Gadgetory


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Narrative Clip: the always-on clip-on camera

2014-03-05
I'm Scott Stein and I'm wearing a camera can you see it yeah it's right here it's the narrative clip it's not that hard to spot but it's one of a growing wave of wearable cameras that are appearing now that wearable tech seems to be vying for every part of your body narrative clip is not alone there are other products like the autography and Sony's lifelogging camera concept that are all attempting to kind of do the same thing a lot of what Google glass is also trying to do which is to capture the moments in your life and remember them for you all throughout the day could be creepy could be inspirational depending on who you are the idea is based on life logging and this goes all the way back to Gordon Bell in my life bits and projects that attempted to take all of your memories out of all the Distilled bits of data in your life and collect them and allow you to browse through them and what that means basically is that this is taking a picture twice every minute that's simple and it's an automatic process there's a 5 megapixel camera in here it's got an accelerometer magnetometer and GPS and it keeps track of the position of the camera it keeps everything upright and it collects all of those photos in a photo quality that's kind of like an iPhone for nothing high-end or fancy and if you want to take a manual photo all you do is you double tap now if you thought Google glass was potentially invasive well it's harder to see this coming you could wear it on your hat you could wear it on your sweater you could wear it on your jacket I wore it all around town and a lot of times people didn't really even know what it was but the question was could I actually capture a picture that would look like anything unlike Google glass where you can aim with a viewfinder you're kind of on your own here a little tilt up and down could be all the difference between looking at someone's face or shooting a picture of the clouds or your jacket and it's pretty hit or miss but that's kind of the idea because first of all you cannot pair the narrative clip with your phone no weirdly surprisingly it actually plugs into your computer with micro USB you upload the photos to the cloud service that narrative clip offers or locally to your hard drive and then there is an app that your phone accesses that if you're connected to that cloud service pulls all the photos back down for you to browse kind of old-fashioned also creates a bit of like a box of chocolates effect because you don't know what you're going to get any day that you walk around outside so if you're looking for something that's really an on-the-go camera kind of like what looks see and others provide you're not going to get that here it's not going to be like a GoPro we're going to be able to shoot photos on vacation and know what you're looking at and that is the idea behind this Kickstarter led project is a Swedish company formerly known as mimoto that created this to really be low-key to not be something you're paying attention to and not have to micromanage all the time to its credit I kept forgetting that I was wearing it I'd walk around and people would say what is that on you and I go oh yeah I'm still wearing the camera and that's the idea to blend in and be invisible but this is 279 for the privilege of being involved on the narrative Clips early days which is a lot of money for a camera that doesn't really do anything that a lot of point-and-shoots at the same price would do or fancy or smartphone cameras so that's also including a year of narrative clip cloud service but once that runs out it will cost $9 a month to use that service so that's over a hundred dollars a year to keep using the service that makes narrative clip potentially interesting you could just download those photos directly to your hard drive and upload them afterwards to Instagram or Flickr or wherever else you want to go Facebook but what's the point because the narrative clip service attempts to distill photos down to moments and it claims that it does it by looking at lighting conditions image sharpness even facial recognition and pulling out moments but the moments are pretty random sometimes it could be a picture of a street sometimes it could be your friend eating a doughnut or it could just be a picture of a ceiling now you have to wear this all the time and keep recording everything no in fact in the narrative reviewers guide and then on their website they recommend that you stop taking photographs at times when it doesn't seem appropriate all you have to do to do that is put it facedown where it automatically turns off or you stick it in your pocket and it won't take pictures anymore but I kept forgetting to take it off so odds are you might end up wearing this anyhow wherever you might go and that's the idea of wearable tech that we're going to cameras on us all the time watching everything we do a panopticon hopefully not but narrative clip is not going to be the last of its type out there in the wearable camera space I'm Scott Stein and that's a look at the narrative clip available now
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