TeriTerryTarry
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Dec 4, 2015
- Messages
- 661
- Reaction score
- 254
- Country
- United States
- Dash Cam
- Several action cams
As with all products, some will perform better than others, even when they have identical specs. That has been, is now and for the foreseeable future will be as true for action cameras as for any other product. Separately there is the issue of whether or not a product is making false claims.
It's obvious that time and again Chinese action camera manufacturers have made false claims. Some do not have the hardware they claim. Some can't perform as they claim. Some make claims but with caveats tucked away somewhere in a manual or on their web page.
My point has been and continues to be only this: When one says that a camera manufacturer is making false claims, how do you KNOW that those claims are false? It can't be based just on the quality of the videos or photos. Cameras with verifiably better hardware and verifiably better specs can still have lower quality videos and photos than lesser cameras.
Is a manufacturer claiming that a camera has hardware that in fact it does not? Unless you have intimate knowledge of the industry and know that the claim is false, or you have seen a teardown of the camera, how do you KNOW?
Are they claiming it has performance that it does not? If you KNOW the hardware, and the specifications for that hardware are known to be incapable of the claimed performance, then you can say you KNOW the claimed performance is false. If the property details shown in video playback programs indicate certain parameters, then unless you know what the hardware is and know that it is incapable of such performance, how do you KNOW the property details are based on interpolation or double frame rates, i.e., are false?
I'm approaching this as somebody who doesn't have intimate industry knowledge and only a newbie's knowledge of action cameras. I read camera manufacturers' blurbs on their websites, specification sheets of component manufacturers, postings of knowledgeable people on sites like DCT, and I read and watch reviews. I want to understand, based on the questions I asked above, how a person can KNOW that a manufacturer's claims are false. If a person says that they KNOW that a camera's specs are false based on balance of probabilities, is that legitimate?
It's obvious that time and again Chinese action camera manufacturers have made false claims. Some do not have the hardware they claim. Some can't perform as they claim. Some make claims but with caveats tucked away somewhere in a manual or on their web page.
My point has been and continues to be only this: When one says that a camera manufacturer is making false claims, how do you KNOW that those claims are false? It can't be based just on the quality of the videos or photos. Cameras with verifiably better hardware and verifiably better specs can still have lower quality videos and photos than lesser cameras.
Is a manufacturer claiming that a camera has hardware that in fact it does not? Unless you have intimate knowledge of the industry and know that the claim is false, or you have seen a teardown of the camera, how do you KNOW?
Are they claiming it has performance that it does not? If you KNOW the hardware, and the specifications for that hardware are known to be incapable of the claimed performance, then you can say you KNOW the claimed performance is false. If the property details shown in video playback programs indicate certain parameters, then unless you know what the hardware is and know that it is incapable of such performance, how do you KNOW the property details are based on interpolation or double frame rates, i.e., are false?
I'm approaching this as somebody who doesn't have intimate industry knowledge and only a newbie's knowledge of action cameras. I read camera manufacturers' blurbs on their websites, specification sheets of component manufacturers, postings of knowledgeable people on sites like DCT, and I read and watch reviews. I want to understand, based on the questions I asked above, how a person can KNOW that a manufacturer's claims are false. If a person says that they KNOW that a camera's specs are false based on balance of probabilities, is that legitimate?
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