Gday buddy. From what i can recall we used two options. (1) We hooked the camera up to our PC with a USB cable and moved files with 'file manager'. (2) We removed the micro SD card and inserted into a 'micro sd to standard sd card' converter. We then inserted the converter into the sd card slot in our pc and moved files. Probably using the USB cable is easiest. Have fun. Merry Christmas. Cheers.
It does not like traffic lights? you need a special camera to capture those light not going on and of. the reason is that the light isn't constant but blinking at extreme speed that with normal human eyes it can't be seen, so it appears as a one constant burning light but it isn't. but with a camera that has other fps it can see the blinking since it captures the small moment that it isn't on and translate it in fps that can be seen with the human eye on your screen. it is normal, if you took a footage of a helicopter or fan you would see the blades do weird things since it may go backward, has a different rotation speed, or because the top layer at the screen and the lower layer screen (captured from the camera) is captured in a small time difference making the blades see curved/loose like it is on drugs or broken. (so some lights may appear weird but that depends on the camera and most camera's have the same problem)
nice video, recently we have found one of these in our new house and was wondering how you import these video onto a latop
Gday buddy. From what i can recall we used two options. (1) We hooked the camera up to our PC with a USB cable and moved files with 'file manager'. (2) We removed the micro SD card and inserted into a 'micro sd to standard sd card' converter. We then inserted the converter into the sd card slot in our pc and moved files. Probably using the USB cable is easiest. Have fun. Merry Christmas. Cheers.
Cheers mate thanks for the help
buen video
Cesar David Díaz blanco hey, thanks mate. Cheers, Steve.
It does not like traffic lights? you need a special camera to capture those light not going on and of. the reason is that the light isn't constant but blinking at extreme speed that with normal human eyes it can't be seen, so it appears as a one constant burning light but it isn't. but with a camera that has other fps it can see the blinking since it captures the small moment that it isn't on and translate it in fps that can be seen with the human eye on your screen.
it is normal, if you took a footage of a helicopter or fan you would see the blades do weird things since it may go backward, has a different rotation speed, or because the top layer at the screen and the lower layer screen (captured from the camera) is captured in a small time difference making the blades see curved/loose like it is on drugs or broken. (so some lights may appear weird but that depends on the camera and most camera's have the same problem)
why it's better at night? more sharp imo