colbysmith":2ki842x6 said:
A year and a half later and now I'm starting to think about getting one. Jim, did you finally get up and going with one that worked? Right now I'm considering the Gopro 4 silver. Just wondering if it's really worth the money. Looks like 399.99 everywhere, but I'm understanding one needs a special sd card and one I saw recommended adds another 75 bucks to the price. Then there's the extra batteries and accessories.... Starting to think I might be better saving up for an auto pilot instead.
If it came down to a GoPro or an autopilot, I would be 100% in the autopilot camp.
After a year and a half with the GoPro 3 Black, I am underwhelmed. Yes, I am aware that there are lots of very cool extreme sport videos being done with the GoPro... or put one on a drone and get some very cool aerial photos, like those done at the Lake Powell gathering. :thup
I'm looking at "extreme" in the rear view mirror... takes too long to heal these days. :wink: For 32 years, I was a professional photographer; an early adopter of digital imaging technology. Only saying that to establish a basis - I know my way around a camera. From my perspective, the GoPro, due to the extreme wide angle, is a one-trick pony. I have tried it on the boat, on the kayaks, on the scooters... yawn. The small buttons and miniscule gray-screen means you have to "scroll and tap" to get at any particular function (video, stills, timed exposures, bursts, resolution, wifi, etc, etc)... I don't think there is a time I have used the camera where I didn't get at least one photo up my nose while scrolling through those screens. :roll:
"Well, sure, Jim, you're an old fart," you're thinking. That's not nice, considering I am handing out free advice here. :twisted: Remember the old flip phones? And what a pain it was to text with those? Imagine that with only 3 buttons instead of 12, and make the screen 1/10 the size... oh, and put each of those buttons on a different face of the camera.
I mostly shoot stills when I use the GoPro. You get wide angle and REALLY wide angle as your only options. The issue with no viewing screen isn't that big of a deal, due to the field of view. But seeing everything in that perspective gets old - give me a camera with some zoom, from wide angle to telephoto.
Imagine it on the dash of your boat. Pretty cool, huh? Now imagine that same view for 20 minutes... which, due to the extreme wide perspective, will be mostly the bow of the boat. See that whale? Unless it is about 10 feet from you, it will just be a dot in the video. Remember that conversation about getting too close to the whales? Yeah, at 200 yards, the whale won't even be a dot.
I used to do video editing back in the olden days - with actual video tape. It was tedious. It is certainly much easier with digital, but still tedious. I took a half hour of video on the scooter, cut it to a couple minutes... and it was still less than exciting for me to look at. Took me nearly an hour... for me, too much for too little.
I totally get how someone who is surfing, sky diving, or extreme mountain biking, or scuba diving with sharks could get some fun video. If they pushed the right buttons in the right series first. :lol:
I'm sure you will get other perspectives from people who love 'em.
Jim