Showing posts with label Camera. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Camera. Show all posts
Friday, July 17, 2009
Shoot your movie while on the go with the Sanwa bicycle stand
This ingenious gadget called Sanwa bicycle stand offers a new vision of what is happening on the road so you will have to attach the Sanwa bicycle stand to the handle of your bike. The Sanwa bicycle stand is easily adjustable and appears to be a perfect solution for shooting on the move to make your riding memorable.
The Sanwa bicycle stand measures 97 × 40 mm so optionally you are able to attach it to the tree so that to analyze your driving experience while having a lot of fun. The Sanwa bicycle stand is not going to take a lot of room as it is very compact. This wonderful bicycle stand seems to be available in Japan for about 14 USD so it is quite affordable.
Saturday, June 27, 2009
Powerful underwater memory with the Underwater 5MP Digital Camera
This high performance underwater camera records video at 18 - 20 frames per second coming with SD cards of up to 2 GB to provide around 65 minutes of high quality video. This underwater bad boy features a digital aqua pack and is rated to be water proof up to 15 meters provided by its water resistant case.
You will be able to play the recorded video as well as pictures right on your TV set. Additionally, if you want to snap a regular video you may easily remove its water proof case and enjoy recording. Besides, you will be able to use it as your standard web camera. This multi functional underwater camera is powered by 2 AAA batteries.
So if you have a long distance journey, you are able to bring some extra batteries for those emergency cases. Its flash memory is 16 MB while 8 x digital zoom coming also with of 18 - 20 FPS video mode at QVGA with sound supported. In addition to that, there is a voice recorder feature as well as TV output along with a cable.
Loaded with a pouch and wrist strap, this underwater camera is ultra portable. The underwater 5MP Digital camera measures 11, 5 cm in length, 8 cm in width and 6 cm in height. The camera is suitable for people aged at least 16 years old. This perky camera requires USB cable included, has a user guide for better comprehension as well as 2, 0 inches full color LCD display.
Thanks to the hardware interpolation, this bodacious camera is capable of shooting 12 and 8 MP resolution images. Moreover, this underwater gadget offers a TV AV cord, camera software CD, resolution sensor with option to snap 5 MP, 3, 1 MP, 1, 3 MP and 300 K resolution pictures.
Other features include easily adjustable flash function with auto flash, auto flash with red eye reduction option, flash off, fill-in flash and slow sync, white balance adjustment with auto, daylight, cloudy, fluorescent, tungsten, sunset and custom mode, Ulead Photo Software, timestamp function, self timer-function and easily mountable tripod.
This cool camera is capable of displaying pictures taken on your TV set while is covered by one year warranty. Besides, its multi lingual interface comes in 8 languages including English, French, German, Spanish, Portuguese, Italian, traditional and facilitated Chinese.
Friday, June 5, 2009
Camera hidden in a belt buckle
This buckle has a secret hidden inside of it - tiny video and audio recorder. While looking like a usual accessory, it turns out to be an ultimate spy tool. Inside of this buckle rests a useful gadget that can record video and audio, and is beautifully camouflaged! Wireless cameras are a no-go in places where they can be detected by wireless camera detectors, so when you are forced to use another way of recording - put it on your belt and it will film everything you want, with practically no risk of getting caught. Miniature camera records video in 3GP video format (176x144, QCIF) with sound, which can be saved on the microSD card from 128 MB up to 2 GB. After that, recordings can be played on PC or on your mobile phone. It can live 3 hours on one battery charge, but if you want to record a 3 hour length video you'll need some spare cards - 1 GB microSD card can only take up to 33 minutes of video. It is available in two models: classic one, called Buckle DVR, and strangely shaped one called Obaba DVR.
Sunday, May 31, 2009
Canon D10: Shock, Water and Freeze-Proof
Weird, bulbous, cartoonish design aside, the D10 looks like a great outdoor camera. The D10 can be frozen, dropped and drowned and it’ll still grab pictures with a perfectly sufficient 12.1 megapixels and a 4x, stabilized optical zoom.
The limits: 33 feet under water, a four foot drop onto hard ground, and a temperature range of 14-104°F. And if you hate the camo-look, you can swap out the faceplates with bright, garish, easy-to-find-in-the-snow colors. At $330, it isn’t cheap, but then, you probably won’t have to buy another camera for a long time.
Monday, May 25, 2009
Sony CCDTRV98 Hi8 Camcorder
Product Features
- Hi8 camcorder
- 20x optical and 28x digital zoom lens with image stabilization
- 3.5-inch color LCD and black and white EVF
- Uses the Sony NP-F330 InfoLithium battery, included
- Includes A/V cable; includes a number of special effects and faders for custom creations
Thursday, May 7, 2009
Canon PowerShot SX1 IS
Canon's popular superzoom range of cameras began with the release of the PowerShot S1 IS back in 2004, and has been incrementally upgraded each year with more features and more pixels, with the last update being the PowerShot S5 IS announced in May of 2007. In September of 2008 Canon announced dual successors to the S5 IS. The cheaper of the two models is the Powershot SX10 IS, which features a 10 MP CCD sensor behind a 20X image stabilized lens, with the more expensive camera - the SX1 IS - adding RAW mode, a CMOS sensor, faster continuous shooting speed, and HD 1080p video recording.
Canon pioneered the use of CMOS sensors in digital SLRs (starting way back in 2000 with the EOS D30) - and they have long been used in cheap imaging devices (such as mobile phones and no brand 'keychain' digicams), but until now they haven't made their way into mainstream compact cameras. The reason has been simple; they just haven't been good enough. CMOS sensors have more circuitry built into the chip itself than CCD sensors, leaving less room for actually capturing light. This isn't a problem when you're working with a sensor with a large surface area, but at very small sizes it means lowered sensitivity - and that means noise and all the image quality problems associated with removing it.
Any problems with CMOS on large (DSLR) sensors were fixed long ago, and it is now the dominant technology in all but the cheapest models. The quest to fix them for smaller sensors has taken a lot longer, but it's one that continues because the possibilities offered by the on-chip processing capabilities of a CMOS sensor are simply too enticing for camera manufacturers to ignore (quite aside from the fact they use less power and are, in theory, a lot cheaper to mass produce). The SX1 IS, along with Sony's HX1 and the Ricoh CX1, is the first in a new wave of CMOS-sensored 'serious' compact cameras, and though few claims are being made about how the use of CMOS will affect image quality per SE, they all sport unique features (high speed capture, HD movies, clever image stacking modes) which are only possible because this technology.
read more "Canon PowerShot SX1 IS"
Canon pioneered the use of CMOS sensors in digital SLRs (starting way back in 2000 with the EOS D30) - and they have long been used in cheap imaging devices (such as mobile phones and no brand 'keychain' digicams), but until now they haven't made their way into mainstream compact cameras. The reason has been simple; they just haven't been good enough. CMOS sensors have more circuitry built into the chip itself than CCD sensors, leaving less room for actually capturing light. This isn't a problem when you're working with a sensor with a large surface area, but at very small sizes it means lowered sensitivity - and that means noise and all the image quality problems associated with removing it.
Any problems with CMOS on large (DSLR) sensors were fixed long ago, and it is now the dominant technology in all but the cheapest models. The quest to fix them for smaller sensors has taken a lot longer, but it's one that continues because the possibilities offered by the on-chip processing capabilities of a CMOS sensor are simply too enticing for camera manufacturers to ignore (quite aside from the fact they use less power and are, in theory, a lot cheaper to mass produce). The SX1 IS, along with Sony's HX1 and the Ricoh CX1, is the first in a new wave of CMOS-sensored 'serious' compact cameras, and though few claims are being made about how the use of CMOS will affect image quality per SE, they all sport unique features (high speed capture, HD movies, clever image stacking modes) which are only possible because this technology.
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