Casio EX-F1 Captures Battlebot Devastation In Super Slow-Mo [Robots]

Robots, Video, Clips, casio, exilim, battlebots, ex-f1, robert woodhead, carolina combat robotics, robogames, robot combat No Comments »

newVideoPlayer(”battlebotslowmo_giz.flv”, 506, 423,”");
Our friend Robert Woodhead is at it again: He took his battlin’ bot Totally Offensive—and his trusty Casio Exilim EX-F1—to Carolina Combat Robots for some “test procedures” in preparation for the RoboGames in San Francisco June 13-15. End result: Mayhem ensuing at 300 frames per second, with some sparks flying, some parts flying and some fax machines and other stand-in electronics getting shizammed to oblivion. Grab a sandwich and press play, cuz you’ll probably watch this four-minute fest of cyberviolence a few times. And remember, this was only a test! Thanks again, Robert! [Robert Woodhead]


Original post by Wilson Rothman

More Stunning High-Speed Footage With Casio EX-F1 [Slo-mo]

Digital Cameras, Gadgets, film, casio, casio exilim ex-f1, slo-mo, slow-motion, high-speed filming No Comments »

I know we’ve been raving on about the Casio Exilim EX-F1 camera and its amazing high-speed shooting capabilities. And I know: we’ve shown you lots of very nifty footage indeed, including some shot by the lucky Wilson, who actually got to play with the thing. But we’ve not shown you this footage before, made by a reader and starring a BB-gun, a can, some wildlife and a dog with a frisbee. It’s amazing, and it’s a quiet Sunday, so check it out. It got me wondering what I’d film if I had one of these cams to hand. I decided I’d capture the old “custard powder on a stove flame” trick. What would you film for some super slo-mo action, guys? [Trivue— Thanks Larry]


Original post by Kit Eaton

More Casio EX-F1 Slow Motion: BB Guns and Frisbees [Slo-mo]

Digital Cameras, Gadgets, film, casio, casio exilim ex-f1, slo-mo, slow-motion, high-speed filming No Comments »

I know we’ve been raving on about the Casio Exilim EX-F1 camera and its amazing high-speed shooting capabilities. And I know: we’ve shown you lots of very nifty footage indeed, including some shot by the lucky Wilson, who actually got to play with the thing. But we’ve not shown you this footage before, made by a reader and starring a BB-gun, a can, some wildlife and a dog with a frisbee. It’s amazing, and it’s a quiet Sunday, so check it out. It got me wondering what I’d film if I had one of these cams to hand. I decided I’d capture the old “custard powder on a stove flame” trick. What would you film for some super slo-mo action, guys? [Trivue— Thanks Larry]


Original post by Kit Eaton

Mo’ Slow-Mo: Objects Breaking (or Not) for the Casio EX-F1 [Slow-mo]

Clips, casio, exilim, water balloons, ex-f1, slow-mo, robert woodhead, slow-motion No Comments »

newVideoPlayer(”waterballoon_giz.flv”, 384, 512,”");
Our friend Robert Woodhead (of slow-mo Mentos-n-Coke fame) has kindly shared another of his Casio Exilim EX-F1 masterpieces, this time water balloons and china slowly shattering (and occasionally not shattering) to the tune of Tchaikovsky’s 1812 Overture. They’re a mixture of 300, 600 and 1200 frame-per-second shots, set up in an uncomfortably vertical version of widescreen (tallscreen?), but they sure are fun. When will the slow-mo clips cease? you ask. Never, that’s when. [Robert Woodhead]


Original post by Wilson Rothman

Spud Gun Destroys Eggs At 1200fps: Even More Casio EX-F1 Love [Home Videos]

Digital Cameras, Video, cameras, casio, slow motion, casio ex-f1, Home Videos, Reader Submissions, slo-mo, Potato Gun, spud gun No Comments »

newVideoPlayer(”spudgun1200_giz.flv”, 494, 162,”");
Hungry for more slo-mo action after the Mentos and Coke and Tomato Carnage tributes to the Casio EX-F1 camera’s unique feature set? Fear not Gizmodo reader, for your compatriot Robert Woodhead has delivered once again! This time around: eggs getting obliterated by a potato gun. Genius! [Robert Woodhead]


Original post by Elaine Chow

Spud Gun Destroys Eggs At 1200fps: Even More Casio EX-F1 Slo-Mo Love [Home Videos]

Digital Cameras, Video, cameras, casio, slow motion, casio ex-f1, Home Videos, Reader Submissions, slo-mo, Potato Gun, spud gun No Comments »

newVideoPlayer(”spudgun1200_giz.flv”, 494, 162,”");
Hungry for more slo-mo action after the Mentos and Coke and Tomato Carnage tributes to the Casio EX-F1 camera’s unique feature set? Fear not Gizmodo reader, for your compatriot Robert Woodhead has delivered once again! This time around: eggs getting obliterated by a potato gun. Genius! [Robert Woodhead]


Original post by Elaine Chow

Mentos and Diet Coke Explosion at 1200fps: Casio EX-F1 Strikes Again [Home Videos]

Video, Clips, casio, exilim, Coke, 1200fps, casio exilim ex-f1, ex-f1, casio ex-f1, Diet Coke, diet coke and mentos, Home Videos, mentos, Reader Submissions, slo-mo, slow-mo No Comments »

newVideoPlayer(”mentos1200_giz.flv”, 494, 452,”");
Giz reader Robert Woodhead combined two things that I just can’t seem to get sick of seeing: Stuffing Mentos into Diet Coke bottles and the super-slow-mo action of Casio’s EX-F1 camera to create this stunningly beautiful video.

Woodhead compensated for the 1200fps’ paltry 336×96 frame size by stitching four different Mentos tests together, and the results are awesome. Globs, ribbons and rings of Coke that are impossible to track in real time come to life when seen in slow-motion.

Watch out later today for another homemade slow-mo video; things will only get messier. [Robert Woodhead]


Original post by Benny Goldman

Casio Updates Baby-G With Colors, Tilt-to-Zoom Display [Watches]

Watches, casio, Timepieces, baby g, bg-2000, bg-2001, g shock No Comments »

Just the other day Casio came up with some colorful retrotastic G-shocks, and now the Baby-G is getting a color treatment, with a neat zooming display. The BG-2000/2001 series come in white, yellow and orange with shiny wrist bands and complimentary colored LCDs that you can customize in five styles. There’s also that auto-zoom function that enlarges the digits when you tilt your wrist to read the time. They’re shock-resistant, 100m water resistant, with world time and five independent alarms and have auto EL backlighting (LED for the yellow version). No word on pricing yet. [Casio and Fareastgizmos]


Original post by Kit Eaton

Casio Exilim EX-F1 Slow-Mo Super Cam Full Review (Verdict: Totally Unique, Shockingly Powerful) [Digital Cameras]

Digital Cameras, Feature, Top, casio, exilim, casio exilim ex-f1, ex-f1, Lytebox No Comments »

OK, say it: What the hell? What’s with all the Casio EX-F1 love? It’s because this camera is the most underrated gadget to hit the market in at least a year—the camera fiend’s equivalent of a jungle gym, with slow-mo, super slow-mo, high-speed stills, and simultaneous HD video and full-resolution still shooting, to name a few of its unique talents. If you’re a nature lover, an explosion lover, a blender lover, a party goer, a pet owner, a parent, grandparent, godparent, secret agent or all-around creepy stalker type, it will rock your little tiny world. It’s not flawless, but damn if it’s not a beautiful and one-of-a-kind invention.

You’ve already seen the slow-mo tomato blending, and you’ve seen the slow-mo DIY backyard Discovery Channel. You get it, it can do slow-mo. But there are other features that stand to be demo’d on video, so take a look:

newVideoPlayer(”exilimtips_giz.flv”, 475, 327,”");
Let’s recap exactly what talents the camera has that have not, in any meaningful combination, been seen before in a consumer-level camera:
• Slow-mo video shooting at 300, 600 and 1200 frames per second
• Fast-slow-fast shooting from 30fps to 300 and back to 30 — I call this the “she walked in the room” mode, because it’s what they do in cheesy 80s movies to indicate the protagonist’s love interest
• High-speed 6-megapixel shots at 60fps
• Strobe shooting of stills at 7 frames per second with standard flash; 60fps with LED flash
• Full-resolution still shooting while capturing HD video
• Fly-in and fly-out auto modes, which capture still shots at 60fps when the subject enter or exit the frame

EX-F1 as Camcorder
As a camcorder, it covers a lot of bases. In HD mode, it can shoot 60 “fields” at 1920×1080 and 30 “frames” at 1280×720. , all the while letting you take a total of 20 6-megapixel still shots. Since David Pogue’s review ran, Casio published firmware 1.02 that fixes a major complaint: When shooting video, you now can actively use the 12x optical zoom lens.

We’ve covered the slow-motion camera already quite a bit, but let me be clear: it shoots 300, 600 or 1200 fps and encodes them on the fly to an H.264 file at 30 frames per second. So 1 second of shooting equals 10 seconds of footage. This causes some challenges, like long periods of lag between action, but there’s a very easy in-camera editing tool that deletes all unneeded footage. You can’t use the zoom in high-speed mode, but trust me, there’s no time to zoom when you’re shooting like that.

As you saw in the video above, there’s also a mode for going from standard-def 30fps to slow-mo 300fps and then back again, what I call the “she walked into the room” mode. It’s pretty cool, and probably more useful than just standard slow-mo.Also, to recap: when shooting at 300fps, you get “standard” video resolution of 512×384. At 600fps, it drops to a tolerable widescreen, 432×192. But when you shoot in 1200fps, you end up with a bizarre 336×96, really long and thin. There’s also a major loss of light when switching from standard to slow-mo, and then each subsequent jump. 1200fps is only good outdoors on a very sunny day, but even 300fps is no good in any kind of dim light. It makes sense, of course, but you need to consider it, especially if you’re into experimental amateur porn cinematography.

Auto-focus is decent for still shooting, but I sometimes found for slow-mo video that it was simpler just to go manual. If you start recording slow-mo video out of focus, there’s very little hope that it will focus during your shot.

One other frustration I experienced was that videos occasionally came out garbled or unreadable. I hope the 1.02 firmware update has a fix for that—I can only assume it’s a known and fixable problem, albeit an annoying one.

EX-F1 as Still Camera
To be clear, this camera is the anti-DSLR. It’s as digital as you can get, so you have to expect some photographic shortcomings. But the tradeoffs are reasonable, with still options that are not available anywhere else.

You can shoot full-resolution 6-megapixel stills at up to 60fps, to ensure that you get a decent pic of a fast-moving subject. I preferred to use something more like 7fps or 15fps with pets and kids, since they’re not that fast, and you have no idea how annoying it can be to flip through 60 or more identical-looking shots. As with slow-mo video, you do lose the higher f-stop settings when you set it for 60, as everything would just be pitch black. What you do get, though, to compensate, is a strobe flash. Though Pogue thought it was too explosive, I thought it works well when you need it. As you can see from the screenshot above, you can use a real flash up to 7fps, and then you have to switch to a mellower LED light, which can’t illuminate everything, but is better than nothing. We intend to subject this camera to some further in-the-trenches club shooting courtesy of Gawker video guy Nick McGlynn (shown here helping me demonstrate flash-strobe mode):
galleryPost(’casiostrobemcglynn’, 3, ”);

The coolest easy-to-miss still settings are the fly-in and fly-out modes: You train your shot on an object like a birds nest or hummingbird feeder, press the shutter and wait until the critter arrives. The camera shoots continuously at 60fps, but only starts saving when it detects the motion, presenting you with a solid set of 60 stills for you to choose the best ones. The other mode does the opposite. You aim it at a critter that is not moving, and when it starts to move, and exit the frame, the camera saves the shots, so you get a dramatic action shot of its departure.
galleryPost(’casiohandinframe’, 6, ”);

As I hinted, low-light shooting isn’t great, and the tiny, experimental CCD in the camera is especially noisy. ISO 1600 is a rainbow of nastiness, and should only be used as a last resort: Shadows are even pretty noisy at lower ISO settings—here’s 800:

Annoyances aside, I found the EX-F1 to live up to our Bestmodo status because of its versatility and originality. It’s nice and rugged, too, capable of withstanding being flung into the air (what good is slow-mo if you can’t move fast?). It had a nice long battery life, too: I shot for six days straight—gathering plenty of video and tons of rapid fire full-resolution stills—before the battery died.

So ultimately there’s just this small issue of the $1000 price tag: Is it worth it? My answer is this: if you’re looking for a great video camera that also takes decent stills, then yes, it’s worth it. But if you’re looking for the perfect still camera, it’s a far cry. But you might miss it when you go on safari, or to a baseball game, or when you’re lighting off fireworks, or when your pets are doing goofy shit, or when… Okay, maybe it is worth it, no matter what your purposes. [Product Page]


Original post by Wilson Rothman

DIY Discovery Channel: Casio EX-F1 Slow-Mo Cam In My Backyard [Digital Cameras]

Digital Cameras, Top, casio, exilim, 300fps, 1200fps, 600fps, casio exilim ex-f1, ex-f1 No Comments »

newVideoPlayer(”slomonature_giz.flv”, 475, 356,”");
Tomato violence only marks the beginning of my love affair with the Casio’s Exilim EX-F1, aka the Hiro Nakamura supercam. It’s crazy addictive. Last weekend I went looking for fast-moving objects to capture in slow-mo, and in my backyard I came up with a freakin’ menagerie of unexpectedly interesting little beasties.

Everything is a twitch here, a blur there—you have to realize that this whole two-minute video consists of just 10 to 12 seconds of real life, shown at 300fps or 600fps. (1200fps turned out to be too much of a novelty, too dark to be practical, as you can see in the tomato-blender vid.)

Shooting slow-mo takes some getting used to, and because you end up with long stretches of zero movement, the in-cam video editor is not just a luxury but a necessity. In the end, though, everything looks like it’s ready for Discovery Channel. I think that chipmunk’s gonna be a star. [Casio Exilim EX-F1 on Giz]


Original post by Wilson Rothman