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Autel Robotics Explains Status, Next Steps After App Store Changes

Autel Robotics posted a March 3, 2026 statement on its bilingual site about the availability of its flight-control and pilot apps on the Apple App Store, but the public post is truncated and key details are missing.

Chris Morales2 min read
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Autel Robotics Explains Status, Next Steps After App Store Changes
Source: www.autelrobotics.com

Autel Robotics published an official company statement dated March 3, 2026 that addresses availability of its flight-control and pilot apps on the Apple App Store, according to a news entry on the company website. The short release, reproduced in the site search index, “explains the company’s position, the current status of its app(s) in the Apple ecosystem, and the steps Autel is taking to co”, but the supplied fragment is truncated and the site search snippet does not include the full text.

The statement appears in the site news index labeled 新闻 and is accessible from a bilingual interface offering English and 简体中文. The site search page shows “Search results, 203 strip” and lists the headline “Official Statement Regarding Autel Robotics App Availability on the Apple App Store” among other news items, indicating the company posted multiple recent items alongside the statement.

The search results visible on Autel’s site include a cluster of related corporate items that provide context but not the missing details: “Autel Robotics Data Security White Paper — European Union,” “Autel Robotics EVO Max Series Achieves C5 Certification, Leading the Way in Drone Compliance,” and a separate “Autel Robotics EVO Max Series Achieves C2 Certification” entry. The news index also lists operational items such as “Autel Robotics Soars To New Heights With The Launch Of A Repair Centre In The UK,” and examples of public safety deployments, including “EVO Max Series helps Murrieta police capture group of suspects” and “Miami Valley police department deploying drones to catch criminals.”

The site navigation and menu visible on the search page enumerate specific product model names that sit alongside the news item: EVO Lite Enterprise Series, Autel Alpha, EVO Max 4T, EVO Max 4T V2, EVO Max 4N, EVO Max 4N V2, EVO II Enterprise V3, EVO II Dual 640T V3, EVO II RTK Series V3, EVO II Pro V3, Dragonfish-25, Dragonfish Pro, and Dragonfish Standard. Those menu entries are presented verbatim on the search results page.

AI-generated illustration
AI-generated illustration

Critical facts remain absent from the public materials: the full text of the March 3 statement is not present in the supplied snippet, the exact App Store app titles are not identified beyond the generic terms “flight-control and pilot apps,” and there is no App Store notice or comment from Apple included in the material. The company search index labels every news entry “Source: 新闻 View Details,” but the View Details content for the App Store statement was not provided.

Reporter follow-ups required to close the story include retrieving the complete March 3 statement via the site’s View Details link, asking Autel for a named spokesperson and the exact App Store app titles and current status, and requesting comment from Apple on any changes to availability. Until those items are obtained and the full statement is published in the news detail, the public record on what changed in the Apple App Store and what steps Autel is taking remains incomplete.

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