Here at IFA, Sony thinks it has just the thing to help struggling musical artists become breakout successes. Say hello to the $300 HDR-MV1 Music Video Recorder. Set to take on the likes of the Zoom Q2 ...
A new HDR video recorder camera with triple-sensors has been created that can capture AMP II HDR recordings. Offering up to 17 stops of dynamic range while simultaneously capturing video on 3 separate ...
The Ninja V is Atomos’ fourth 5" monitor/recorder. The original Ninja was announced in 2010 and I first saw it at NAB 2011. By 2012, the Ninja II had already replaced the original Ninja. In 2014, the ...
The Sony HDR-MV1 Music Video Recorder has been introduced this week as a device made for musicians who wish to record and share live – or staged – performances. This device works with an X-Y position ...
Given that we're living in the Age of YouTube, it's becoming pretty much standard practice for up-and-coming musicians to post videos of their jam sessions or live performances online. And while the ...
We've just heard that the Atomos Sumo 19" HDR monitor/recorder is now shipping worldwide. When we visited Atomos' booth at NAB in Las Vegas this April, it created quite a bit of interest. But more ...
The new Shogun 7 is the company's first absolutely true HDR display/recorder, and that's not the only trick up its sleeve. This is another game changer. Just a few years ago, Atomos embraced HDR at a ...
Bang & Olufsen, the dumb blonde of the consumer electronics industry, rolled out the HDR 2, a hard disk video recorder that amounts to a PVR that stores 60 hours of standard definition video. It makes ...
I think it’s safe to say that the VHS market is on its final legs – but that doesn’t mean to say we haven’t all got piles of tapes still knocking about the house (including many things yet to be ...
Voice recorders are a total anachronism in the gadget world. Almost everything about their design, interface, and form-factor is predicated by 30 some-odd years of tape-based predecessors, making for ...
The backward compatibility of Advanced HDR by Technicolor makes it possible for public broadcasters to improve picture quality without creating barriers to ensure equitable services.” — Ling Ling Sun, ...
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