Hi, this is Wayne again with a topic “Snapchat Spectacles review”.
There’S a saying in photography that the best camera is the one that you have on to you. So what if that statement was literally true what if you could wear a camera? Almost all the time? That’S the promise of snap spectacles and they’re pretty awesome. Now spectacles are the first hardware product from snapping, the company formerly known as snapchat, and they really deliver on that promise. Even for someone like me, who carries around a camera all the time, I’d really consider bringing these with me as well, and a part of that is that they tie right into the snapchat app every video you shoot on. These glasses gets sent right to your phone and from there you can edit it and upload it or share to your friends. I’Ve spent about a week with spectacles, and I found three really good use cases for them. One is experiential videos, two is face-to-face interactions with the people that you know and love and three is making videos that look and feel like memories.
Now, spectacles are good at experiential videos because they leave your hands-free. It lets you interact with whatever you’re doing without having a Juggalo camera. There’S also a really wide angle lens on that’s not quite as wide as a GoPro, but it works in the same way is sort of stretching the image making everything look a little bit more exciting, especially if it’s only at arm’s length, landscapes and open scenes. Look pretty good in spectacles, but where you’re really going to see it shine, is when you’re holding something in your hands or playing around with something at arm’s length. Now spectacles are also really good at filming interactions with people and that’s because snap went out of its way to make sure that everybody knows that you’re recording and that’s what this whole recording light is about. Instead of an ominous red light, that’s telling everybody that you’re filming them.
It’S this friendlier white wheel of Lights, that spins and sort of lets everybody participate in the experience. If they want, I didn’t, can I get a Shack, burger, fries and a large iced tea? Get a drink tray. I needed that part of that is the fact that the camera shoot at 60 frames. A second another part is the wide-angle lens, but it’s really actually all about the fact that the camera sits there right at eye level, it’s almost impossible to get that point of view with basically any other camera, and it makes a world of difference even if you’re, Not in the video in the end being able to capture something the way that you saw, it is a really powerful thing.
They were boring videos that shot of me pouring coffee or opening the door that I still felt an emotional connection with that I wouldn’t normally feel with. If I had shot them with anything else and then of course, there were more emotionally impactful moments like greeting my dog at the end of the day or going out on a date with my girlfriend, where it really shines. So there’s two big problems with spectacles: they don’t really ruin the experience, but you are going to have to live with them. If you want to use these, one is, if you shoot a lot of videos in spectacles, transferring those videos can be a pain in the ass right.
Now we’ve spent a good chunk of the day, shooting this video and shooting videos on spectacles, and it is now trying to import eighty three videos, the problem, as it builds a bunch of those videos up and waits to transfer them. Is it takes a lot longer if you shoot, maybe five or ten videos it’ll, take you about ten seconds of video to transfer, but if you shoot eighty-three of them, it sort of bogs down and it’s taking a lot longer than 10 seconds is signaling. Twenty or thirty seconds, the other big problem with spectacles has to do with the user interface with spectacles, you shoot the video on the glasses, get the way for them to transfer and then once they’ve transferred the app dumps them all into day by day groups, and So you have to go into each day and slide all the way over to find the video that you want then tap again to edit or do whatever you want with it and then tap again to be able to post it to your stories. It’S just three or four times as long of a process, if not longer than any other interaction you do inside the snapchat app and that’s after you figure all that stuff out.
There’S is still a learning curve. Beer, if you haven’t used snapchat a lot, but if you take a couple steps back, I feel like there’s more going on here than these, just being a supplement to snapchat. I think the reason that staff is calling itself a camera company now is that it’s starting to test out bigger ideas like being able to capture videos from your point of view that feel like memories and in that sense, spectacles feel more like a beta test.
For what’s coming next sure, they’re 130 dollars they’re really hard to buy right now, and the video quality isn’t quite there. Yet the idea that spectacles represent are much bigger than what we have today. I got this hold on Google, glass or a GoPro nope, and our food is right.
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