capability, making it capable of displaying the live feed on an FPV glass a la virtual reality headset. It has a signal booster for Wi-Fi as well, so that the control range can go beyond what the tablet or phone alone could offer. The Skycontroller features two navigational joysticks with a dock for tablets. Precision control is much easier on the Skycontroller, though. Plus, the interface can control the drone’s takeoff and landing, removing a common hassle for users. With just a few tweaks here and there, you’ll find it easy to use. It has a simple interface with intuitive controls.
Parrot drone windows#
With guidance from either the Freeflight 3 app (which works on iOS, Android, and Windows phones) or the add-on transmitter Skycontroller, it’s possible to fly the drone within a confined space. Freeflight 3 is perhaps one of the best aspects of this UAV. Thanks to its tiny form, the drone is capable of flying indoors. Although this quad is lightweight, it is considerably stable even when the wind starts to pound. The dimensions – which are, at most, 33 x 38 x 3.6 cm – merit some points. The main selling point of this new Parrot UAV is its amazing form factor. But how does Parrot’s most recent quadcopter fare?

The AR.Drone 2.0 and other previous models have had bugs and glitches the company had to iron out after their release. Parrot, a France-based company, has been on a hit or miss run with the drones they released in the past years.
