DJI drone cameras emerge and land, and in the sense that they have become a unique and powerful tool to create a well-stabilized portable video.
Capture motion without blurring. Action scenes without talks Perfect video, even when you’re on the move. With advanced technologies specifically designed to keep your camera fixed no matter how you move it, DJI Osmo helps you record videos and take photos like never before. It’s more than a camera. This helps you create more freely than ever before.
- DJI announced last week the new Osmo.
- A radical change in the action camera industry that has enormous potential not only for fans.
- But also for filmmakers.
- Do you have a simple style to hold the camera? Like a gun?And one of DJI’s Zenmuse 3.
- -axis gimbal stabilizers.
- The Osmo produces highly stabilized 4K video and 120 ip HD video in your hands.
- The device also offers hyperlapse and time-lapse functions.
- As well as the ability to take panoramic photos.
First, here are DJI Osmo’s introductory videos
Does the Osmo look like it uses the same 4K camera?Or at least one that’s very similar? For the camera that comes with the Phantom 3 Professional. La the main difference between the two is that Osmo’s camera is capable of shooting at 120 ips in Full HD, while the Phantom 3 Professional camera reaches up to 60 ips.
Like all other DJI cameras, Osmo should be used with a smartphone to track your movie and change most of the camera’s internal settings. That said, the gun style has some basic built-in features, such as a record button, a joystick to control the gimbal manually, and a switch to change the gimbal’s operating mode.
Here are some images that DJI released this week and here’s Osmo used with the Zenmuse X5P camera in a professional cinema environment.
True innovation here, if you want to call it stabilization, or at least the form factor in which it is presented. While the gun style with gimbal stabilizers for GoPros and smartphones has been around for some time, DJI’s integration with the camera and stabilization equipment should offer users a much simpler shooting process than they normally would have. Add to that the fact that stabilization here is really impressive, perhaps even a giant step better than competitive gun-style gimbals, and you have a camera that has some potential for serious cinema, especially when combined with a better camera.
This brings me to the coolest aspect of this device, that is, it can be upgraded with DJI Inspire 1 drone camera or DJI’s new Zenmuse X5 cameras as well, meaning Osmo users are not limited to shooting with a professional drone camera. It could also mean that Osmo will be compatible with the new DJI cameras as soon as they become available, meaning that the new Phantom 4, Inspire 2 or Zenmuse enhanced professional cameras could be used in Osmo. This is just speculation at the moment, but it seems obvious that DJI allows different segments of its user base to have the option to choose between different cameras depending on the set of functions they need.
DJI Osmo will cost around $650 and is expected to go on sale on October 15.