How often have you wished you could pan, tilt, and control your camera
remotely, without spending a small fortune to do it? A solution is on
the way from Satarii, creator of the Swivl.
The original Swivl
is a clever, puck-shaped device that holds a smartphone or other device
weighing less than six ounces, and acts as a "robotic cameraman" to
help with your shooting. Using a small "marker" that you carry, it can
follow your movements to keep you on-camera, swiveling 360 degrees, and
tilting 10 degrees up or 20 degrees down. You can also control its
movements remotely from an iPhone or iPad.
The original Swivl was hugely popular, but Satarii received a lot of
requests for a version that could support a tablet or a proper camera,
as well as the ability to work with Android devices. It now appears that
a model meeting both needs is on its way.
I had the chance yesterday to spend a little time talking with Brian
Lamb, co-founder of Satarii, and co-inventor of the Swivl. He showed me a
working prototype of the new SLR-capable version, and talked about some
of the directions they're hoping to take their technology.
The new version will not only move the camera, but control it as well,
via a built-in USB port. The Swivl SLR control app lets you frame the
shot using a remote preview display, adjust settings to whatever extent
permitted by the camera, and fire the shutter. Special multi-view modes
can do such things as manage time-lapse exposures, collect panorama
frames, and even do "moving timelapse" shooting, where the camera pans
and/or tilts slowly over the course of a time-lapse sequence.
For video shooters, the Silver Edition DSLR model will provide the
subject racking via the remote, and high-quality audio support via an
included wireless microphone and speakers. (The speakers would be useful
for video conferencing and other telepresence applications.)
Initially communicating via BlueTooth, Satarii is also working on a WiFi-capable version for longer transmission distances.
As I write this, the company is in the final stages of a Kickstarter campaign
for its second-generation product; you'll see ads in various places
around the site, promoting this. What I found particularly interesting
in talking to Brian was that Kickstarter for them is much less about the
funding raised -- although that's certainly very welcome -- as it is
about being getting detailed feedback from prospective users who are
really serious about the product.
That's a large part of why I'm sharing this with our readers: Here's
your chance to have some input into the development of a product you'd
like to use yourself. Rather than the four-steps-removed feedback after
the fact that's so common with most any consumer gadget, here you have a
company that's very actively looking for useful suggestions from their
prospective user community, before they finalize the product. All
you need to be able to get your two cents' worth in is to make a
strictly minimal commitment to the Kickstarter campaign, and you'll be
able to give your feedback and comments about comments from their
Kickstarter participants.
With some digitally controlled pan/tilt head solutions costing upwards of $900, the $239 target price of the Swivl DSLR dramatically drops the cost of entry for this capability, and introduces some very useful new twists as well.
If the new DSLR-capable Swivl sounds like something you could use in your own work, head on over to the Kickstarter campaign for all the details, and a chance to help influence the direction of this very interesting product.
(Full disclosure: Satarii is an IR advertiser, in that we accepted a
pittance from them to run a few banners promoting their Kickstarter
campaign. This article wasn't part of that deal, though; I just think
it's an interesting product, one I'd be inclined to purchase myself once
they're available.)
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