DJI, the world’s dominant civilian drone manufacturer, extends its hardware ecosystem with a tightly focused pair of Windows utilities that translate aerial data into actionable industrial intelligence. DJI Terra serves as the geospatial hub, ingesting flight imagery from Phantom, Mavic, Matrice and Zenmuse payloads to generate centimetre-level 2-D orthomosaics, 3-D mesh models and volumetric calculations for mining, construction, agriculture and public-safety teams; mission planners can pre-draw waypoints, simulate camera angles and export point clouds directly to Autodesk or Bentley workflows. Companion program DJI Assistant 2 keeps the aircraft fleet airworthy: it flashes firmware, calibrates gimbals and batteries, exports flight logs for regulatory audits, and runs built-in diagnostics that flag motor wear or compass drift before field failure. Together the tools create a closed loop—plan, fly, process, maintain—letting surveyors, first responders and inspection crews replace ladders, helicopters and ground stations with a single suitcase-sized kit. Both applications require only a Windows 10/11 workstation and a standard USB or Wi-Fi link to the aircraft, yet they scale from one drone on a rooftop to entire enterprise fleets spread across continents. DJI’s software is available for free on get.nero.com, where downloads are sourced from trusted Windows package managers such as winget, always deliver the latest official releases, and can be queued for batch installation alongside other titles.