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HD home movies from your pocket?
Kodak Zi8 0

The follow-up to the Kodak Zi6, the new Kodak Zi8 pocket camcorder from Kodak brings with it 1080p video resolution and a host of new features, but should you be rushing out to get one? We took it out and about to find out.

Yes we know, chances are you already have the ability to record video in your mobile phone, and yes the notion of using a £149.99 ($180) pocket camcorder doesn’t fill you with excitement over something a little more, well professional.

With the camcorder market heating up as more and more people turn to videoing their magical moments rather than just snapping them, Kodak’s third pocket camcorder aims to appeal to those who want top quality recording in a pocketable device.

Pocketable is questionable. It’s small, but not that small. In real terms it the size of two iPhone’s stacked on top of each other. That means it will fit in your pocket, but your tailor would be unhappy about it riding in your shirt pocket.

The camcorder sports a 2.5-inch screen, a series of complicated buttons and well lots of space presumeably for your hand. Space it seems Kodak has used out of the box to plaster with a big sticker that tells you what it can do. A sticker we must have to say was a bugger to get off.

Regardless of stickers, those complicated buttons found beneath the screen allow you to set the settings of the device, delete clips, playback what you’ve recorded and of course select the camcorder or stills camera elements of the camcorder.

A central joystick, which is both fiddly and badly designed – it sits too deep in its recess – allows you set the recording going, navigate through the menu system and use the digital zoom.

Around the edges are all the connectors. There is a pop-out flexible USB cable that allows you to connect to your computer for charging and transferring files. It’s flexible now to allow greater movement – the previous version was fixed – and it means that you don’t have to perch your laptop higher than the desk just to plug it in.

You’ll also get an SD card slot, as the device has virtually no memory (enough to store the software on it) as well as a HDMI connector so you can view your movies back on a HD-Ready television. Older TV owners don’t worry there is also a standard AV out as well.

Realising that the in-built microphone is likely to be awful in outside conditions (it is) there is also a welcomed headphone is socket so you can opt for a wireless or wireless mics.

The only real switch on the device allows you to switch the camcorder from macro to landscape mode, a manual rather than automatic task.

In use and the camcorder is fairly easy to get recording. All you have to do is set the quality that you want to record at 1080p, 720p/60fps, 720p, WVGA or still (5 megapixels). Once you hit the record button you are recording. There are no trick moments or anything else to really worry about.

The lens is an f2.8 fixed focus lens that means it works well in poor light conditions but that it won’t auto focus. It’s a good job too as there is no light or flash, and the upshot of that fixed lens is that it won’t spend forever trying to focus on a subject (called hunting) as it moves around the screen, something that other pocket camcorders suffer from.

The move to include a fixed lens also means that you have to be a little more thoughtout in your shots. Depth of field isn’t an option here.

Because it’s fixed focus that’s where the macro/landscape switch at the top of the unit comes in. Switching to macro mode manually changes the focus of the camera allowing you to get close up shots.

Then there is the digital zoom. It’s there, but we wouldn’t recommend using it, ever. Slow, juttery and well, digital this should be used as a last resort if you really can’t get closer to what you want to shoot.

As for sound, in doors in a quiet environment the sound will be fine. It’s not the greatest of mics and that showed when we went outside in a windy environment. Luckily you can bring your own mic to the party. Something we would highly recommend. The problem is, however, is that with nowhere to connect it to, you’re going to have to enlist the help of some gafer tape (maybe that’s what all the space at the bottom is for) to keep your hands free.

Get inside, so to speak, and you’ll get Electronic Image Stablisation, which didn’t see to stablise our images that well (yes it was turned on) and software for the PC to help you upload it to YouTube, Facebook and lots of other social networking sites without too much fuss.

The software doesn’t work on the Mac, although the camera can be plugged in. That said, you’ve probably got iMovie installed already, so it’s not the end of the world.

Verdict:
Overall the Zi8 is a mixed back. The internal mic is shockingly poor when you get outside and the controls on the device (ie settings and playback) very fiddly. In addition to that the lens isn’t very wide so you’ll have to stand back to get in all the action, something that if you’re in a close environment with kids isn’t all that easy.

On the upside you get 1080p support, a rechargeable battery, an SDHC card slot, USB dongle tucked inside, and HDMI connector so you can watch it back afterwards on your TV without having to drag around a bag of cables (just steal the one out of his PS3, Xbox 360 or Sky box).

The fixed lens approach is also welcomed, as you’ll fail to take a blurry picture because it won’t be hunting or getting confused over a tree branch that is waving in the distance.

Do we like the Kodak Zi8? On the whole the pro’s do outweigh the cons, but you need to be aware of those cons before parting with your cash to avoid being disappointed.

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Tags:
Cameras Camcorders Kodak

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Kodak Zi8 camcorder originally appeared on Pocket-lint on Mon, 03 Aug 2009 20:23:02 +0100

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Suckers
Fly-Goodbye vacuum gun available 0

If you want to dispatch flies with a little more finesse that your average fly swat affords, you might like this vacuum gun. With a powerful inward gust of air, the gun sucks flies up and in as fast as you can say “bluebottle”.

Bundled along with the weapon of mass fly destruction are three glue cartridges that will ensure the flies meet a slow, sticky end as well as a catch-and-release cartridge with a magnifying top for those with a more Attenborough-style approach.

The Fly-Goodbye gun is available now from ThinkGeek for $29.99.

Read

Tags:
Dad Gadgets ThinkGeek HomeAndKitchen

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Fly-Goodbye vacuum gun available originally appeared on Pocket-lint on Wed, 29 Jul 2009 16:40:45 +0100

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Shure SE115 0Will these immerse you in sound?

Shure are best known for their high-end in-ear headphones that come with a high price tag too. With the SE115 Shure are making a play for the aftermarket, coming in with a still fairly hefty price of £99.99. So are these worth the money?

Read Shure SE115 in-ear headphones on Pocket-lint

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So Apple announced their push facility for iPhone OS 3.0 today. I think that’s great. Unfortunately, it’s only half a solution, and the other half is pretty important, too. At least it is to me. Let me explain.

If you want an app to let you know of something going one while you’re not looking — so you can do other things and stay informed — then push is great. In fact, I agree with Apple that keeping the whole app running in the background is overkill for this. In that regard, their push solution seems a great addition, keeping us from running numerous apps (and burning CPU cycles and battery life) for no other reason than we don’t want to lose touch. I’m with Apple on this solution all the way.

But sometimes it’s not about notification. Sometimes it’s just about switching.

Every single day I use NetNewsWire on my iPhone to read RSS feeds. I do this an hour or more each day. During that time I also stay in touch with friends and work via email and chat. Since I use Apple’s Mail and SMS apps, I already get background notification (further proof I know how necessary that functionality is). However, when I go to mail or chat to read/respond, I have to quit NNW. And when I go back to that app it must relaunch, and then I have to navigate back to where I was. This is frustrating enough that sometimes I delay responding until I hit a more convenient point in the text.

Why does it have to be this way? My point is that I don’t always want an app in the background for notification purposes. Sometimes I want it in the background because I’ll be switching right back to it. I’m only leaving for a few minutes; I’ll be right back. Why do I have to quit the freakin’ thing?

Push does nothing to address this usability issue. This is where allowing it to stay open in the background is a great solution.

To be sure, an app might be written to try to remember where it was, but even then I still have to relaunch it and let it figure that out. Why can’t I just switch to an app and back to another?

Way back when Switcher hit the Mac (and DOS before that), it wasn’t about background notifications. It was about not having to feel restricted to one app at a time, and not having to wait for an app to startup. I think those are still valid reasons for switching today. I wish the iPhone would allow it.

Make no mistake, the push facility is huge, and will be a great improvement. It addresses a critical portion of backgrounding in a better and more efficient manner. It also levels the playing field in giving third-party functionality that Apple’s apps already had. But it’s not the whole story, and it appears I’ll still be stuck with my switching problem even with a sleek new 3.0 iPhone.

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A good travel bag is one that you don’t notice. It slides easily under a seat or into the overhead compartment. It doesn’t set off red alerts in the security checkpoint line. The Skooba Checkthrough Messenger bag does all of these things and does it with simple, quiet style. … More Info