Huawei P10 Video clips
While the latter offers only 1080s video (for instance, a 360 video with 1,080 lines of resolution), the 360 CAM footage will be rendered at 1440s, and the extra detail can definitely be seen. It’s still much fuzzier-looking than Full HD shot with a regular camcorder, though. Spherical video will probably require a 4K or even 8K base file to reach this level. The 360 CAM also has three microphones, so it can record 5.1-channel surround sound alongside the video. However, since YouTube doesn’t support this, and neither does my phone (an iPhone 6 Plus), I couldn’t test whether this was panning with the video – although the video files were definitely being recorded in 5.1 audio.
An outdoor photo on Google Street View can be found here. An indoor photo on Google Street View can be found here. There isn’t so much obvious difference in quality between photos taken with the two devices, and Street View doesn’t do the available resolution full justice.
Huawei P10 Video clips - Considering buy phones Products
The Ricoh Theta S is already relatively better at this than it is at video, and the LG 360 CAM improves quality only marginally. The photos have more detail than the video, while (obviously) being static. Related: 4GEE Action Cam Should I buy the LG 360 CAM? The 360 CAM is a promising offering from LG. In particular, it provides better video quality on YouTube than the Ricoh Theta S, which could be enough to convince those who haven’t quite been bowled over by the Ricoh offering that this is the VR camera to buy. On the other hand, the Theta S has a considerable following already – including from developers – and will be offering features such as live VR streaming via YouTube in the near future. The clincher, however, is the price.
Where the Theta S will set you back around £300, the LG 360 CAM is closer to £200. Considering that you can pick up 64GB of SDXC memory for less than £20 these days, the lack of on-board memory is more of a benefit than a downside. So while this still isn’t the essential 360 camera that everyone must have, it’s another step in that direction. Verdict The LG 360 CAM ups the virtual-reality video quality a notch, and reduces the cost too. Thanks to Mobile Fun for providing us with an LG 360 CAM for review ONSEPTEMBER 11, 2015EDIT "OSMO | TRUSTED REVIEWS" OSMO | Trusted Reviews ONSEPTEMBER 9, 2015EDIT "SAMSUNG GALAXY NOTE 5 AND S6 EDGE+ KEYBOARD COVER REVIEW" Samsung Galaxy Note 5 and S6 Edge+ Keyboard Cover Review Hands-on with Samsung’s Galaxy Note 5 and S6 Edge+ Keyboard Cover One of the more left-fields products, or accessories, released by Samsung over the past few years has been the keyboard case for the brand’s latest phablet flagships: the Galaxy Note 5 and S6 Edge+.
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Looking rather like the keyboard of an old BlackBerry handset, but attached to the body of one of Samsung’s 5.7in devices, it caused quite a stir when it was first shown off last month. I’ve finally managed to get some hands-on time with it – and I really don’t get it. Firstly, it isn’t the best-looking product that Samsung has crafted. Although the Korean company’s latest slew of phones have been built from glass and metal, the keyboard cover harks back to the days of the plasticky Galaxy S4 and S5. Related: Samsung Galaxy Note 6 It slips onto the phone, covering its rear – which on the plus side actually provides added protection against scratches or cracks to the glass. The keyboard sits about half way over the display, and the software will recognise that it’s attached and shrink down the UI accordingly. I find it makes text way too small – it’s still readable, but only just.
While most keyboards that attach to mobile devices work via Bluetooth, this isn’t the case with Samsung’s keyboard cover. In fact, it merely presses down over the virtual keyboard that pops up normally.
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