- Joined
- Mar 8, 2016
- Messages
- 624
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- Age
- 68
It seems like new firmware is as likely to introduce an issue as resolve one. The physical characteristics of the drone don't change, so once the ACs computer "knows" how to fly itself, it should be able to do so indefinitely. The main reason to change the firmware, is to keep the drone compatible with the updates happening in programs the drone must interact with. Since it's a machine, not a personal computer, it doesn't really need to interact with outside programs. It's almost completely a closed system. Common sense indicates that if the software in a closed system is acceptable, it does not need updates, though cosmetic updates could still be implemented if desired. I think (speculation) that DJI calls them upgrades to imply that your drone is getting better and better after each. Don't be a fool! You can't teach an old dog new tricks. If your drone can function as specified, no "upgrade" is going to beat that.
Not trying to be rude, but this statement is full of a lot of incorrect assumptions. It might "seem" that to you, using "common sense", that updates are nothing more than "cosmetic", but the longer your paragraph of suppositions got, the more you indicate how little you know about how these things work.
These UAVs are full of interconnected logic systems. The motors have ESCs. Your BATTERIES have updateable firmware. These are complicated, interconnected systems that are highly configurable, as one should be able to deduce by looking at all the flight/craft configuration parameters in the GO app.
And it's not entirely closed either, considering that DJI supplies third party companies with an SDK that allows people to supply their own controller software (Litchi, Airnest, etc.). Some of those apps had problems that weren't fixed until DJI updated the firmware.
The craft and batteries for my P3P have been updated multiple times for performance problems because some people had issues, which DJI corrected for, then made sure the rest of the world didn't experience those same issues. That's not cosmetic. Also, the motors have had enhancements to limit their output to keep them from and the batteries from damage. Not cosmetic.
This is all aside from the many features implemented. For example, my first P3P only had 2 intelligent flight modes, even though the owners manual described 4. Now there are 5. Not cosmetic.
It's not all documented, but enough of it is to show that most of the updates have been beneficial.
These are all things that have actually happeedn, not hairs of imagination plucked from the nether regions of my behind.
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