Capturing 360-degree video and Playboy: Wet & Wild 1 (1989)photos is still very much a thing for geeks, but Ricoh, one of the first companies to release a consumer 360 camera, wants to change that.
The company's new $300 Theta SC 360 camera is less expensive than the company's flagship Theta S, but more feature-packed than the entry-level Theta m15. All of these devices let you shoot "spherical" footage that you can interact with later.
SEE ALSO: Samsung's Gear 360 is the VR video camera for the massesInstead of 360 enthusiasts, the new Theta SC camera is aimed at the general consumer -- teens, millennials and moms, according to the company. The four different color options should help with that to a certain degree.
The Theta SC offers the same 360-degree imaging as the Theta S: You'll get 14-megapixel still photos and high-definition 360-degree videos.
But it's missing a couple of features compared to the Theta S. It lacks an HDMI port for livestreaming, and video capture is limited to five minutes rather than 25 minutes.
Otherwise, the two cameras are pretty similar. Both come with 8GB of internal storage for saving footage.
Launching with the new 360 camera is a redesigned Theta app for iOS and Android. The company says the app will make it easier to shoot, view and share 360-degree content to supported platforms like Facebook and YouTube. The new app will also work the Theta S and Theta m15.
The new camera gives Ricoh a trio of 360 cameras to choose from, but the differences between the new Theta SC and Theta S are so minor, we can't help but suggest just springing for the flagship camera. It's only another $50, and you never know when you might want to livestream in 360 degrees.
Consumer 360 cameras are more popular than before. Samsung's Gear 360 is one of the best out there, and everyone from LG to Kodak to Nikon seem to have one now.
Whether teens and moms will take to the Theta SC will depend on whether it really is easier to operate via the app.
Topics Cameras
(Editor: {typename type="name"/})
Hinge partners with Esther Perel for new prompts
At Tokyo’s Book and Bed, Readers Are Encouraged to Doze Off
Where the Mets Meet Mark Twain: A Perilously Catchy Chant
Best Amazon deal: Save 20% on floral and botanical Lego sets
Moebius and the Key of Dreams: On Jean Giraud's Astonishing Multiverse
Spooky Staff Picks: What to See and Read on Halloween
William Seabrook’s “The Magic Island” Brought Zombies to America
Waymo stopped Los Angeles man from stealing a driverless car
Lena Dunham on Mary Karr’s “The Liars’ Club”
NYT Connections Sports Edition hints and answers for January 16: Tips to solve Connections #115
Listen to a William Carlos Williams Radio Interview from 1950
接受PR>=1、BR>=1,流量相当,内容相关类链接。