My First Look at the new Atli EON Time-Lapse Camera
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- Опубликовано: 27 сен 2022
- #atlieon #atlitimelapse
There are so many other features with the camera that I could not cover in one video. In short, having app control adds abilities and capabilities that a stand-alone camera (like brinno) simple can't do. I found the Atlie EON to be so much easier to use than the Brinno's.
Playlist for my time-lapse video (various camera's) - • Time Lapse Videos
Atli EON Website - www.atlitimelapse.com/
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Thanks for your review! Turn on the power saving mode, extremely prolong the duration of the battery under the non-charging situation. No fear from a long time traveling. And also try the remote access feature, we look forward to your plant time lapses
Thanks. I'm wondering if they will come out with a 4k version.
Forgive me if you already understand this, but in case you don't know...1080p is simply just another way of saying 2 megapixels. This camera has a
4 megapixel sensor which is essentially "2K." So it's totally capable of creating 2k video.
There is nothing wrong with 1080p video quality. Most people don't understand that real 1080p video is actually very crisp and detailed. Remember blu-ray?? That was just 1080p. The reason why people think 1080p these days is
not good enough is because of the invention of tiny image sensors with smart phones and action cameras. Small pixels are loaded with image noise and are highly processed by whatever small camera is being used and then compressed. This creates a "1080p" video, but poor quality video by comparison to cinema quality cameras with larger less noisy image sensors. If you take a 4k recorded video and downscale it to 1080p without high compression, The image clarity and detail would be almost indiscernible between the original 4k video and the downscaled 1080p video. The only difference is the actual true size of the video pixels meaning one would look slightly better on a big theater screen. But on a small screen (computer monitor or smaller) or even a tv screen when viewed from a normal distance (roughly 8ft), good 1080p and 4k are almost impossible to tell the difference unless you really look for it.
When the time lapse camera is making a "time-lapse" all it is doing is taking a photo, not video. When a small image sensor takes a photo instead of video, it can expose for longer with a lower
gain setting vs what it would need to do for taking video. This means each image will have less noise and be more crisp. The only thing that would then stand in the way of good clarity is how much the firmware compresses the final video after all the individual photos are made into video frames. Just for reference, if you take 30 photos in one day then that would be 1 second worth of video later (30 frames per second).
Now getting back to why they do 1080p and not 2k even though it could...It's because of the reasons I mentioned, but also because of 2 others reasons. One reason is that the more resolution the image sensor uses, the more power it needs. So it reduces battery life greatly. The last reason is because most videos are not even streamed online above 1080p anyway. And really there is not much point. Again, for the reasons I mentioned here. Now if you were taking just photos, The camera can do 4 Megapixels (2K). Which is plenty of resolution. You could take those photos at that resolution and use a program to make them into a time-lapse, but I really see no point in that. Resolution, whether it be
720p, 1080p, 2k or 4k has little to do with quality or more to do with size. Resolution is not an indicator of image quality. It's just that the tech market has spoiled how people understand it. so unless you want to view your desired 4k time-lapse on a 120" screen, 1080p is plenty of res. This camera has a good quality sensor and good lens. So as long as you get the focus and lighting right, then it creates some very decent results.