The breakout star of the Milan Cortina Winter Olympics isn’t an athlete. It's the drones.
The Winter Olympics have never, ever looked this cool.
The 2026 Milan Cortina Olympics are giving people at home a first-of-its-kind, first-person view of the Winter Games, all ...
First person view drones are providing new, dynamic camera angles for viewers at the 2026 Winter Olympics. Here's more on how they work: ...
First-person-view drones are being used at the 2026 Olympics to deliver live, close-up angles and aerial coverage that ...
Martin Bochatay is the drone cam pilot for the money shots inside the iconic Tofana schuss, the narrow chute between two walls of Dolomite rock.
Drone cameras are changing how broadcasters show Olympic winter sports by chasing athletes down the course for fast and close-up shots. The cameras have become ubiquitous in showcasing the speeds and ...
Athletes competing in this year’s Winter Olympic Games in Milan will do so surrounded by a complex web of AI-enabled cameras, ...
Drones chasing behind athletes has illuminated these Winter Olympic sports like never before, though not without their downsides.
A drone operator for the 2026 Winter Olympics is sharing an inside look at his job and how he puts viewers in the shoes of ...
Olympic Broadcasting Services is using up to 15 first-person-view drones across venues at the 2026 ... Read More ...
None of these drones ever go over the athletes or in front of them. This is one of the fundamentals. They always stay behind ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results