GoPro's new lineup of cameras is sex slave training videoshere.
Today, the company is introducing the $399 Hero 8, which comes with a series of optional accessories called "mods" for the first time. Additionally, the $499 GoPro Max is the company's latest take on a 360-degree camera. The Hero 8 and GoPro Max are both available for pre-order now and officially go on sale later this month.
Both cameras have features that will appeal to YouTubers, though there's still plenty for filmmakers and action sports enthusiasts.
The Hero 8 looks similar to last year's Hero 7, but with two big differences. First, the camera no longer requires a frame to mount it on a tripod or other accessory. Instead of clipping it into the removable frame from cameras in the past, the Hero 8 has two pieces that extend down from the body of the camera itself, allowing you to attach it to the mount of your choice without fiddling with an extra case. Second, the Hero 8 comes with a set of optional "mods," separate accessories that add an additional flip-up display, light, or microphone to the camera.
Put all these mods together and you get a camera that looks like it was designed for Instagram influencers and YouTubers. Images of this setup first leaked back in August.
The mods, which won't be available for pre-order until December, add new capabilities that GoPro says have been oft-requested features, like the ability to capture higher quality audio. They'll also add to the Hero 8's price tag — the display and media mods cost $79.99 each, while the light mod is $49.99. That means if you get a fully decked out Hero 8 with all three mods, it will cost more than $600.
Mods aside, GoPro has also made some notable software improvements. With Hero 8, the company is introducing the next generation of its stabilization tech, called HyperSmooth, and its time lapse feature, called TimeWarp. I'll have more thoughts in Mashable's full review of the Hero 8, but after a few weeks of testing the Hero 8, I've been very impressed with GoPro's stabilization improvements.
There's also a new nighttime time lapse mode, a Live Photos-like "Live Burst" feature, and audio and HDR improvements. The camera's user interface has also been revamped to make all its shooting modes more accessible and easier to use, and the GoPro app has gotten some much-needed attention as well.
Separately, GoPro is also showing off Max, a new 360-degree camera the company describes as a "next-level vlogging camera." Max has two 180-degree lenses, six built-in mics, and a front-facing display. It has amped up versions of the same stabilization and other software improvements of the Hero 8, but its 360-shooting capabilities enable a few other tricks as well.
After you've shot a 360-degree video, you can opt to "reframe" your video — selecting which parts of the frame you want to include — and export the video as a normal-looking clip, similar to what you can do with Rylo's 360 camera.
It's not the first time GoPro has introduced a 360 camera — let's not forget Fusion — but while that was billed as somewhat of an experiment, the Max seems like it's meant to cater more toward vloggers than the (mostly nonexistent) virtual reality content creators camera companies talked about a few years ago.
Recognizing that there are very few platforms (or viewers) interested in 360-degree videos, Max is more about enabling creator to capture an entire scene and allowing them to decide later how to share it.
Topics Gadgets
Things we wish our pets could say'The Social Dilemma' and 'Coded Bias' docs sound the alarm on AIMore than 100 authors ask Oprah to remove 'American Dirt' from her book clubJ.K. Rowling has some heartfelt, uplifting advice for budding writersScientists have recreated a period — and it's a big deal for women's healthFacebook will remove some coronavirus conspiracy theoriesThose Apple Cards are looking pretty busted just six months laterVin Diesel laser cut out of ham and cheese is a sandwich masterpieceSamsung Galaxy S20 reservations are now open. Yes, reservations.Siri, Google Assistant, other smart assistants lacking in emergenciesTwitter's iOS app now visibly threads together repliesMore than 100 authors ask Oprah to remove 'American Dirt' from her book clubGet schooled online by celebrities like Steve Martin, Shonda RhimesNever gonna give you up: The surprising resilience of the Rickroll, 10 years laterWe don't need April Fools' Day anymore because we're living a fake news nightmareGoogle is reportedly launching another messaging app, but this time might be differentNow Julian Assange is tweeting at Trump for some reasonSnapchat's Bitmoji TV premiere was fittingly weird (and ironic)Your internet privacy is gone and more sad news in podcast formIf you turn Baby Yoda into a snowman, you get an adorable Baby Snowda Another Evening Gone by Sadie Stein Points of View, Points of Origin An Interview with Julia Wertz Cabinet of Wonder Annotations by Paul Muldoon A Marvelous Crutch: An Interview with Brad Zellar Maya Angelou, Denise Levertov, and Gary Snyder on Poetry The Victorian Ghost Stories of Vernon Lee A Brief History of Insect Control The Morning News Roundup for November 13, 2014 Staff Picks: Staircases, Sister Mountains, Self The Morning News Roundup for November 10, 2014 The Morning News Roundup for November 28, 2014 A Microinterview with Nell Zink The Ballad of Ferguson, Missouri This Week’s Staff Picks Notes on Oxford Dictionaries’ Word of the Year The Morning News Roundup for December 5, 2014 An Interview with Shelly Oria How to Repair Parchment
1.9454s , 10520.3359375 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【sex slave training videos】,Exquisite Information Network