Tuesday, October 6, 2009

Vado HD...from Creative Labs

Creative Labs makes some interesting stuff. Most of it aimed squarely at the technology consumer market.

Below, I focused on the GoPro POV cameras that I use for my motorsports work. They're great cameras with well-made mounting hardware.

The problem is that I work primarily in high definition and the GoPro's video size of 512x384 is hard to utilize without really aggressive upscaling...which really isn't possible to do without featuring the obvious low resolution of the pictures. GoPro is working on an HD version, but no word yet on when it will be available.

Upon some additional searching, I decided to examine some cameras that fall into the category of the "Flip" camcorders that are out there as many of them are 720p capable. I stumbled upon a unit from Creative Labs called the Vada HD.

The camera has an on board USB connection for offloading and it charges from the USB port as well...not as convenient as the over-the-counter lithium AAAs and SD cards that go into the GoPro...but I gain the 1280x720p framesize.



This is also not to mention that the camera's form factor is that of a cel phone with an on-board camera and comes with no super-useful mounting hardware. In fact, since it's really meant to replace the family camcorder, it doesn't even come with mildly useful mounting hardware... It comes with a somewhat curious latex "boot" that I suppose is a very useful barrier against liquids and perspiration getting into the camera, though the viewscreen, lens and USB pigtail remain uncovered and available...and I suppose technically, still vulnerable. The unit is oriented vertically and has a threaded mounting hole off to one side. I'm working on fabricating a reasonable way to mount this in a car without the obblong weight of the thing causing strange stresses and vibrations. It may very well end up mounted upside down.

The GoPro comes with the waterproof shell that I've verified myself-underwater.

The Vada is of course, creating aggressively compressed video. The device has 8 GB of storage and for most casual use, as well as for the POV use I anticipate for it, I suspect it will be fine. I've included some frame grabs in the post for you to examine (click on the images for full size).



The PC utility that comes with the device seems to work well...for those who want to head directly to YouTube...you can do that right in the utility.




I've noticed with the GoPro that the Motion JPEG AVI files seem to agree with Sony's Vegas Video without much problem but my most frequent tool, Adobe Premiere Pro, can't seem to run them properly under any circumstances I can create. I haven't completed my tests on a post path for the Vada H264 material, but I'm going to be on that in the very near future.

...and of course I'll need to figure out how the heck to mount it.

TimK

Creative Labs Website

GoPro Camera Website