Turn the Dial Through the Decades on Fujifilm's Retro-Inspired Instax Evo Cinema Camera
Briefly

Turn the Dial Through the Decades on Fujifilm's Retro-Inspired Instax Evo Cinema Camera
"The 5-MP, 1/5-inch sensor records photos at 1920 x 2560 pixels and videos at 600 x 800 pixels (though there is an option to record higher resolution using the 2020 high-quality mode, which bumps video to 1080 x 1440 pixels). The sensor shares the same specs as the Mini Evo Plus, and it seems safe to assume it is the same. That means it's good enough for Instax prints and social media, but won't look that great even at 4 x 6 inches."
"Just throw a tiny microSD card in there and you'll avoid all that hassle. You have to use the app to first download the image, but then it's hard to save them on your phone outside of the app."
"The lens is a 28-mm (35-mm equivalent) f/2.0 with autofocus and face recognition. Focusing is totally automated and center weighted, though the face recognition will override this when it detects a face."
"The shutter button, which is bit more like a trigger in this design, will record for up to 15 seconds. You can use it two ways, either like a trigger, where it shoots as long as you hold it down (up to 15 seconds anyway), or push it once to start and once to stop."
This compact camera features a 5-MP, 1/5-inch sensor recording photos at 1920 x 2560 pixels and videos at 600 x 800 pixels, with optional high-quality mode reaching 1080 x 1440 pixels. Built-in memory exists but using a microSD card is strongly recommended due to extraction difficulties through the app. The 28mm f/2.0 lens includes autofocus and face recognition capabilities. A trigger-style shutter button records up to 15 seconds of video. The focus ring adjusts effect strength rather than focus. A front-mounted flash and constant video light are included, along with a selfie mirror and low-resolution rear screen viewable with an optional eyepiece.
Read at WIRED
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