Jim Cancil
December 7th, 2011, 03:59 PM
I have read a lot of criticism that most cameras, unlike a GoPro, will not shoot stills on a time schedule. I scratch my head, because I seem to be able to find perfectly 'useable' images buried within the video of all sorts of inexpensive cams?!
http://wetstuff.com/Ebay/Jake2.jpg
The kid on the chairlift was a snapshot from a video shot 26 Nov at Big Bear in California with a <$100 waterproof, Kodak ze2 attached to his snowboard. This camera was released in about Oct 2011.
http://wetstuff.com/Ebay/Brian_takeoff.jpg
This was shot in October 2011 in Ocean City Maryland. Local surfer, Brian Robbins, had a Contour ROAM on the front of his surfboard.
There was about 4MB of (heaven help us) 720 30fps images to look through. In both cases, these were also photos that would be either horribly expensive to stage ..or near impossible to be in 'the right place at the right time'.
I used a simple little freeware program, VLC, to extract the images. It was hard to control with a Start/Stop button - finding the best images among the roughly "100,000 images per hour" of video, but both Brian, and Jake's Mom, were more than pleased to have these memories.
Jim
http://wetstuff.com/Ebay/Jake2.jpg
The kid on the chairlift was a snapshot from a video shot 26 Nov at Big Bear in California with a <$100 waterproof, Kodak ze2 attached to his snowboard. This camera was released in about Oct 2011.
http://wetstuff.com/Ebay/Brian_takeoff.jpg
This was shot in October 2011 in Ocean City Maryland. Local surfer, Brian Robbins, had a Contour ROAM on the front of his surfboard.
There was about 4MB of (heaven help us) 720 30fps images to look through. In both cases, these were also photos that would be either horribly expensive to stage ..or near impossible to be in 'the right place at the right time'.
I used a simple little freeware program, VLC, to extract the images. It was hard to control with a Start/Stop button - finding the best images among the roughly "100,000 images per hour" of video, but both Brian, and Jake's Mom, were more than pleased to have these memories.
Jim