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  2. Head-mounted display - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Head-mounted_display

    First-person view (FPV) drone flying uses head-mounted displays which are commonly called "FPV goggles". [26] [27] Analog FPV goggles (such as the ones produced by Fat Shark) are commonly used for drone racing as they offer the lowest video latency. But digital FPV goggles (such as produced by DJI) are becoming increasingly popular due to their ...

  3. Fat Shark - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fat_Shark

    Logo Fat Shark goggles in use. Fat Shark, [1] founded in 2007, manufactures FPV (where FPV stands for first-person view) headsets for drone racing.Their headsets utilize radio technology to show the user a live video feed that is broadcast from a drone.

  4. First-person view (radio control) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/First-person_view_(radio...

    The operator gets a first-person perspective from an onboard camera that feeds video to FPV goggles or a monitor. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] More sophisticated setups include a pan-and-tilt gimbaled camera controlled by a gyroscope sensor in the pilot's goggles and with dual onboard cameras, enabling a true stereoscopic view.

  5. Drone racing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drone_racing

    Racing drones lineup A first person-view racing drone showing the drone's video perspective as it navigates obstacles.. Drone racing is a motorsport where participants operate radio-controlled aircraft (typically small quadcopter drones) equipped with onboard digital video cameras, with the operator looking at a compact flat panel display (typically mounted to the handheld controller) or, more ...

  6. FPV - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FPV

    First-person view (radio control), a method of piloting radio-controlled devices using FPV camera and goggles. FPV loitering munition , radio-controlled drones with explosives attached to it. Ford Performance Vehicles , an Australian vehicle manufacturer

  7. HDMI - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HDMI

    HDMI 2.0a was released on April 8, 2015, and added support for High Dynamic Range (HDR) video with static metadata. [119] HDMI 2.0b was released March 2016. [120] HDMI 2.0b initially supported the same HDR10 standard as HDMI 2.0a as specified in the CTA-861.3 specification. [117]