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Panasonic HDC-SDT750 3D camcorder preview
THREEE DEEE. Sorry, just had to get which out of the system. We just played with Panasonic’s HDC-SDT750 THREEE DEEE, er, 3D camcorder, as well as it positively functions as billed. The lens is written for close-up depth notice in a 3 to 15 feet operation, and doesn’t have any wizz capacity. Luckily, it isn’t as well hard to pop a screw-on lens off, giving yourself a regular zoomtastic 2D camcorder. When you do cocktail a 3D lens back upon there’s the discerning set of setup menus, which let you adjust a twin lenses inside of the 3D add-on with the few knobs dark under the door upon tip of a assembly.
We didn’t get to do any free roaming with the camera, but that’s none as well thrilling anyway: your preview image is a somewhat hairy 2D upon the built-in LCD. What we did do was watch a camera feed the 3D capture live to the Panny 3D TV (in a single of the waggish outfits yield for us by Panasonic, as pictured above), as well as while a 3D outcome is certainly for-reals and non-janky, the actual picture extravagant takes an viewable strike from a fact that a 1080p sensor is being cut in half to capture a twin images. It roughly took us behind to a early days of HD cameras, or your friendly neighborhood “HD” webcam, where a output fortitude is obviously higher than a sensor is physically capturing. Similarly, you doubt the early adoption of cameras like this is going to be thespian at first, and even after the tech is undiluted we’re uncertain how big of a consumer need there is for something similar to this, but with easy options similar to Panasonic’s own Micro Four Thirds 3D lens, a barriers to acceptance have been fast disappearing. Er, you merely meant to contend, THREEE DEEE. Panasonic HDC-SDT750 3D camcorder preview