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veltronix.com's video: Zhiyun crane and Nikon footage in Switzerland by Velibor Mitrovic and Kathy

@Zhiyun crane and Nikon footage in Switzerland by Velibor Mitrovic and Kathy
CRANE, your camera CREW in one. CRANE is a 3-axis gimbal stabilizer designed primarily for mirrorless cameras, such as the Sony a7S and Panasonic GH4, ideal for low-cost individual filming applications, from micro films, wedding videos to travel films, and so on. Supporting 360° unlimited rotation along the 3 axes with perfect stabilizing performance, it empowers you to shoot steady and smooth streams EASILY and ALONE with all imaginable angles of view, while realizing the perfection that was once only possible by a whole camera crew. Bridge cameras are cameras that fill the niche between the single-lens reflex cameras (SLRs) and the point-and-shoot camera.[1][2] They are often comparable in size and weight to the smallest digital SLRs (DSLR) and there are also superzoom DSLR-shape bridge cameras with retractable lens to make it more compact,[3] but almost all digital bridge cameras lack an optical viewfinder system (film bridges generally had a lighter version of a reflex finder). In addition, SLRs normally feature interchangeable lenses, while current bridge cameras do not.[4][not in citation given] They are prominent in the prosumer market segment. The phrase has been in use at least since the 1980s,[1] and continues to be used with digital cameras.[2] The term "bridge camera" was originally used to refer to film cameras which "bridged the gap" between point-and-shoot cameras and SLRs.[5][6] Like other cameras, most current bridge cameras are digital. These cameras typically feature full manual controls over shutter speed, aperture, ISO sensitivity, color balance and metering. Generally, their feature sets are similar to consumer DSLRs, except for a smaller range of ISO sensitivity because of their typically smaller image sensor (a DSLR has a 35mm, APS, or Four Thirds size CCD or CMOS sensor). Many bridge cameras have long zoom lenses which now often start at a super wide-angle focal length of 20 or 22mm equivalent focal length (in 35mm film camera terms), so the term "bridge camera" is often used interchangeably with "megazoom", "superzoom",[7] or "ultrazoom."[8] However, some bridge cameras have only moderate or short zooms (such as the Canon Powershot G9[9]), while many compact cameras have superzoom lenses but lack the advanced functions of a bridge camera. With zoom ranges and sales rapidly increasing in the early 21st century, every major camera manufacturer has at least one 'super zoom' in its lineup.[10] Sales of bridge cameras with DSLR-shape and MILC are steady in the overall context of declining camera sales.

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This video was published on 2018-01-22 02:05:21 GMT by @veltronix.com on Youtube. veltronix.com has total 13.3K subscribers on Youtube and has a total of 281 video.This video has received 12 Likes which are lower than the average likes that veltronix.com gets . @veltronix.com receives an average views of 38.5K per video on Youtube.This video has received 2 comments which are lower than the average comments that veltronix.com gets . Overall the views for this video was lower than the average for the profile.

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