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hey guys, would anybody like to take a crack on my question above?
Great clips indeed! Not HV20 quality but for 1/6th of the price it's great. I'm thinking of getting one of those. Just not sure if the GO-HD or this. |
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Michael, From what I understand it is the same chip. The main differences are: Go-Hd has optical zoom and AF A-HD has digital zoom and fixed focus. No LED lights on the A-HD The battery life is better on the A-HD I've see 2 clips demonstrating the zoom of both. The GO-Hd had a bit more reach when zoomed all the way in. On the A-HD think they fixed some issues that were really a problem on the GO-HD. By looking at the clips I can see that the AF on the GO-HD is really poor and slow. It hunts too much initially and it gives a blurry look until it locks in. I don't expect instant AF but this one is just too slow. My money is on the A-HD. |
The clips I've posted are from the Go-HD.
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Can't get this thing out of my pocket.
I don't know what it is... I bought an A-HD and I seem to bring it everywhere. I own two other HD cameras but I find my self using this thing anywhere and everywhere... basically because I think its just fun and if you happen to drop it you won't be disappointed as much as one of your big cameras.
Here's a link to a video I shot of fall colors using the foootage from the Aiptek A-HD only. I didn't use the audio. To rough. Currently working on doing car mounts and motorcycle mounts with it. Considering buying two more just to get those extreme shots without the worry. Here's the clip: http://youtube.com/watch?v=sGXhS6QXQ3g RAW Video Samples at: www.skyhighsports.com/Aiptek/Aiptek.zip |
Hmmm those raw samples are actually fairly blocky don't you think? No post processing or conversion at all? It seems to have an awful lot of artifacting.
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I hope you aren't judging by the YouTube examples as those are converted with heavy compression to SWF/SWV type for quick viewing.
I don't find it blocky at all, for the price it just can't be beat! |
I was looking at the raw zip files that were posted.. they just looked really blocky to me which was why I was wondering if they were "raw" or had any kind of post processing or encoding?
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yeah, they have a little bit of 'crunch', but i think its pretty manageable considering the versatility of the device.
seems like it might be an interesting project to tap video directly from the sensor (hint hint any soldering gurus out there.) |
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I bought one and returned it the next day. Sound quality was absolutely terrible. Very distorted at even moderate levels. Video quality was OK. I did exchange it once for the same camera in case mine was faulty. Same issue.
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The SD video quality is pretty good, and you can hook up an external video source, so this might serve better just as a recorder for a helmet/bullet cam too. |
I have both the GO HD and the A-HD. Both use the Ambarella A1 chipset:
http://www.ambarella.com You can find a PDF on the A1 chipset here: http://www.ambarella.com/technology/ Video is AVC1 and audio is AAC. The GO HD encodes at 30fps flat whereas the A-HD encodes at 29.97 fps. This slight difference seemed to improve playback for many people. There were definite enhancements in encoding with the A-HD over the GO. On the GO panning would often be wavy whereas this is pretty much gone with the A-HD. Here is a clip that demonstrates panning on the A-HD. A similar clip done with the GO HD was very wavy. On a PC I have been able to edit clips in Sony's Vegas Movie Studio Platinum 8 (a few clips did crash), Ulead's VideoStudio 11 Plus and Pinnacle Studio 11. In all cases to load the video properly and have them render properly I had to change the extension from .mov to .mp4. The only editor that could load the clips and render them properly with the .mov extension was Nero Vision 4. Here is a short WMV clip that I edited with VS 11+: http://www.megaupload.com/?d=MMQYX10M For playback of the raw clips the latest QuickTime player works. By latest I mean the updates they sent out over the last month. Before then it didn't handle the clips very well at all. On Linux MPlayer with the -framedrop switch works. The clips have a lot of B-Frames in them which is probably why they aren't so compatible with many players but OTOH some many of the other MPEG-4 cameras are just using mpv4 codec instead of AVC1 which may also be the source of the problem. Some people also got results installing the K-Lite codec though it and QT can't coexist. |
Greetings. I bought an A-HD few weeks ago at Circuit City and it's great so far. Can't go wrong only paying $150. It's cool since it's a beat up cam. I have no problem handing this off to kids or friends to mess around with. With no moving parts, I don't have to worry so much about it breaking and if it does break, I'll just get another one. I previously had the Aiptek MPVR I bought for $80 and used it when going fishing. The A-HD is a nice upgrade.
One thing that's cool about it using h.264 files is that I can plug the A-HD directly into a Xbox 360. It thinks the cam is just a USB storage device/camera and will play the raw h.264 files directly in full 720p. Here are some blog posts I wrote about the A-HD: http://rodfathermobile.com/2007/09/1...der-unleashed/ http://rodfathermobile.com/2007/09/2...-outdoor-test/ (Disregard the footage. Used Sony Vegas' mainconcept AVC codec and the results ended up bad) http://rodfathermobile.com/2007/09/2...sposting-test/ (raw clip) http://rodfathermobile.com/2007/09/2...rd-came-today/ (w/ 4Mbps, can record 4hrs 23min footage on a 8GB card) http://rodfathermobile.com/2007/10/0...or-video-test/ (just posted this) |
Does anyone know of a retailer that has stock and will ship to Canada?
I want one now!!! Thanx |
Well, I know what I'm getting my niece and nephew for Christmas...
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