Well, this is just about the most amazing thing I’ve ever seen. It’s a lightning bolt that’s shooting down from the sky, shot in slow motion. I’m not sure exactly how fast this camera is, but it’s got to be shooting at a speed faster than the Casio EX-F1 can shoot at, at least at a resolution this high. Whatever, who cares? Just watch this and prepare to be blown away.
One of our favourite cameras, the Casio EX-F1, is getting a new firmware update that adds yet another awesome feature: prerecord movies. This allows you to capture video starting a full five seconds before you fully press down the movie button, letting you catch stuff that your beer-slowed reflexes would have missed with any other camera. This new feature works with the full HD video functions as well as the 300fps, 600fps and 1200fps slo-mo video functions of the camera. Hit the jump for the full press release.
Casio’s excellent EX-F1 slow motion digital camera has a bit of competition in Sanyo’s Xacti HD1010 camcorder. The 1080i HD cam does face detection for up to 12 people at once, and 300 frame per second slow motion as well as seven frame per second still shooting. YES! IIIIII saaaaaaaaiiiiiiidddd SLOOOOO MOTIOOOOON!
newVideoPlayer("battlebotslowmo_giz.flv", 506, 423,""); Our friend Robert Woodhead is at it again: He took his battlin’ bot Totally Offensive—and his trusty Casio Exilim EX-F1—to Carolina Combat Robots for some “test procedures” in preparation for the RoboGames in San Francisco June 13-15. End result: Mayhem ensuing at 300 frames per second, with some sparks flying, some parts flying and some fax machines and other stand-in electronics getting shizammed to oblivion. Grab a sandwich and press play, cuz you’ll probably watch this four-minute fest of cyberviolence a few times. And remember, this was only a test! Thanks again, Robert! [Robert Woodhead]
I know we’ve been raving on about the Casio Exilim EX-F1 camera and its amazing high-speed shooting capabilities. And I know: we’ve shown you lots of very nifty footage indeed, including some shot by the lucky Wilson, who actually got to play with the thing. But we’ve not shown you this footage before, made by a reader and starring a BB-gun, a can, some wildlife and a dog with a frisbee. It’s amazing, and it’s a quiet Sunday, so check it out. It got me wondering what I’d film if I had one of these cams to hand. I decided I’d capture the old “custard powder on a stove flame” trick. What would you film for some super slo-mo action, guys? [Trivue— Thanks Larry]
newVideoPlayer("waterballoon_giz.flv", 384, 512,""); Our friend Robert Woodhead (of slow-mo Mentos-n-Coke fame) has kindly shared another of his Casio Exilim EX-F1 masterpieces, this time water balloons and china slowly shattering (and occasionally not shattering) to the tune of Tchaikovsky’s 1812 Overture. They’re a mixture of 300, 600 and 1200 frame-per-second shots, set up in an uncomfortably vertical version of widescreen (tallscreen?), but they sure are fun. When will the slow-mo clips cease you ask? Never, that’s when. [Robert Woodhead]
As excited as we are about Casio’s Exilim EX-F1 camera with slow-mo and high-def video modes, we’re even more thrilled to see actual competition in this category. Samsung announced its HMX20C (or HMX20) at CES, and is now officially shipping it, at least in Korea, for a price around US$850. That’s about US$150 less than Casio’s Hiro Nakamura supercam. Here’s what’s similar about the two models:
newVideoPlayer("spudgun1200_giz.flv", 494, 162,""); Hungry for more slo-mo action after the Mentos and Coke and Tomato Carnage tributes to the Casio EX-F1 camera’s unique feature set? Fear not Gizmodo reader, for your compatriot Robert Woodhead has delivered once again! This time around: eggs getting obliterated by a potato gun. Genius! [Robert Woodhead]
newVideoPlayer("mentos1200_giz.flv", 494, 452,""); Giz reader Robert Woodhead combined two things that I just can’t seem to get sick of seeing: Stuffing Mentos into Diet Coke bottles and the super-slow-mo action of Casio’s EX-F1 camera to create this stunningly beautiful video.
newVideoPlayer("slomonature_giz.flv", 475, 356,""); Tomato violence only marks the beginning of my love affair with the Casio’s Exilim EX-F1, aka the Hiro Nakamura supercam. It’s crazy addictive. Last weekend I went looking for fast-moving objects to capture in slow-mo, and in my backyard I came up with a freakin’ menagerie of unexpectedly interesting little beasties.