Did you think DJI had already reached the top of the sky? Think again. If rumors are true, the company known as the king of drones and gimbals will introduce its first full-frame mirrorless camera by the end of 2025. And it's not just "another camera" - it's the DJI Mirrorless Camera 2026, spiced with genetic material from the prestigious Hasselblad, which promises to shake Sony, Canon and Nikon to their core.
DJI
DJI – yes, the DJI with the drones – has entered the big battery market with the DJI Power 2000, a 2048 Wh power station that offers a continuous 3000 W of power, charges up to 80 % in 55 minutes and expands to 22 kWh by connecting up to 10 batteries. At $1,299/€1,399, it’s aimed at anyone who needs a quieter, lighter and (according to DJI) smarter alternative to existing solutions from EcoFlow, Bluetti, Anker and Jackery.
DJI, until recently known as Mr. "the one with the drones", is sending two new DJI cameras into the world in 2025 that could concretely shake up the world of action and professional video production. On the one hand, we have the DJI Osmo 360 - a new 360-degree action camera that has just escaped into the online wilds with its 8K resolution. On the other, we have the upcoming DJI Ronin Mirrorless Camera 2025 - a device that promises a mirrorless renaissance with a touch of Hasselblad and stabilization that will make even gimbals ashamed of their existence. The DJI Osmo is certain to arrive in July 2025, but the date for the biggest novelty is not yet known.
DJI's new DJI Osmo 360 will try to prove itself in fierce competition with the GoPro Max and Insta360 X5 with its spectacular resolution and long battery life. Is it worth waiting until July for it, or should we just order the old, proven competitor?
Chinese tech giant DJI, best known as the world's largest drone maker, is preparing to enter the oversaturated but fast-growing robot vacuum cleaner market. According to a report by the state-run China Securities Journal, citing internal sources, DJI will launch its first smart robot vacuum cleaner with suction and wet cleaning capabilities, called DJI ROMO, this month.
Is DJI really entering the world of mirrorless cameras with the DJI Ronin Mirrorless 2025 (working name), which promises a full-frame (36 × 24 mm) sensor with approximately 45 MP, built-in 4-axis IBIS stabilization, 4K/120 fps (10-bit, ProRes) video and wireless cloud upload - all for around €2,500 (estimated, 2025). Competitors such as the Sony Alpha 1 (€7,300), Canon EOS R5 (€4,500) and Nikon Z8 (€4,300) now get a serious challenger in the “killer class” of the mid-range price range.
With rumors of DJI's first true mirrorless camera (DJI Ronin Mirrorless Camera 2025) possibly coming as early as late 2025, a new chapter in the world of visual creation is opening. What do the rumors promise and why could this be a gamechanger for anyone who lives for footage?
DJI has unveiled its most ambitious drone yet – the new DJI Mavic 4 Pro 2025. This beauty combines futuristic design, technical brilliance and performance that would put even a €100,000 helicopter to shame. But Americans? For now, they can only admire it in pictures.
If you're a drone enthusiast and have already marked April 24, 2025 in red on your calendar, you've probably checked your batteries three times and refreshed the official DJI website five times by now - to no avail. The DJI Mavic 4 is still the mythical unicorn of the drone world: everyone's talking about it, but no one's seen it yet. What do we know today? A little more than yesterday, but with a touch more cynicism.
DJI, the king of drones and stabilization, is expected to launch its first mirrorless camera - the DJI Mirrorless Camera - by the end of 2025. Rumors point to a full-frame sensor, built-in stabilization and a modern design - all spiced up with the genetic code of the prestigious Hasselblad. If the promises come true, it could collapse the long-standing dominance of Sony, Canon and Nikon.
As the US brandishes tariffs against China, the photography world is already in silent shock: most of the equipment we use is no longer just made in China, but also created there. How have Chinese companies gone from copy-and-paste masters to world-class innovators in 10 years – and what does this mean for Sony, Canon, Nikon? DJI's mirrorless camera is also coming, and it will change a lot.
DJI, the king of drones and stabilizers, has introduced the DJI Osmo Mobile 7P – a smart gimbal for phones that has enough tricks up its sleeve to make even Houdini wonder. For 149 $ (about €163), you get a stabilizer with a built-in tripod, an extendable telescopic arm, standalone tracking without an app, and even a magnetic adapter for quick phone mounting. But the question remains: is it enough to replace the already excellent Osmo Pocket 3?