Yes, it is all software, done with EIS, and only a 4K sensor, so there are no spare pixels for EIS to use, so 4K videos with EIS must be lower real resolution, and looking at the demo videos, maybe they were done at 1080 so that there were plenty of spare pixels, otherwise it would be hard to get that much stabilisation. It will be interesting to see what the customers can manage when they try to use 4K 60fps EIS on their mountain bikes...So this "gimbal-like" stabilization in its ad. should be software function!
Yes, you can, OIS is good to keep the sensor stable and remove the motion blur from camera shake which EIS can not do, but it is hard for OIS to move fast enough to remove rolling shutter jello or to rotate the sensor to correct roll, so some OIS systems leave the rolling shutter and roll correction to EIS. Also OIS often can only do small movements, EIS can do much bigger corrections so EIS does what the OIS can't but it is still worth using the OIS so that it can remove the motion blur and give the EIS a sharp image to work with.not even sure you could combine EIS and OIS in the same product if you wanted to.
MEMS OIS is the next step, then we can forget about EIS, but I think it will take a few more years to get that in an action camera.I have seen "hybrid OIS" but i never bothered to read into it as it are not on things i can afford to get this side of a major lotto win.
We are all going to have to turn our monitors and TVs on their sides sooner or later! How long before the TV broadcasters start broadcasting sideways video?Vertical video is to appeal to the markets where it's the dominant format, Snapchat, Instagram, Facebook, given the streaming capabilities they'd be crazy not to have this
Yes, you can definitely have the stabilisation too smooth, and then I can get motion sickness watching the video! If you would experience bumps in real life then the video should be bumpy, but not too bumpy.I somehow feel footage with no bump or shake at all to it are a little spooky to watch, it just feel unnatural to me.
Dont get me wrong if you dont have any EIS /OIS or gimbal it is even worse, but when every bump are gone and its just like a drone / sky cam just floating along it do get a little weird to me.
But it is cool none the less, would love to get a GP7 and strap it to one of the small RC cars that have a quite bumpy ride even if the speed are not great.
Read more at https://www.trustedreviews.com/news...chinese-imitators-3584812#KZtyEImdvqkeDlPY.99GoPro isn’t averse to marketing big talk, once calling its Karma Grip “Hollywood-calibre stabilisation in a backpack”.
And true to form, it’s come out with some similarly big claims for its new flagship GoPro Hero 7 Black action camera.
GoPro founder Nick Woodman told us that the Hero 7 Black has “the best in-camera video stabilisation ever, in any camera”.
He didn’t stop there either, calling HyperSmooth stabilisation “the biggest innovation and advancement in our category since high definition”, and “the biggest value add that we’ve ever built into a GoPro”. Understatement sold separately, then.
I guess he wont be selling many more of his Karma Grip in the future then!he called it the gimbal killer in another interview.
Good audio is difficult, our brains pick up more information from sound than from video, but there is a lot less data to process so they ought to be able to sort it with "the power of their GP1 processor"!the stabiliser stuff is nice but the improved audio is the biggest advance so far, their audio has sucked forever
Good audio is difficult, our brains pick up more information from sound than from video, but there is a lot less data to process so they ought to be able to sort it with "the power of their GP1 processor"!
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