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DJI Mimo gets major upgrade for new Osmo Pocket cameras

DJI is keeping the momentum going for its newest pocket-sized cameras. Just days after introducing the Osmo Pocket 4P in China and rolling it out to additional Asian markets including Japan, Indonesia, and Vietnam, the company has released a fresh update for the DJI Mimo app — the companion app that’s essential for activating, managing, and editing footage from the Pocket camera lineup.

The latest version (2.10.9) of DJI Mimo brings support for the new Osmo Pocket 4P while also delivering several creative editing tools that make it easier for users to customize and share their videos.

One of the biggest additions is a trio of new Master Filters: Vista Pro, Grace Pro, and Radiant Pro, giving creators more cinematic looks straight out of the app. DJI has also updated its Color Presets to fully support D-Log 2, allowing users shooting in the new color profile to apply richer, more refined color grading with less effort.

For creators who spend a lot of time editing on their phones, the update introduces several workflow improvements as well.

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A new Preset Sharing & Importing feature lets users generate a share code for their custom editing presets. Instead of recreating an editing style from scratch, other users can simply import the preset with a single tap.

The app also adds Custom Live 3-Split, allowing creators to rearrange, reposition, and zoom individual panels in split-screen layouts. It’s a small addition, but one that offers much more flexibility for social media edits.

Meanwhile, DJI has expanded the app’s Sports Dashboard by adding support for importing sports data from the Xingzhe app, making it easier to overlay ride or workout statistics onto action footage.

The update builds on DJI’s recent software push for the Pocket series. Earlier, the company released a more substantial firmware update for the Osmo Pocket 4 family that added features such as Direct Transfer to Huawei devices, making it easier to move footage without cables. That firmware also introduced a variety of stability improvements and feature refinements designed to improve the overall shooting experience.

Together, the firmware and Mimo updates suggest DJI is putting significant emphasis on polishing the software experience around its newest Pocket cameras, not just the hardware itself.

The timing also makes sense. Although the Osmo Pocket 4P has yet to receive a global launch, DJI has steadily expanded availability beyond China into several Asian markets, fueling speculation that a broader international rollout could follow. The new camera brings several hardware upgrades over previous Pocket models, including improved imaging capabilities and new creator-focused features, while maintaining the compact, stabilized design that has made the Pocket series popular among travelers, vloggers, and everyday content creators.

For existing DJI users, the latest Mimo update is worth installing even if they don’t own the new Pocket 4P yet. The editing enhancements, improved color workflow, and preset-sharing tools benefit a wider range of creators, while Pocket 4P owners will need the updated app to unlock full compatibility with DJI’s newest handheld camera.

More: This DJI drone flies up to 93 minutes for under $300

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Avatar for Ishveena Singh Ishveena Singh

Ishveena Singh is a versatile journalist and writer with a passion for drones and location technologies. She has been named as one of the 50 Rising Stars of the geospatial industry for the year 2021 by Geospatial World magazine.