Meet the guitar string that can't be broken
Would you pay for online privacy?
How to spring clean your fitness regime
We can now get that on mobile devices, at consumer prices, with an add-on device called a steadicam.
In this week's #TalkingTech smackdown, we look at three mobile steadicams (also known as smoothcams, stabilizers or grips), the devices that aim to turn jumpy cell-phone and camera video into sweeping views, by using motors that steady the shot.
We begin with the new kid on the block, the Smove. At $139, it's the lowest priced of the bunch.
The DJI Osmo($550) started the trend, and continued it in 2016 with the lower-priced Osmo Mobile ($299), offering smooth video from the Chinese-based drone maker.
And the GoPro Karma Grip, originally intended as an accessory for the Karma drone, is now sold individually, for $299.
All three bring the motorized gimbal used on drones to the camera or phone to steady the image.
© Robert Hanashiro, USAT Jefferson Graham tries out three consumer gimbals at Venice Beach: Smove, GoPro Karma and the DJI Osmo . How does this work? Many drones have "three-axis" gimbals — that is, three motors, to work at stabilizing the footage as it soars through the skies. Cheaper drones have two-axis gimbals, and thus, are not as steady. The same metrics apply to the land-based steadicams.
SmoveThe Smove just came out of crowd funding on the IndieGogo website, where it raised $1.4 million, and is shipping now. Reader alert: the getsmove.com website redirects to Indiegogo, where it appears to be still looking for backers. The company assures us this isn't the case: click the $139 option, and you'll get a unit shipped to you. The company says it will set up its own website soon.
Besides smooth video, other features include the ability to charge your phone while shooting video, which is cool, but buyer beware. The unit is no fun to set up, with instructions that are hard to follow, and little online help as well.
But if you're short on cash and have to get a stabilizer, the price is a bargain, and the unit is an improvement over your normal smartphone footage.
OsmoI've written about the Osmo units in the past, and love both of them, although I'm partial to the $550 version, which comes with its own, super wide-angle camera.
The Osmo Mobile records footage to the iPhone or select Android models. As good as those cameras are, the Osmo camera is better, at least for getting wide-angle cinematic footage without camera shake.
(It's fun to walk down the street with the Osmo, and see your walk presented as super steady, like a camera was flying by your side.)
The $550 model connects via DJI private Wi-Fi, which can be problematic when in big crowds, or bluetooth for the $299 version. Battery life is really poor with these units—the juice can peter out in as little as 45 minutes, and you're draining your smartphone battery too.
GoPro Karma GripAnd unlike the Smove or Osmo units, you don't have to connect to Wi-Fi or Bluetooth to operate the unit. Just turn it on, and you're good to go.
To operate the Grip, place the Hero camera in the cradle, snap it tight, and power it up on the bottom of the unit. This, in turn, charges both the grip and camera. Once charged, turn on the power button on the grip, click record, and have fun.
The negative here is that you get less real estate to compose your images as with the others. With the Smove and Osmo units, the phone is your viewfinder, good for 4 to 5.5 inches, vs. the 2 inches for the Hero.
And if you have a Hero 5, you'll need to spring for a $29.99 adapter to fit the unit into the Karma grip.
Yet for the ease of not having to pair to Bluetooth or Wifi, one-click power starts, longer lasting battery and fabulous footage, the #TalkingTech smackdown victor goes to the Karma Grip.
What's your favorite grip for smooth mobile footage? Let's chat about it on Twitter, where I'm @jeffersongraham. And don't forget to subscribe to the daily #TalkingTech podcast on iTunes and Stitcher.
Source: How to turn your phone into a movie camera
No comments:
Post a Comment