Lily’s first prototype, built by Henry Bradlow and Antoine Balaresque in September 2013, used a Raspberry Pi and an Ardiuno. It was enough to convince investors, and in the Spring of 2014 Shana Fisher and SV Angel made Lily real.
For Lily to become more than a prototype, Rob Englin gave it a heart, Rowland O’Flaherty gave it courage and Nghia Ho gave it a brain. Soon Lily was what it was meant to be: the world’s first throw-and-shoot camera. All you have to do is throw it in the air to start shooting. Lily flies itself and uses GPS and computer vision to follow you around. Lily is waterproof, ultra-compact, and shoots HD pictures and videos.
The camera in Lily offers 1080p 60 fps or 720p 120 fps as video resolution. With a fixed focus lens, the camera can take 12MP photos and has digital gimballing and image stabilization. It’s not going to compete with any professional tool out there, but the price for this drone is $499 if pre-ordered or $999 (plus taxes) when launched in the market.
Buyers will get the Lily Camera, a tracking device (with its wrist waterproof case), a brick charger, a micro USB cable, and a user manual.
Find more about the Lily at the project’s webpage.