Cameras Archives - 国产吃瓜黑料 Online /tag/cameras/ Live Bravely Thu, 17 Apr 2025 17:54:41 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.1 https://cdn.outsideonline.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/favicon-194x194-1.png Cameras Archives - 国产吃瓜黑料 Online /tag/cameras/ 32 32 The 3 Best Action Cameras of 2025 /outdoor-gear/tools/best-action-cameras/ Tue, 01 Apr 2025 12:00:14 +0000 /?p=2699546 The 3 Best Action Cameras of 2025

Pocket-sized cameras designed to go wherever adventure takes you

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The 3 Best Action Cameras of 2025

Creating high-quality video content has never been easier. Small action cameras now feature powerful sensors that capture stunning footage day or night, mind-boggling stabilization, and easy integration with quality wireless mics. But remember that your video is only as good as your adventure, so get out and get after it.

At a Glance


Insta360 Ace Pro 2
(Photo: Jakob Schiller)

Best Overall

Insta360 Ace Pro 2

Sensor Size: 1/1.3″
Weight: 6.3 ounces
Battery Capacity: 1800mAh

Pros and Cons
Buttery stabilization
Nice low-light footage
Great color profile
No need for 8K video

GoPro and DJI have long dominated the action camera market, but Insta360 takes over this year with the Ace Pro 2. Co-engineered with Leica, the camera shoots ultra high-resolution footage, rich 4K slow-mo, and captures high-quality audio. It also has a laundry list of amazing features, including a dedicated chip to help with low-light shooting, a back screen that flips up for great selfie footage, and industry-leading stabilization.

The total package makes it nearly impossible to shoot bad footage. No matter what we were doing鈥攕kiing, cycling, overlanding, etc.鈥攖he Ace Pro 2 produced video that we were always excited to edit and share. Shooters with more experience will find it easy to dial in custom settings, but the camera鈥檚 user interface was also easy to navigate for testers who had less experience.

Insta360鈥檚 accessory ecosystem is not as big as GoPro鈥檚, but there is still plenty to choose from, including chest and handle-bar mounts, tripods, fast-charge battery packs, and ND filter sets. The company is not pushing integration with wireless mics, but it鈥檚 easy to pair a mic from a company like DJI to improve the quality of interviews or narration.

We were hard-pressed to come up with any critiques of the Ace Pro 2. Just one comment: No one really needs 8K footage on an action cam. That kind of resolution is overkill for social media (even YouTube), which is where most action-cam footage ultimately ends up.


Hero13 Black
(Photo: Jakob Schiller)

Best GoPro Update

Hero13 Black

Sensor Size: 1/1.9″
Weight: 5.6 ounces
Battery Capacity: 1900mAh

Pros and Cons
Better battery life than previous model
Class-leading accessories
Great color profile
No upgrade to the sensor

The new Hero13 comes with two big upgrades. First, it includes a higher capacity 1900mAh battery that lasts up to 2.5 hours (depending on settings) and is now the standard for all of GoPros flagship cameras (we can hear videographers cheering from here). And second, GoPro has expanded its already robust accessories ecosystem by adding a suite of lenses you can slap on the new camera.

Related: Is the GoPro Hero13 Black Better Than the GoPro Hero?

These include an ultra-wide lens ($100) to increase the field of view, making it 36 percent wider and 48 percent taller, and a macro lens ($130) that lets you get up close and personal with small things like tiny animals or flowers. GoPro also just released its new Anamorphic lens ($130), which allows shooters to capture pro-level cinematic-quality footage. When you affix any of these lenses, the GoPro automatically recognizes it and adjusts its settings accordingly.

We鈥檙e fans of accessory lenses because they provide different perspectives: a new way of seeing and of capturing content. These days, all action cameras offer amazing resolution and stabilization; if you want to capture unique footage, different lenses open up new avenues for creativity. We hope that other action camera companies follow GoPros lead in this department.

GoPro plopped the same sensor from the Hero12 into the Hero13, so there鈥檚 no bump in resolution or low-light video quality. GoPro has been criticized for this, butit doesn鈥檛 bother us much because the lens integration is what you鈥檙e buying with the Hero13.

The biggest downside to the Hero13 is that the new lenses have to be purchased separate from the camera and its included standard lens. As a bundle, all three lenses cost $360. But we think that鈥檚 a smart, long-term investment since these lenses will likely be used with, and outlive, the 13, 14, and other GoPros to come.


DJI Osmo Pocket 3
(Photo: Jakob Schiller)

Best for Beginners

DJI Osmo Pocket 3

Sensor Size: 1″
Weight: 6.3 ounces
Battery Capacity: 1300 mAh

Pros and Cons
Easy to use
Great stabilization
Best for social
Lower quality footage

It鈥檚 not lost on us that the most expensive action cam on this list is one we recommend for beginners. It would be cheaper to get a GoPro, but we think this camera鈥檚 user-friendly design makes it a worthwhile investment for novices.

Most action cams are designed to be attached to accessories like tripods, monopods, and various grips to capture footage on the go. The Osmo Pocket 3, on the other hand, is an all-in-one unit with an easy-grip handle and built-in three-axis stabilizer, which allows you to grab the camera at a moment鈥檚 notice, hit the power switch, and start recording silky smooth 4K footage almost immediately. We also love the two-inch screen that you can flip vertically to record social footage and keep horizontal to record wide-angle footage that鈥檚 great for YouTube.

DJI makes the best wireless mics on the market and they seamlessly plug and play with the Osmo Pocket 3 so you can record interviews or film yourself with high-quality sound. If you鈥檙e vlogging, you can also set the camera down and tell it to lock onto your face so you stay in focus while walking around within the frame.

While this camera isn鈥檛 designed to be strapped to a mountain bike (the built-in handle gets in the way), we have reliably used it to capture decent action footage while skiing. It can鈥檛 compete with the likes of GoPro or Insta360 in this department, but it鈥檚 a great option for traveling and hiking.

One note: the Osmo 3 has been around for a while. While it鈥檚 still available for sale, we鈥檇 be willing to bet that DJI is working on an update.


How to Choose an Action Camera

Purchasing an action cam is just like buying a bike or a set of skis in that you need to think first and foremost about how you will use it. Invest in a GoPro if you want a huge ecosystem of accessories, go for the Insta360 if quality footage is what matters most, and we suggest the Osmo Pocket 3 if social is where most of your videos will land.

You鈥檒l need to look elsewhere if you plan to produce full-length documentaries. Action cams are best for gathering shorter videos that go on social platforms or that get spliced into longer edits. Take Cody Townsend鈥檚 鈥淭he Fifty鈥 for example: He had a full-time videographer, , who used pro cameras to capture most of the footage. Townsend was also filming with a GoPro so that we could see his first-person perspective, but the editors would only include his footage when it made sense.

Storing and Editing Video Footage

It鈥檚 easy to shoot fun footy, but without proper organization and equipment, it can be a pain in the ass to store and edit. Make sure you have a hard drive that鈥檚 big enough to store video footage (we suggest you start with something that鈥檚 at least 10 or 12 terabyes), and use a naming convention that鈥檚 easy to search so you can go back and find the footage you shot last month, or last year.

On the editing side, there are lots of apps such as that will help you splice your best clips together to create a short Instagram reel, but they can鈥檛 help you produce a thoughtful three-minute mini documentary. If you want to create something longer, you鈥檒l need to learn how to use video editing software such as Adobe Premier Pro.

Battery Life

Always invest in extra batteries. Companies say their batteries will last hours, but they never do, so it鈥檚 important to have at least two extra batteries on hand if you鈥檙e on an all-day adventure.


How We Test

  • Number of Testers: 5
  • Number of Products Tested: 10
  • Hours of footage captured: 20+
  • Number of times we jokingly said 鈥渇ooty鈥 and 鈥済nar鈥: 100+
  • Highest elevation while testing: 10,500
  • Coldest temp while testing: 0掳贵

Camera geeks are the best testers because they鈥檙e geeks. While most people just want to start shooting, the geeks also want to dig into the minutia and spend hours debating the merits of one camera versus the other. Thankfully our camera geeks have gotten good at digging into the details but then backing out and putting themselves in the shoes of the regular consumer so they can make recommendations based on general use.

For this year鈥檚 test we sent cameras on a wide variety of adventures and told testers to push the limits to find out where they failed. One tester took his camera on a full-moon skin to see how well the low-light option worked. While you could make out what was happening, the footage was not pretty to look at, letting us know that while action cams have come a long way, they鈥檙e still not as good as a bigger pro-level camera.


Meet Our Lead Testers

Category manager Jakob Schiller was a gear editor at 国产吃瓜黑料 and is now a columnist. The father of four kids and two dogs, he鈥檚 a bit pinned down but still manages to run, ski, or bike every day and often brings a camera with him. Sometimes he nails the footage. Sometimes it鈥檚 total junk.

can鈥檛 sit still so he鈥檚 always thinking up an adventure like driving all the way to Alaska, raving in the Nevada desert, or riding his motorcycle up mountain roads. It鈥檚 easy to hand him a camera and tell him to push record.


More Gear Reviews

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Our 4 Favorite Mirrorless Cameras for 国产吃瓜黑料rs and Travel Junkies /outdoor-gear/tools/best-mirrorless-cameras/ Tue, 11 Mar 2025 21:03:08 +0000 /?p=2695851 Our 4 Favorite Mirrorless Cameras for 国产吃瓜黑料rs and Travel Junkies

Capture your adventures in detail-rich photos with these fully featured cameras

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Our 4 Favorite Mirrorless Cameras for 国产吃瓜黑料rs and Travel Junkies

Nowadays there鈥檚 no such thing as a bad digital camera. The iPhone you have in your pocket takes stunning images and every single mirrorless or DSLR being released by the major brands is capable of capturing images that could land on the cover of 国产吃瓜黑料.

But with great choices come hard decisions. The camera market is so crowded you鈥檒l have to do some research to find the model that includes the specific features you want鈥攂e that amazing autofocus, enormous file size, or an affordable price. We鈥檝e put together a list of the new mirrorless cameras that stood out during our testing to provide a starting point.

Updated March 2025: We’ve added a new top pick from Canon and a splurge pick from Leica. Prices and info have been updated for 2025.

At a Glance


Canon EOS R5 Mark II
(Photo: Courtesy Canon)

Best Overall

Canon EOS R5 Mark II

Weight: 1.3 lbs (body only)
Size: 5.45鈥 x 3.87鈥 x 3.48″
Sensor: 45 megapixel full-frame stacked BSI CMOS sensor

Pros and Cons
Ultra-fast frame rate
Great autofocus
Compact body
Not the prettiest

It鈥檚 been a decade since Canon launched a camera as game-changing as their 2005 compact, affordable, yet fully-featured 5D DSLR, but the new R5 Mark II promises to have a similar impact in the mirrorless category. Thanks to a smart balance of size and specs, the R5 Mark II is bound to have a longer-than-normal shelf life with pro and amateur photographers alike.

The R5 Mark II鈥檚 appeal centers on three main things: a compact and easy-to-carry camera body, a 45MP full-frame stacked BSI CMOS sensor that allows the camera to capture up to 30 frames per second (fps), and high-powered autofocus.

The croissant-sized camera body weighs just 20.7 ounces, making it a great choice for those who prioritize moving lightly on outdoor adventures. In the frames-per-second game, 30 is 10 more than you get with similar cameras like the Nikon Z8, and more than enough to capture a skier streaking past in a high-g turn or a cyclist ripping down a descent. And with an 眉ber-smart autofocus that uses machine learning to help shooters easily lock on and track a variety of different subjects, I was almost guaranteed to nail the shot every single time

Photo of a Landrover vehicle perched on cliff taken with the Canon EOS R5 Mark II
The Canon EOS R5 Mark II takes high-quality photos from near and far thanks to a great auto-focus feature. (Photo: Jakob Schiller)

The R5 Mark II doesn鈥檛 produce the same image quality as the Sony A7RV (the most resolution-packed mirrorless camera on the market). But the Sony files are a pain to store because they take up so much hard drive space, making them too big for 90 percent of shooters, even the pros. Canon opted for a more reasonable file size, that can still produce images that are high-quality enough to grace magazine covers and gallery walls.

One niggle is that the Canon camera body, compared to those from Nikon and Sony, is not as pretty to look at. But in the end, who cares when it produces beautiful photos?


Sony A7CII
(Photo: Courtesy Sony)

Best Value

Sony A7CII

Weight: 15.1 oz (body only)
Size: 4.9鈥 x 2.8鈥 x 2.5鈥
Sensor: 33-megapixel full-frame Exmor R BSI

Pros and Cons
Small
Full-frame sensor
Fair price
No auto-focus joystick
Not ergonomic with Sony鈥檚 largest zoom lenses

The Sony A7CII is our top pick because it鈥檚 small but mighty and the best option for those of us who like to adventure. At just over a pound and about as thick as three iPhones stacked together, it鈥檚 travel friendly and comes with a giant full-frame sensor that captures 33-megapixel images, advanced auto-focus, and interchangeable lenses. In short, it鈥檚 a pro-level camera that鈥檚 significantly better than any current phone camera (or any phone camera we鈥檒l likely see in the next five years).

The interchangeable lenses you can use on the A7CII add bulk and weight, but Sony makes two that are the perfect add-on. Less than three inches long and about the diameter of a paper-towel tube, they鈥檙e much smaller than most standard lenses but fast enough to capture great photos in low light, wide enough for landscapes yet not too wide for portraits, and built with high-quality glass so it produces tack-sharp images

This camera is best for those who primarily want to shoot photos; but if you want to shoot video, you get beautiful 4K footage and incredible image stabilization for handheld shooting.

The A7CII costs $2,198 and the 35 millimeter f1.8 lens adds another $748, which brings the total to just shy of $3,000 for the basic setup. That may seem high, but it鈥檚 in the ballpark for a pro-level, full-frame camera that has the chops to shoot everything from action to landscapes.

Read our full review of the Sony AC7II here


Fujifilm X100VI
(Photo: Courtesy Fujifilm)

Simplest

Fujifilm X100VI

Weight: 1.15 lbs
Size: 5鈥 x 2.9鈥 x 2.2″
Sensor: 40.2-megapixel APS-C X-Trans CMOS 5 HR

Pros and Cons
Easy to transport
Simple to use
Rich photos
No interchangeable lenses
Not a full-frame sensor

The X110VI won a spot on this list for three reasons: it鈥檚 small, relatively simple, and captures gorgeous images. About the size of three iPhones stacked together, the camera weighs just 1.1 pounds so backpackers, bikepackers, hikers, skiers, or anyone who鈥檚 moving fast won鈥檛 feel weighed down. You won鈥檛 want to pack it in a running vest, but the camera is certainly small enough to fit in your daypack, or even the chest pocket of your ski shell.

Some photographers will chafe at the idea of not having interchangeable lenses, but we love the simplicity of this camera. With just one, high-quality 23mm f/2 (35mm equivalent) lens to work with, you鈥檙e forced to be a more creative photographer. If you want to zoom in, you鈥檒l need to walk closer. Need to capture a landscape? Back up or climb a hill. The 35mm focal length isn鈥檛 perfect for portraits, but it doesn鈥檛 distort the subject and can be made to work if you鈥檙e careful about your framing.

Why not just pack your iPhone 15 Pro (or newer) since it鈥檚 also portable and actually has three lenses? Because the X100VI is a camera (versus a phone with a built-in camera), Fujifilm is able to pack in a significantly bigger sensor (40.2 megapixel APS-C X-Trans CMOS 5 HR) compared to what you get with an iPhone. That bigger sensor drinks in more light and therefore creates more detailed photos and also does better in low-light situations.

The X100V isn鈥檛 as powerful as a full-frame Sony or Canon camera, but it鈥檚 the perfect travel-sized option that captures better quality photos than an iPhone.


Leica Q3 43
(Photo: Courtesy Leica)

Splurge

Leica Q3 43

Weight: 1.5 lbs (body only)
Size: 5.12鈥 脳 3.15鈥 脳 3.62鈥
Sensor: 60.3 megapixel full-frame CMOS

Pros and Cons
Sleek
Ultra-sharp glass
Indestructible
Expensive
Limited in its uses

I let out a guffaw when I first heard the price for this camera. For $7,000, you can buy two Sony A7CIIs and several high-quality Sony lenses or one Canon R5 Mark II and a suite of their top-shelf lenses. So why the hell would you throw down $7,000 for one camera and one fixed lens? Because it鈥檚 a Leica.

Despite the outrageous price tag, Leica has a strong hold on me for two main reasons.

First, the brand has an incredibly storied past. Photographers toting Leicas have shot many of the world鈥檚 most important photos like the shot of the young girl fleeing a napalm attack in Vietnam, the iconic portrait of Che Guevara that鈥檚 on T-shirts and pins worldwide, and that rainy day photo of James Dean walking through Times Square. This history gives Leica more street cred than any other camera company and makes photographers want to use one in hopes that they, too, can one day shoot a photo that counts.

Second, Leica makes a damn nice and beautifully simple camera. It starts with the ultra-sharp glass, making the photos produced by the f/2 43mm lens on the Q3 crisper than those shot by a Nikon, Canon, or Sony. A fixed 43mm lens might be a little long for people who are used to fixed 28mm or 35mm lenses, but it鈥檚 great for portraits and street photography and still wide enough to capture a crowd or a landscape.

The Q3鈥檚 lens is matched to an ultra-high-res 60-megapixel full-frame sensor that shines in low light and produces rich images that look as good on Instagram as they do on your wall. Instead of a host of buttons and dials on the top of the camera, the Q3 controls are paired down and the camera features far fewer custom options. This is intentional because the camera is not designed for shooting Premier League soccer, but instead is meant to be toted along on your trek through the Alps or into the streets of New York City.

Many photographers have film Leicas that are decades old and still work great because of their unmatched build quality. The Q3 is no different thanks to an all-metal outer that will put up with drops, scrapes, bumps, and anything else you can throw at it during your adventures.

The Q3 might be compared to other pieces of high-end outdoor equipment like a carbon-plated running shoe, an ultra-light camping tent, or a set of all-terrain tires. These pieces of gear are not for everyone, should not be used in every instance, and cost a lot more money than other options. But for people who use these specialty pieces of gear for their intended purpose, they make a real difference.


Frequently Asked Questions

What鈥檚 the Difference Between DSLR and Mirrorless Cameras?

A DSLR has a mirror inside the camera body that reflects the light coming through the lens and shoots it up to the viewfinder. When the shutter button is pressed, the mirror moves out of the way to let the light from the lens hit the digital sensor.

In a mirrorless camera there is no mirror, so the image you see through the viewfinder is electronically generated and the light goes straight from the lens to the sensor.

Which Is Better鈥擠SLR or Mirrorless?

You could spend a week combing through threads about whether DSLRs or mirrorless cameras are better, but the short answer is this: mirrorless cameras are the future and that鈥檚 where you should spend your money.

Some people like that the viewfinder on a DSLR is optical, not digital, but the digital viewfinders these days are so good that you鈥檒l never have any problems. Some people like the larger form factor of DSLRs when handling big lenses, but it鈥檚 easy to add an extra grip to a mirrorless that makes these smaller cameras just as easy to handle.

The advantages of the mirrorless camera, on the other hand, are numerous and growing. They鈥檙e smaller to start because there is no mirror, and therefore easier to transport on adventures. You can also shoot silently, since there鈥檚 no mirror moving around, which is an advantage in situations where you鈥檙e capturing wildlife or other sensitive scenes.

There used to be more lenses for DSLR cameras, but all the major companies now have a full line of high-quality mirrorless lenses, and the prices have also come down so you can easily find affordable but high-quality mirrorless cameras these days

How Much Does a Decent Camera Cost?

You should plan on spending at least $2,000 for the body. That gets you a pro-level camera that uses interchangeable lenses and comes with all the best features, like a full-frame sensor and high-quality autofocus. If you can make the jump to $3,000, you get even better resolution and all the new autofocus features that make shooting sports a breeze.

What Are Key Features to Look For?

If you鈥檙e going to invest in a mirrorless camera, get a full-frame sensor. These large sensors have incredible resolution and great low-light performance. From there you鈥檒l need to decide what kind of photographs you want to make.

Shooting sports? Go for a mirrorless camera that has a really high frame rate and all the newest autofocus technology. More focused on landscapes and portraiture? Go for a camera that shoots high-resolution or high-megapixel images.


Action photo of a Landrover driving in the dessert taken with Canon EOS R5 Mark II
An action shot taken by the author on the Canon EOS R5 Mark II (Photo: Jakob Schiller)

How We Test

  • Number of cameras tested: 10
  • Number of testers: 5
  • Number of pictures taken: 70,000 +
  • Hours spent figuring out each camera: Over 50 hours total

You鈥檝e probably heard the term 鈥渃amera geek.鈥 I bring this up because our tester pool was full of digital nerds. All the testers are former or working photojournalists who鈥檝e followed camera development for the past 20 years and love to geek out on new specs and features. They spend hours debating which camera is the best overall, which is the best for sports, which is the best for portraits, and love to argue about where the technology is going next.

All this enthusiasm made our job easy because we just had to distribute the cameras and let them go crazy. For this test, the cameras traveled all over the United States and Europe and captured everything from bike races to beach vacations.

What made a camera rise to the top of our test was a blend of performance and usability. Our testers looked for cameras that performed, whether that was accurate autofocus or great low light captures, and then also gave notes on how easy it was to get the camera to do what you asked. Were the dials in a convenient place? Was it easy to hold the cameras with a larger lenses? Did the camera bog you down on longer adventures? To be honest, the final decisions were quite hard but these were our clear favorites.


Meet Our Lead Tester

Before Jakob Schiller was a columnist at 国产吃瓜黑料 he spent almost a decade working as a photojournalist at newspapers around the country. He鈥檚 old enough to have shot film, but since the rise of the digital camera, has taken well over 1,000,000 photos on various DSLRs and smartphones. He loves photography because it facilitates adventure and captures important historical moments, but he鈥檚 also a tech lover and can geek out with the best of them about things like resolution, autofocus, and shadow detail.

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Is the GoPro Hero13 Black Better Than the GoPro Hero? /outdoor-gear/tools/gopro-hero13-black-versus-gopro-hero/ Thu, 20 Feb 2025 00:04:19 +0000 /?p=2696218 Is the GoPro Hero13 Black Better Than the GoPro Hero?

One GoPro is the easiest to use, and the other is the most versatile ever. Here鈥檚 the one we think you should buy.

The post Is the GoPro Hero13 Black Better Than the GoPro Hero? appeared first on 国产吃瓜黑料 Online.

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Is the GoPro Hero13 Black Better Than the GoPro Hero?

I鈥檝e been testing and writing about GoPro鈥檚 small action cameras since the first one was launched in 2004, watching as those cameras evolved from cumbersome chunks of plastic worn on your wrist to the content-capturing machines that they are today.

The two newest versions from GoPro, the Hero13, and the original Hero, continue that evolution. One is the most versatile camera GoPro has ever produced. The other might be the easiest to use. But which is the best option for you?

I spent the last month testing both in a variety of situations, from an epic ski trip to Palisades in Tahoe to a surf trip to Costa Rica to tame adventures on local trails in the Southern Appalachians. Throughout that period, I alternated between the two cameras on bike rides, golf rounds, ski days, and surf sessions, trying to determine which camera was the best.

Learn more: The 3 Best Action Cameras of 2025

The result is an enigma: The camera that I like the most personally is not the camera that I would recommend to most people. Here are my thoughts on the Hero13 and the Hero.


The GoPro Hero13 Black
The GoPro Hero13 Black (Photo: Courtesy GoPro)

The Hero13听

The GoPro Hero13 Built-In Features

Let鈥檚 start with the Hero13, which is GoPro鈥檚 most versatile camera to date, ideal for serious photographers and content creators who need to get a variety of footage. The new camera uses the same sensor and processor as the previous ($288) but adds a few key upgrades that make it far more capable. That includes interchangeable lenses, a magnetic mount, and a suite of built-in features that allow you to customize the footage you capture by adjusting the resolution, aspect ratio, and even sound before you start shooting.

The Hero13 shoots professional-grade 5.3K video, which is rendered incredibly smooth thanks to the in-camera HyperSmooth 6.0 video stabilization. I shot some shaky ski videos recently that were so silky you鈥檇 think they were shot on a gimbal. The fact that this stabilization happens inside the camera means you鈥檙e not forced to edit your video in GoPro鈥檚 Quik app (more on that below).

It鈥檚 waterproof down to 33 feet, but even better is the hydrophobic lens, which sheds water, giving you crystal-clear shots when you bring the camera back up above the surface. I have a lot of useless footage from past surf trips when I used older GoPros that didn鈥檛 have this water-shedding lens; instead of epic footage, all I got were videos of blurry water drops. That鈥檚 less of an issue with this new lens. I used this camera during a week-long surf trip to Costa Rica, and probably 95 percent of the videos I took while in the surf were crystal clear. On previous surf trips with older models of the GoPro, I鈥檇 say that ratio was probably 50/50.

My favorite aspect of the new Hero13 is the tall image sensor, which allows you to shoot wide, vertical, or square videos and images without having to adjust the camera鈥檚 settings or lenses. I take a lot of videos for Instagram, which requires a vertical frame, but I also do some scenic and gear videos for this magazine and YouTube, both of which require a horizontal frame. I can switch back and forth from those two perspectives on the touch screen with the swipe of a finger before I start the video, or even better, I can shoot everything in Full Frame and decide later if I want to edit and publish vertically or horizontally in the GoPro Quik app.

This versatility means you can shoot footage with or without GoPro鈥檚 signature fisheye perspective, which is handy if you鈥檙e vlogging, getting scenic landscapes or closeups, or even if you just want a more straightforward first-person perspective. It also makes it easier to pair footage from the Hero13 with footage from other cameras, like your iPhone.

Hero 13 Add-Ons

And that鈥檚 just what鈥檚 built into the Hero13. You can also purchase add-on HB Series Lenses, like a Macro that gives you 4x zoom or an ultra-wide that offers a 36 percent wider field of view than the standard GoPro lens. Clip these lenses onto the Hero13, and the camera automatically recognizes which lens you鈥檙e using without the need to manually adjust the settings.

Most casual photographers won鈥檛 need to purchase these extra lenses, but everyone will appreciate the new Enduro Battery that comes with the camera, which is an absolute game changer. One of my biggest complaints with every GoPro I鈥檝e ever used is the subpar battery life, especially in cold temps. This new battery is a beast with a reported 2.5-hour constant run time. I filmed with the Hero13 over several hours, from cold ski days to hot beach days, and never once ran out of battery.

Another fun tool in the Hero13 is the built-in Burst Slo-Mo, which offers three slow-motion options with different levels of quality. This is key if you ever want to throw your videos up onto a big screen; slow motion video from a low-quality camera blown up on a TV鈥檚 big screen can look blurry, but the Hero13 gives you five seconds of slow motion in crystal clear 5.3k quality.

The Hero13’s Downsides

Some professional photographers complained that the Hero13 didn鈥檛 get an upgraded sensor from the Hero12. While I do publish videos and photos on a variety of platforms, I don鈥檛 consider myself a pro photographer, so GoPro鈥檚 decision to stick with their previous sensor doesn鈥檛 bother me. I will say that the versatility of the Hero13 comes with a price; there鈥檚 a learning curve to the system, and it has taken some trial and error to figure out exactly which features I need. It鈥檚 like ordering from a menu that鈥檚 five pages long鈥攚ith so many options, it鈥檚 hard to settle on a single choice.

Final Thoughts

Overall, I鈥檓 blown away by the Hero13’s capabilities. Straight out of the box, it drastically broadens the kind of footage I can capture. Considering all of the potential add-ons, from the new lenses to external lights and microphones, the Hero13 is out of the action camera category altogether. It is a powerhouse that can be my primary content-capturing tool, whether I鈥檓 standing in front of the camera for a vlog, attaching it to my handlebars for action footage, or just capturing a photo to support an article.


The GoPro Hero
The GoPro Hero (Photo: Courtesy GoPro)

The Hero听

The Hero鈥檚 Upsides

Take the Hero13, cut it in half, and you have the Hero. It鈥檚 half the weight (86 grams to the Hero13鈥檚 159 grams), roughly half the size, about half the price, and is even waterproof to about half the depth (16 feet to the Hero13鈥檚 33 feet). That said, the tiny size is one of this camera鈥檚 selling points, especially if you like to mount a camera on your helmet.

Just like the Hero13, it has flip down mounting fingers, a removable hydrophobic lens cover, and a large touch screen on the back of the camera that you use to adjust the settings. It even has voice-activated controls, just like the Hero13, so you can tell this GoPro what to do without touching any buttons. Very cool.

The Hero鈥檚 Downsides

That鈥檚 where the similarities end, though, as the Hero is a straightforward, easy-to-use action camera without the bells and whistles of the full-featured Hero13.

For instance, you can鈥檛 change the resolution on the Hero (4K is the only option). It doesn鈥檛 shoot as well in low-light situations, and if you zoom in on the 4K footage, it鈥檚 a little blurry compared to the 5.3K Hero13 footage. You also can鈥檛 change the frame ratio; like older GoPros, it only shoots ultra-wide lens, fish-eye type footage, which might be a deal breaker for some users. Another limitation to note is that the HyperSmooth stabilization doesn鈥檛 happen in the camera. Instead, you have to upload your footage to GoPro鈥檚 Quik app before the video stabilizes. That鈥檚 not a big deal for most of us, but if you鈥檙e editing in a different software and bypassing the Quik app, you鈥檒l be dealing with shaky footage.

The battery life is roughly half as good as the Hero13, and that鈥檚 being generous. The Hero repeatedly died halfway through each day on a recent ski trip. Granted, I was filming heavily, and it was cold, but I鈥檝e been able to get through full days with the Hero13 under similar conditions. The Hero鈥檚 battery is within the camera, which eliminates the option of swapping out an extra battery.

Personally, my main issue with the Hero is that it only shoots ultra-wide lens footage. That鈥檚 a handy viewpoint for some shots, but I don鈥檛 want all of my videos to have a fish-eye view. You also have to mount or hold the Hero vertically in order to shoot vertical videos, which sounds like a silly thing to complain about, except most mounts hold GoPros horizontally. This kept me from getting vertical video during my Palisades ski trip, which makes for an awkward transition if I鈥檓 trying to match that footage with a vertical-oriented camera, like my phone.

Which Is the Better Camera For You?听

It sounds like the Hero13 is the camera I鈥檓 going to recommend, right? Not so fast.

I love the Hero13, and I think it鈥檚 the best GoPro I鈥檝e ever tested. It鈥檚 the right camera for me, and I鈥檓 excited to keep using it for the various ways I capture photos and videos. But I think many of those features that get me excited aren鈥檛 necessary for the majority of users out there. While I mentioned many of the Hero鈥檚 limitations, I think it鈥檚 a great action camera, especially when you consider the budget-friendly $199 price tag.

The question you have to ask yourself is, what kind of photographer are you? If you just want to get the occasional clip of a surf session or a POV of you sending it on a gap jump at the park, then the Hero is probably the right camera for you. The tiny size means you can bring it almost anywhere and get some really beautiful footage that you might not be able to capture with your phone. But if you鈥檙e looking for a single camera that can capture a variety of styles of content in a small package, the Hero13 is the obvious answer.

Or maybe you鈥檙e like me, and you鈥檝e convinced yourself you need both cameras: the Hero13 for its versatility and everyday capabilities and the Hero for its diminutive size, which makes it the ideal shooter for POV angles on a helmet mount.

Yeah, maybe that鈥檚 the answer here. Both cameras are the best cameras.


More Gear Reviews

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Apple鈥檚 New iPhone 16 Pro Is Once Again Our Favorite Pocket 国产吃瓜黑料 Camera. Here鈥檚 Why. /outdoor-gear/tools/apple-iphone-16-pro-reviewed/ Wed, 18 Sep 2024 12:00:23 +0000 /?p=2682330 Apple鈥檚 New iPhone 16 Pro Is Once Again Our Favorite Pocket 国产吃瓜黑料 Camera. Here鈥檚 Why.

Innovative new features make the phone even more powerful at capturing professional photos and video

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Apple鈥檚 New iPhone 16 Pro Is Once Again Our Favorite Pocket 国产吃瓜黑料 Camera. Here鈥檚 Why.

Every time Apple launches a new iPhone we get about a week to test before we can publish our initial review. As someone who primarily focuses on the camera features, it鈥檚 always a challenge to find a visually compelling spot that will allow me to fully test what the new camera is capable of.

This year, however, I got lucky. Immediately after I picked up the phones in the Bay Area I got on another plane to Alaska where I鈥檝e been driving overland trucks and fly fishing around Denali. This far north it鈥檚 the middle of fall, with bright yellow trees covering the landscape, and moose hunters roaming the woods to collect meat for the winter. It鈥檚 been dumping rain most of the time, but we also got one day of partial sun, and that night the northern lights popped out at 2 a.m.

Fly fisherman in Alaska captured by iPhone 16 Pro
Reviewer Jakob Schiller had plenty of stunning scenes to capture with the iPhone 16 Pro while adventuring in Alaska. (Photo: Jakob Schiller)

Needless to say, I鈥檝e had plenty to photograph in a variety of lighting conditions that have helped me dig into the camera upgrades. Once again, I鈥檓 impressed with the visual features Apple has been able to pack into a tiny device that also serves as a phone, GPS, TV screen, AI assistant, and many other things. But as I always remind readers, iPhones don鈥檛 come close to the power of a full-frame mirrorless camera, and the iPhone 16 Pros are no exception. Here are my initial thoughts on why the 16 Pros are a great adventure camera, but just one tool in a photographer鈥檚 belt.

We Love the Camera Control Button (But It Takes Some Getting Used To)

Apple keeps the hardware design of the iPhone purposely simple (no headphone jack, for example) so it鈥檚 a big deal when they give us a new button (as silly as that sounds). This year they鈥檝e added a Camera Control button, which is designed specifically for photographers and gives immediate and easy control of several different manual camera features.

One hard press of the button, which sits on the lower right-hand side of both Pros, launches the camera. Another hard press takes a photo. But the real power comes when you double soft-press the button (sort of like half-pressing the shutter on a camera) which brings up an entire menu of controls such as exposure, aperture, and focal length.

Apple iPhone 16 Pro showing the new Camera Control button
The new Camera Control button is on the lower right side of the iPhone 16 Pro. (Photo: Jakob Schiller)

To select a manual control like exposure, you slide your finger on the button until that control is highlighted, and then soft press it once to enter. Next, you again slide your finger along the button to make a change. Holding the camera horizontally, a swipe right on the button when in aperture control makes the shot bigger for less depth of field. A swipe left on the button when in zoom control makes it zoom out and access the phone’s ultra-wide camera. Another soft double press gets you back to the original menu so you can then click into and change another feature.

I was excited to see Apple launch this button because the best photos are often made when you have as much control as possible over your camera. While shooting landscapes in Alaska, for example, I wanted lots of depth of field so I could gather details in the foreground and background and keep everything in the frame as sharp as possible. While shooting white overland trucks, it was helpful to bring my exposure down a little so that the vehicles weren鈥檛 blown out when set against a darker background.

As photographers know, mastering a new camera takes a while, and the same will be true with the Camera Control button. I suspect it will be months before I create the muscle memory needed to use the button quickly and without thinking. I also know that one button on the side of a camera will never match the buttons, dials, and toggles that photographers can use to quickly control bigger mirrorless cameras.

Truck in rain captured by the Apple iPhone 16 Pro
The Camera Control button proved difficult to operate in the rain, but Schiller was able to wipe it dry enough to capture this overlanding vehicle in its natural habitat. (Photo: Jakob Schiller)

A heads up for anyone who lives in a rainy environment. While shooting in an Alaskan downpour it was hard to get the Camera Control button to react to my sliding finger, so I had trouble changing my exposure or focal length. Many times I had to wipe the button dry with my shirt in order to get it to work. Keep in mind that when you buy a phone case you鈥檒l need to make sure you buy one that either comes with a cutout so that you can directly access the button, or one that Apple has certified so that the phone case button covering the Camera Control button interacts appropriately and doesn鈥檛 cause any weird delays or interferences.

Apple says that later this year a software update will allow the Camera Control button to lock focus on a subject so that we can then shift the camera and composition but not lose our main point of focus. This is a technique that many pro photographers use to get more creative framing in their photos and a smart update from Apple.

More Resolution Is a Good Thing

The iPhone 15s and 15 Pros all came with a larger 48-megapixel (mp) main camera (26 mm and 24 mm equivalents, respectively), which was a big deal because those cameras provided enough resolution to make photo prints large enough to hang on your wall. Last year I commented on seeing more photos on the walls of Apple HQ, and the same was true this year, with iPhone photos hanging all over the spaces we toured.

Unfortunately the 15 Pros had a bit of a shutter lag when shooting 48 mp photos in Apple ProRAW because the files that format creates are huge. But with the 16 Pros there鈥檚 zero shutter lag on the standard camera (24 mm equivalent), thanks to a second-generation quad-pixel sensor that reads data twice as fast, and something called the Apple Camera Interface that transfers higher levels of data from the sensor to the chip. So photographers can now capture action at the largest resolution possible.

An Alaskan landscape captured by the new Apple iPhone 16 Pro
The larger sensor on the iPhone 16 Pro’s ultra-wide camera can capture rich details of a landscape, creating an image with depth and character. (Photo: Jakob Schiller)

The other big news for the 16 Pros is that their ultra-wide (13 mm equivalent) camera now comes with a 48 mp sensor as well. There鈥檚 some shutter lag on this camera when you鈥檙e shooting at 48 mp in Apple ProRAW, but I was still able to use it to photograph people fly fishing and overlanding. Thanks to the wide angle and resolution, it was easy to get clean and crisp subjects in the foreground but also capture subtle details in the landscape, creating a photo with lots of depth and character. I鈥檝e yet to print a photo off the ultra-wide camera but suspect I鈥檇 have no problem making something that is 11×14 inches or even bigger.

The only hedge I鈥檒l include is a reminder that even though the iPhone now has 48 mp sensors behind multiple cameras, that doesn鈥檛 mean that the iPhone photos are anywhere as detailed as a full-frame mirrorless camera that comes with a similar resolution but a much larger sensor and larger lenses. Those larger lenses and sensor drink in more information and will always win in the resolution game.

You Can Now Shoot Slow-Mo 4K Video

Most iPhone users aren鈥檛 using their phones to create commercial music videos like the one Apple and showed during the iPhone 16 Pro keynote presentation. That said, it鈥檚 definitely convenient to have higher-resolution 4K slow-mo video that you can use to capture action or add drama to social videos.

The new features enables the phone to capture video in 4K at 120 frames-per-second (fps), and the Photos app lets you adjust the playback speed after capture. That means you can watch your video at full speed, or dial it down to half speed, quarter speed, or even one-fifth speed. I shot a guide fly fishing and friends driving trucks through puddles and found it enormously helpful to be able to choose my playback speed in order to best highlight the action.

For example, I chose half speed for the fly fishing video because that was slow enough to emphasize the casting movements but not so slow it made the video boring. When I was editing the cars chewing through puddles, however, I slowed the video all the way down to one-fifth speed because I liked the drama of the splash coming at me as slowly as possible.

The Styles Feature Has a Lot of Potential

All iPhone 16s come with the ability to control something called Styles. At first glance these are just a new set of filters, but Apple says that鈥檚 not the case. Instead of applying one simple tone to the entire photo, like some older filters, Styles alter the color balance and tonality in a more sophisticated way that leaves things like skin tone more natural while still adding a certain overall feel to the rest of the photo. There are preset Styles developed by Apple, but each of those can be modified by the user in the Photos app. Note that at this point Styles only work in the HEIF format and do not work on Apple ProRAW files.

Apple says that photographers have created their own tonal styles for decades and that they drew on this history when building Styles. For me, I immediately thought of how modern photographers use Presets in Adobe Lightroom that do something similar. Photographers will create a Preset, or dozens of Presets, that alter the overall tonality of a photo so that everything with that Preset has a consistent feel.

When done well, these Presets help photographers nail an aesthetic that鈥檚 uniquely theirs and creates a visual consistency that you might compare to an author鈥檚 tone of voice. I asked a pro adventure photographer I ran into in Alaska what he thinks of Presets and he said he uses them all the time. That said, he warned that it鈥檚 taken him hundreds of hours to create his set of Presets, and he鈥檚 always tweaking them. His advice leads me to believe that Styles, when used best, will not be a magic wand, but instead an advanced tool iPhone users will need to spend some time with to master.

Everything Else You Need to Know About the iPhone 16 Pro

Last year just the iPhone 15 Pro Max came with a 5X zoom (120 mm equivalent), but both 16 Pros now feature that lens and it sits in front of a 12 mp camera. I鈥檝e tested the 5X over the past year and it鈥檚 been a fun new way to capture the world and create unique perspectives. For video it鈥檚 been great to get in ultra close to the action for a more personal experience, and on the photo side it鈥檚 perfect for portraits where you still want a little background info (unlike Portrait mode, where the background is completely blurred).

A new feature called Audio Mix that launches with the 16 Pros will undoubtedly help YouTubers and other social videographers in a big way. There鈥檚 a lot to this feature, but what鈥檚 most important to know is that when you record video of people talking in a noisy area, Apple鈥檚 software can now go into that video and cut out the background noise almost completely or just quieter if you prefer, so that you can hear the forward conversation much more crisply. The effect is like attaching body mics to your subjects or using an overhead mic like you see in film production. It remains to be seen if video creators who use an iPhone ditch their mics completely, but Audio Mix will certainly allow some people to just bring their phone.

Apple Intelligence, or Apple鈥檚 version of AI, will be released later this year and, according to Apple, will include important updates to the Photos app. One that caught my eye is the ability to use detailed natural language queries to search through the thousands of photos stored on your phone and in your cloud. Apple says we should be able to type something as specific as 鈥淢aya skateboarding in a tie-dye shirt鈥 into the Photo app鈥檚 search bar and it will find all the photos that meet that description, even if they鈥檙e buried in photos from four years ago. You can also use this same kind of query to search videos. Your phone will sort through all your footage to find the exact spot where Maya is skateboarding in that specific t-shirt.

Finally, Apple Intelligence will also allow users to remove distracting elements from a photo with a few swipes. Personally, I think this is great for photos like family portraits, or anything staged, but not something I鈥檓 interested in when it comes to other photography. AI features like this, in my opinion, destroy the character of a photo and it should be the job of the photographer to compose a photo how they want it instead of relying on AI to clean it up or enhance it after the fact.

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Everything You Need to Know About Apple Event鈥檚 New Products /outdoor-gear/tools/apple-event-new-products/ Tue, 10 Sep 2024 00:21:45 +0000 /?p=2681439 Everything You Need to Know About Apple Event鈥檚 New Products

The new iPhone 16 comes with smart camera upgrades and important new health features. We get an improved Apple Watch and AirPods. But there鈥檚 no Ultra Watch 3, unfortunately.

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Everything You Need to Know About Apple Event鈥檚 New Products

For the past couple years Apple has rolled out big releases at their annual Apple event, including the Ultra Watch and Emergency SOS, that were especially important for people who love to play outside. This year was more muted for us outsiders as the big news focused on Apple鈥檚 version of AI, called Apple Intelligence, which is launching on their phones in beta this fall.

We didn鈥檛 get an Ultra Watch 3 with a better battery life (which we鈥檙e still hoping for), and we didn鈥檛 get an announcement about any new satellite features (even though we鈥檙e very excited about the previously announced ability to when iOS 18 launches later this month).

What we did get were several big improvements to the iPhone鈥檚 cameras and two smart health updates. Plus, AirPods get noise canceling and the new Apple Watch has its largest face ever.

Camera Control Button

We started covering the iPhone in 国产吃瓜黑料 years ago because it鈥檚 long been the best pocket camera that you can haul along for backcountry adventures. Every year Apple rolls out new camera features that make it significantly better, and this year we鈥檙e most excited about something called the Camera Control button.

The Camera Control button, which comes on all the new iPhones鈥16, 16 Plus, 16 Pro, and 16 Pro Max鈥攕its on the right side of the phone. With one full press, it immediately brings up your camera. Another press takes a photo. More importantly, a soft press gesture on the button brings up a menu that offers a host of manual controls including aperture and exposure adjustment鈥攍etting you play with depth of field or optimize the brightness of something in the shadow or highlight鈥攁s well as the ability to adjust your zoom range.

A quick demo we watched made the ability to access these features with a button look surprisingly similar to how you might quickly and deftly control a high-end mirrorless camera. Older iPhones offer the ability to change things like exposure, but with a dedicated button you鈥檙e able to control these important aspects of your photograph significantly faster, which allows for more creative picture making in fast-moving situations.

Improved Camera Features on the iPhone Pros

Both the iPhone 16 Pro and 16 Pro Max come with a new in addition to a 48-megapixel standard 24-millimeter camera. This increased resolution for the ultra-wide camera means that when you want to take sweeping landscape shots you鈥檙e going to get significantly more detail and resolution. As we pointed out last year in our review of the iPhone 15鈥檚 48mp camera, all that extra detail and resolution is particularly nice when you want to make a print to hang on your wall, or if you want to adjust the color and tone in Adobe Lightroom and not totally ruin your photo.

Last year only the iPhone 15 Pro Max came with a 5x telephoto lens, but both the 16 Pro and 16 Pro Max have that higher-powered zoom that allows you to get close to a subject without losing photo quality.

We love to shoot in RAW, but shooting in this uncompressed photo format takes a lot of processing power and caused some earlier iPhones to have a slight shutter lag. Now, thanks to a quad-pixel sensor in the 16 Pro and Pro Max that can read data twice as fast, there鈥檚 zero delay between when you press the button and when you take the photo, which is immensely helpful when photographing action.

High-Res Slo-Mo Video

In many music videos, commercials, films, or other pieces of high-end video, you鈥檒l notice that slow-motion video is often used to add drama and intrigue by giving the viewer more of a chance to focus in on the action. To help shooters create this effect, the new 16 Pro and 16 Pro Max now offer the ability to shoot 4K video at 120 frames per second (fps), which is a high-enough frame rate to slow down a mountain biker or skier slashing a turn, or a runner sprinting by on the track. Once the video is shot you can adjust the playback to full-speed, half-speed option, quarter-speed, or one-fifth-speed, which corresponds to 24 fps.

Sleep Apnea and Hearing-Loss Monitoring

Health monitoring has long been a part of Apple devices and for this go-round they introduced two smart and important advances. First, using the accelerometer the new Apple Watch Series 10 (along with the Series 9 and the Ultra 2) can now monitor small movements at the wrist that are associated with interruptions in normal respiratory patterns, something they call breathing disturbances. A new algorithm then analyzes the breathing disturbance data so that the Apple Watch can notify its user if the data indicates consistent signs of sleep apnea. Apple says that this feature was only launched after being validated in a clinical trial that was 鈥渦nprecedented in size for sleep apnea technology.鈥

The sleep apnea information that the watch provides is not meant to be a diagnosis, but instead helps a user identify the problem and consult with a physician. According to Apple, more than 1 billion people worldwide suffer from sleep apnea, but most don鈥檛 get a diagnosis. If left untreated, sleep apnea can create an increased risk of hypertension, Type 2 diabetes, and cardiac issues.

To address hearing loss, which affects 1.5 billion people around the world according to the World Health Organization, Apple, via a software update launching this fall, is going to be able to offer a scientifically validated hearing test via their AirPods Pro 2 headphones. That test will result in a personalized hearing profile that will turn the AirPods Pro into a Apple says that this feature was also validated via a clinical trial.

The Best of the Rest

Two other updates of note are the large screen on the Apple Watch Series 10, and the launch of the AirPods 4 that come with active noise cancelation. The watch screen is important because it鈥檚 actually the largest screen of any Apple watch, including the Ultra 2, and it provides even more real estate to see important information. For AirPods, we love that Apple bought incredible noise cancelation to their more affordable headphones so that you can spend less but still get a feature that allows you to hone in while traveling and working.

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Our 16 Favorite Deals on Outdoor Gear for Prime Day /outdoor-gear/camping/prime-day-deals-outdoor-gear/ Tue, 16 Jul 2024 16:22:07 +0000 /?p=2674654 Our 16 Favorite Deals on Outdoor Gear for Prime Day

From now until 11:59 pm PST on July 17, you can score some amazing deals on outdoor gear during Amazon鈥檚 biggest sale event of the year, Prime Day

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Our 16 Favorite Deals on Outdoor Gear for Prime Day

It鈥檚 the most wonderful time of the year…OK, Prime Day isn鈥檛 Christmas, but it鈥檚 a pretty great fake holiday if you鈥檙e a sucker for a good deal. And I am indeed that kind of sucker, especially when it comes to outdoor gear. So I stayed up late (most Prime Day deals were announced at midnight Pacific time this morning) and combed through the scores of products on deep discounts. Note: you have to be a to take advantage of the sale.

Here are some of the best outdoor Prime Day deals I found that you can get from now until the end of the day July 17.

Updated July 17: We鈥檝e added six deals to the list, including the Skratch Labs Energy Chews, Tailwind Nutrition Recovery Chocolate powder, Vssl G25 Java Coffee Grinder,听 Adidas Men’s Terrex Free Hiker 2.0, Kelty Cosmic 0 Down Mummy Sleeping Bag, and the Osprey Poco Plus Child Carrier. We also checked all links and removed the Oru Kayak Lake and the Yeti Tundra 35 cooler.

If you buy through our links, we may earn an affiliate commission. This supports our mission to get more people active and outside.听Learn more.


(Photo: Courtesy Skratch Labs)

Ready for a pro tip? Prime Day is a smart time to stock up on adventure snacks. High-quality trail treats like these Skratch Labs Energy Chews aren鈥檛 cheap, but they can have a decent shelf life, so it makes sense to load your larder now. More importantly, if you haven鈥檛 tried Skratch鈥檚 sour-sugar-dusted raspberry gumdrops, do yourself a favor and indulge. Not only do these athlete-approved, easy-to-digest energy chews contain an adventure-fueling formula of simple carbs, sugars, and sodium, but they鈥檙e downright delicious and taste mind-bogglingly like real raspberries.


(Photo: Courtesy Tailwind)

Recovery Mix is Tailwind Nutrition鈥檚 delicious and nutritious apr猫s adventure powder. Whether you鈥檝e been hitting the gym, crushing singletrack, or battling a complicated climbing project, the drink mix is a perfect way to reset and replenish your body. Unlike many post-workout powders that are almost exclusively packed with protein, Tailwind鈥檚 formula also includes carbs and electrolytes for holistic recovery and rehydration. If you鈥檙e looking for a post-workout pick-me-up, check out the coffee flavor, which includes 80 milligrams of caffeine per serving. Otherwise, you can鈥檛 go wrong with chocolate.


(Photo: Vssl)

How smooth is VSSL鈥檚 carabiner-topped, 30-gram-capacity G25 Java Manual Coffee Grinder? Smooth as the best cup of coffee you鈥檝e ever had thanks to high-carbon stainless steel conical burrs and a dual-bearing design. VSSL outfitted the G25 with 50 grind settings, allowing you to fine-tune grind consistency to pair with your preferred method of coffee preparation. And while the sleek, two-toned colorway looks sharp in any home kitchen, the G25 is crafted from ultra-durable machined aluminum, making it ideal for car camping, road tripping, surf missions鈥攜ou name it.


(Photo: Courtesy Adidas)

If you love the feel of a high-top hiker but hate the heft, check out Adidas鈥 now heavily discounted, lightweight Free Hiker 2.0. The hybrid hiker sports tech typical of Adidas鈥 Terrex line, including aggressively lugged, granite-gripping Continental rubber outsoles, rebound-enhancing midsoles, and a reliable, well-built heel cup. However, what sets the Free Hiker apart is an integrated sock-like gaiter that simultaneously keeps sand and scree from sneaking into the shoe, providing hikers with a touch of compression and more support. Plus, if you like a little street-style with your singletrack, these three stripes have your name on 鈥榚m.


(Photo: Courtesy Kelty)

At four and a half pounds, the Kelty Cosmic 0 Down Sleeping Bag isn鈥檛 winning any awards for weight. In fact, we definitely don鈥檛 recommend this sleeping bag if you鈥檙e planning on putting in serious, or even moderate, mileage on the trail. But if you鈥檙e not counting grams and you鈥檙e counting dollars instead, this budget option from Kelty is virtually unbeatable. Kelty keeps the price low (and volume and weight high) by stuffing the 20D nylon mummy鈥檚 trapezoidal baffles with cost-effective 550-fill hydrophobic DriDown. Again, the result isn鈥檛 ultralight, but it is ultra-warm, ultra-comfy, and ultra-affordable.


(Photo: Courtesy Osprey)

Parent or packhorse? With Osprey鈥檚 Poco Plus Child Carrier, you can be both! Osprey鈥檚 backpacking DNA is evident as soon as you shoulder the Poco Plus. The toddler-toting pack comes equipped with a padded harness, aluminum-framed suspension, and ample ventilation for easy carrying, ensuring parents don鈥檛 tap out early on the trail. It also comfortably accommodates a petite passenger in the kiddie cockpit (replete with stirrups and a retractable sunshade), as well as plenty of toys, treats, and other essentials spread across 26 liters of ingeniously compartmentalized gear storage.


(Photo: Courtesy Solo Stove)

If you don鈥檛 have a Solo Stove yet, now is the time to pull the trigger. Their super popular Bonfire 2.0 is 30 percent off right now, knocking over $100 off the typical price. And this deal comes with the stand, which raises the fire pit off the ground, helping to increase the airflow while allowing you to use the stainless still fire pit on a deck. This is the same family-sized fire pit I have in my backyard and I鈥檝e become completely addicted to the smokeless aspect of this product. Honestly, I have a hard time sitting around a regular fire after using the Bonfire for so long.


(Photo: Courtesy Hydro Flask)

This is, hands down, the best water bottle I own. And I have a lot of bottles in my cabinets. It holds 40 ounces, has a wide-mouth opening, and keeps water cold for up to 24 hours. All of that is great, but I carry this bottle because it鈥檚 absolutely leak-proof and dishwasher safe, which means I don鈥檛 have to hand wash it every night. The pro-grade stainless steel lining also means you鈥檙e only tasting water鈥攏ot leftover flavors from previous drinks. Buy it now for about $14 less than the sticker price.


(Photo: Courtesy Osprey)

Osprey makes some of my favorite packs, and their quality carries over to the Duro, a vest that鈥檚 built for running. A rear sleeve holds a 1.5-liter reservoir with a tube that routes around and secures to your chest so you can have hydration on the move, while the front vest panels are strategically designed with pockets that will hold all your snacks, phone, and keys. There鈥檚 even an attachment point for a trekking pole or ice axe if you鈥檙e getting really wild during your trail runs. I鈥檝e done some long runs and races with this pack, and I love it. It鈥檚 34 percent off right now.


(Photo: Courtesy LifeStraw)

You don鈥檛 always need the LifeStraw water filter, but when you do, you鈥檒l be glad it鈥檚 in your pack. This personal water filter acts as a straw that removes 99.9999 percent of waterborne bacteria and parasites from creeks and ponds. It only weighs 1.6 ounces and a single LifeStraw will filter 1,000 gallons of water, so you can keep this in your pack and have peace of mind for years to come. It鈥檚 50 percent off on Prime Day.


 

(Photo: Courtesy Keen)

The Headout is an aggressive hiker designed to tackle difficult terrain, with an upper that blends breathable mesh with durable leather and Keen鈥檚 patented multi-directional lugged outsole that provides traction and stability when the trail gets rowdy. There鈥檚 a layer of squishy cushion that bounces back when you鈥檙e moving fast and the whole thing is waterproof, so feel free to tromp through those puddles. It鈥檚 a steal at 29 percent off for Prime Day.


(Photo: Courtesy Coleman)

Coleman makes some of the most iconic car camping stoves, and for this two-in-one Tabletop, they took their streamlined two-burner design and gave it a miniature grill. One side has a standard stove burner, and the other has a 130-inch grill. You can grill steaks and cook pasta on the same appliance at the same time. It offers 20,000 BTUs of cooking power spread between the two cook surfaces. The lid turns into a wind shield (flaps fold out from the side), and you can remove the grates from the grill and burner to wipe the system clean after the grill cools down. It鈥檚 19 percent off, so if you need a car camping grill, hop to it.


(Photo: Courtesy CamelBak)

It鈥檚 hard to remember life before CamelBaks, but I can tell you, it wasn鈥檛 great. You had to carry a lot of water bottles and stop pedaling to pull those bottles out of your pack. The Hydrobak takes CamelBak鈥檚 winning platform and reduces it to the essentials: This small pack holds a 50-ounce bladder and has a small pocket big enough for your essentials, making it perfect for a two-hour ride. It鈥檚 a minimalist design that鈥檚 perfect for cyclists who just want to stay hydrated without all of the frills.


(Photo: Courtesy Yeti)

Do you need an over-engineered coffee mug? If you鈥檝e ever taken a sip of lukewarm coffee at 11 am from a standard mug, then you know the answer to that question is 鈥測es.鈥 The Rambler鈥檚 double-wall insulated design keeps 14 ounces of java hot for hours, and the lock-tight lid is a joy to sip from. I have a few. I love them, and they鈥檙e 30 percent off, so I might get a couple more.


(Photo: Courtesy Coleman)

If you haven鈥檛 dabbled in the 鈥渃ot life鈥 while car camping, do yourself a favor and make the leap. Getting off the ground and into a cot while sleeping in a tent makes the whole situation feel more civilized. Coleman鈥檚 Camping Cot is a queen sized bed with a plush air mattress topper for ultimate frontcountry comfort. There are even two side tables with cup holders. You鈥檙e basically glamping when you use this thing.


(Photo: Courtesy GoPro)

Okay, technically this isn鈥檛 a Prime Day deal. This is a 鈥淟imited Time鈥 deal on Amazon, but right now the latest model of GoPro is $100, making it only slightly more expensive than the GoPro Hero11 that鈥檚 on sale for Prime Day. So I feel like it鈥檚 a no-brainer to go for the Hero12, which is their most advanced camera to date boasting new NDR 5.3K and 4K video and an upgraded video stabilization that makes video shot in even the shakiest situations look like it was shot on a gimbal. It has twice the run time than previous models and has Bluetooth audio support for headphones and microphones. It鈥檚 25 percent off right now, taking $100 off the regular sticker price.


More Amazon Prime Day Deals from Our Sites:

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This Is the Most Travel-Friendly Pro Camera We鈥檝e Tested /outdoor-gear/tools/sony-a7cii-camera-review/ Tue, 18 Jun 2024 19:30:37 +0000 /?p=2671561 This Is the Most Travel-Friendly Pro Camera We鈥檝e Tested

Sony鈥檚 new A7CII is a full-frame powerhouse in a small package

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This Is the Most Travel-Friendly Pro Camera We鈥檝e Tested

When asked which camera takes the best photos, professional photographers like to quip that 鈥渢he best camera is the one you have with you.鈥 It鈥檚 a tongue-in-cheek way of saying that you should never worry too much about your gear. Use whatever you have, then do the work to find, frame, and capture a high-quality photo. The photographer matters more than the camera.

That mantra has become easier to follow now that we all have high-powered cameras in our pockets thanks to companies like Apple, Google, and Samsung. I鈥檝e been blown away by the camera in the new iPhone 15 and think that we鈥檝e finally reached a point where camera phones can produce images that we鈥檇 be happy to print and hang on our wall (a true test of image quality).

That said, I鈥檒l eat my hat if Apple ever finds a way to make an iPhone that鈥檚 just as good, in every way, as a pro-level digital camera. Because phones are designed to be more than just cameras, they have to compromise, allowing companies like Sony, Nikon, Canon, Fuji, and Leica to still make a significantly superior product.

Case in point is the new . It鈥檚 smaller than a traditional mirrorless camera鈥攊t weighs just over a pound and is about as thick as three iPhones stacked together鈥攑laying on the trend that people want something that鈥檚 easy to travel with. Yet the small size doesn鈥檛 limit its functionality: You still get a giant full-frame sensor, advanced auto-focus, and interchangeable lenses, making it a pro-level option that鈥檚 significantly better than any current phone, or any phone we鈥檒l likely see in the next five years.

See how it stacks up against our other favorite mirrorless cameras


Sony A7CII

Specifications

  • Price: $2,198
  • ISO range: 50-204800
  • Weight: 15.1 oz (body only)
  • Size: 4.9 x 2.8 x 2.5 inches
  • Sensor: 33-megapixel full-frame Exmor R back-illuminated CMOS

Pros and Cons
Small and light
Comes with a full-frame sensor that performs well in low light
Works with all of Sony鈥檚 high-quality E-mount lenses
Fairly priced
No auto-focus joystick
Does not match ergonomically with Sony鈥檚 largest zoom lenses

All gear in this guide was tested by multiple reviewers. When you buy through our links, we may earn an affiliate commission. This supports our mission to get more people active and outside. Learn more.


Review: Sony A7CII Mirrorless Camera

After testing the A7CII alongside many other newly-released full-frame digital cameras, I think it鈥檚 the best camera on the market for those of us who like to adventure. Weight and size matter on an all-day hike, multi-day ski tour, or when you want to haul a camera along on a 100-mile road ride, and the A7CII is small and light enough to never really bog you down or get in the way.

The interchangeable lenses you can use on the A7CII add bulk and weight, but Sony makes two that are the perfect add-on. Less than three inches long and about the diameter of a paper-towel tube, they鈥檙e much smaller than most standard lenses but fast enough to capture great photos in low light, wide enough for landscapes yet not too wide for portraits, and built with high-quality glass to produce tack-sharp images when paired with the well-tuned sensor on the camera (more on that later).

Because the A7CII is a full-frame camera, it works with Sony鈥檚 entire line of E-mount lenses. If you鈥檙e a birder and want to save a little weight on the camera but still bring along a 70-200 millimeter f/2.8鈥攐r heck, even the new 300 millimeter f/2.8鈥攜ou鈥檇 be more than happy with the image quality. The ergonomics of holding a big lens matched to a small camera are not ideal, but doable if that鈥檚 where you land.

The full-frame sensor on the A7CII captures 33-megapixel images that are plenty big and detailed enough to produce stunning prints or magazine covers, but not so big that you鈥檒l fill up unnecessary space on your hard drive. Like all Sony full-frame sensors, this one offers a wide dynamic range, so you can always go into Adobe Lightroom and tone down the highlights and pull out the shadows to create a balanced image, even when you鈥檙e shooting in lousy light.

For travel and adventure photographers who are shooting on the go and almost never bring along any external lights, knowing that you鈥檒l always get a usable鈥攊f not absolutely gorgeous鈥攊mage takes away the stress and allows you to focus on your framing and the moment.

Closeup birds eye view of the Sony AC7II camera control panel
(Photo: Jakob Schiller)

One big update on the A7CII is a front adjustment dial that sits just below the shutter button. It鈥檚 an important addition to the A7CII because that dial allows you to quickly and easily adjust your shutter or your aperture if you鈥檙e shooting in shutter or aperture priority mode. If you want to shoot manually, there鈥檚 another dial on the back of the camera where your thumb sits so you can control aperture and shutter speed at the same time.

The only ergonomic drawback, one that I admittedly had to get used to, is the lack of an autofocus joystick. On Sony鈥檚 larger cameras, like the A7RV, there鈥檚 a small joystick that sits in the upper righthand corner on the back of the camera which easily allows your thumb to move the spot focus point around. I love that joystick because I can quickly, with just a flick of my thumb, tell the camera exactly where to focus, be that in the middle of the frame, down at the bottom, or in an upper corner.

Closeup view of back panel of Sony A7CII mirrorless camera
(Photo: Jakob Schiller)

The workaround on the A7CII is to turn the rear dial into your joystick. Ergonomically, this works fine because it鈥檚 easy to press the dial up, down, or side to side to move the focus point. The downside to this is that it requires reprogramming the standard setting.

When you get the camera out of the box, the rear dial is set up to allow you to change your frame rate (how many photos the camera takes when you hold down the shutter) and ISO. If you reprogram the rear dial to act as your autofocus joystick, as I did, you lose the ability to change frame rate and ISO quickly. These features can be changed otherways, but it鈥檚 a little more difficult. Side note: the A7CII shoots up to ten frames per second, which is plenty for capturing high-octane action shots.

Some photographers will not turn the dial into the autofocus select mechanism because the A7CII has phenomenal autofocus tracking. You can tell the camera to latch onto a subject by aiming the focus on the human, animal, insect, or even a car or a plane you want to track, and then half-pressing the shutter. The camera then tracks that subject no matter where it moves in frame, negating the need to manually move your autofocus point.

This technology has gotten significantly better in the past few years and allows the photographer to track subjects in dynamic and fast-moving situations. To switch subjects, you just line up your focus point and half-press the shutter once again.

I鈥檇 recommend the A7CII primarily for shooting photos; but if you did want to shoot video, you get beautiful 4K footage and incredible image stabilization for handheld shooting.

The A7CII costs $2,200 and the 35 millimeter f1.8 lens adds another $748, which brings the total to just shy of $3,000 for the basic setup. That may seem high, but it鈥檚 in the ballpark for a pro-level, full-frame camera that has the chops to shoot everything from action to landscapes.

There are similar cameras out there that are small but mighty, but within that testing pool, the Sony still comes out on top. The Fuji X100V, which has a loyal following and a similar price point, does not have the same high-level functionality as the Sony, and the images are not as good, in my opinion. There are rumors about an that will improve that camera鈥檚 specs, but even that will likely still leave Fuji behind Sony in the rankings.

Leica also released the recently, which is just as compact and makes beautiful Leica-quality images. But that camera comes in at $6,000 with a lens. For Leica loyalists, that price tag might be easy to rationalize; but for others, it might be too hefty.

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Gift One of These Seven Curated Picks of the Latest Tech /outdoor-gear/tools/gift-one-of-these-seven-curated-picks-of-the-latest-tech/ Wed, 01 Nov 2023 12:00:57 +0000 /?p=2651020 Gift One of These Seven Curated Picks of the Latest Tech

Mouth-watering presents for your tech-savvy loved ones

The post Gift One of These Seven Curated Picks of the Latest Tech appeared first on 国产吃瓜黑料 Online.

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Gift One of These Seven Curated Picks of the Latest Tech

DJI Mavic 3 Classic Drone (Starting at $1,599)

DJI Mavic 3 Classic
(Photo: Courtesy DJI)

Do you have a drone hobbyist on your list that鈥檚 looking to take their flight game to the next level? Check out the Mavic 3 Classic from DJI. Its film quality is good enough for all but Hollywood shooters, but it鈥檚 user friendly enough 鈥渇or those of us who are still mastering the art of drone flight,鈥 says our lead camera tester Jakob Schiller.

Read the Full Review.

Apple Fitness+ ($10/month or $80/annually)

Apple Fitness+
(Photo: Courtesy Apple)

Testers loved the inclusivity of the roughly 4,000 different workouts you can choose from on this app: not only do workout lengths vary, but each session includes three instructors catering to different ability levels. Of course, you need at least one Apple device to enjoy them鈥攚e suggest the new Apple Watch.

Read the Full Review.

Sony a7RV Camera ($3,900)

Sony a7RV
(Photo: Courtesy Sony)

The Sony a7RV gets you 鈥渟ome of the best digital imaging on the market,鈥 says Schiller. The autofocus is amazing at capturing action sports (10 shots per second in compressed raw mode) and you can capture 8K, image-stabilized footage, too. If you want your gift recipient to potentially shoot some wall-hangers for you in the future, this Sony will do the trick: the 61 megapixel, full-frame sensor will provide plenty of detail for printing.

Read the Full Review.

Sponsor Content
Siren 3 Pro ($797)

Siren 3 Pro

Make every boating experience better and more secure with the Siren 3 Pro. Siren Marine’s smart boat monitoring system allows boaters to remotely track their boats鈥 location, engine, temperature, bilge pump activity, battery levels, water levels, shore power status, and more. Your boat is at your fingertips. With the touch of a button, you can control the lights, A/C, and access digital switching. When coupled with the easy-to-use Siren Marine Mobile App, the Siren 3 Pro connects you to your boat anywhere, anytime.

Marshall Emberton II Outdoor Speaker ($170)

Marshall Emberton II
(Photo: Courtesy Marshall)

If you鈥檙e buying a gift for an audiophile that takes a speaker wherever they go, get them the Marshall Emberton II. Not only is the sound 鈥減otent and and clear from every direction,鈥 according to our lead audio tester Will Palmer, but it鈥檚 tough too, thanks to a steel, silicone, and recycled plastic build.

Read the Full Review.

Garmin Enduro 2 Fitness Watch ($1,100)

Gamin Enduro
(Photo: Courtesy Garmin)

Yes, this was the most expensive fitness watch we tested this year, but it鈥檚 also the most capable. It would be especially valuable for serious endurance athletes who need features like 150 hours of battery life (GPS mode, with solar charging), topographic maps, and an easy-to-read screen.

Read the Full Review.

Suunto 9 Peak Pro Titanium Fitness Watch ($699)

Suunto 9 Peak Pro Titanium
(Photo: Courtesy Suunto)

This watch from Suunto has the best GPS acquisitions of all the devices we tested this season and is tough as nails. Our testers also loved the on-screen navigation features and the 40-hour battery life in GPS mode鈥攐h, and it charges lightning fast, too.

Read the Full Review.

Sony WH-1000XM5 Headphones ($400)

Sony WH-1000XM5
(Photo: Courtesy Sony)

Who doesn鈥檛 want to put on headphones and forget the world exists from time to time? These have some of the best sound quality thanks to its futuristic tech, like a new carbon-fiber driver and eight microphones that detect your surroundings and adjust the noise canceling levels with AI. As our lead tester said: 鈥渢he outside world can wait.鈥

Read the Full Review.

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Everything You Need to Know About the New iPhone 15 Camera /outdoor-gear/tools/review-iphone-15-camera/ Tue, 19 Sep 2023 13:00:29 +0000 /?p=2646486 Everything You Need to Know About the New iPhone 15 Camera

The upgrades to the Apple iPhone 15 series cameras are kind of a big deal

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Everything You Need to Know About the New iPhone 15 Camera

Apple, at its core, is a hardware company. But damn if it doesn鈥檛 also have the best marketing department in the world.听

Case in point: in the for this year鈥檚 Keynote that Apple used to announce its new iPhone and Apple Watches. The video shows a group of people whose lives were saved using Apple products, from the young girl whose watch detected a high heartbeat that led to the discovery and removal of a cancerous tumor, to the middle-aged man who used the iPhone鈥檚 SOS technology to call in rescuers when he got trapped out adventuring.

I鈥檓 not ashamed to say that I sat there and cried watching all these people celebrate birthdays they would have otherwise never celebrated if not for their Apple products.听

But there was another marketing feature that Apple showed off during their launch. The feature literally hung in the background and might be more relevant to your day-to-day life.

听A series of large photo prints taken with iPhones adorned the walls of Steve Jobs Theater and other buildings on the Apple campus. These prints, many of which stretched to somewhere around six feet, were gorgeous and showed the rich colors, sharp details, and astoundingly good low-light information that a modern听 iPhone camera is capable of capturing.

A photo of the mountains and green fields
This photo taken with an iPhone 15 was on display in Steve Jobs Theater at Apple Park during this year’s Keynote presentation. (Photo: Courtesy Apple)

Most people I saw at the launch walked right by these photos without giving them a second thought. I, however, stopped to look at each one and was impressed with the display because this was the first time since I鈥檝e been covering the iPhone launch that Apple used real, on the wall, photographic prints as a marketing tool for the iPhone.听

The message I got, and the one that Apple was trying to deliver, is that with the iPhone 14 Pro, and truly with the launch of the and , we鈥檝e arrived at a point where the photos coming out of these phones are so good enough to print them and hang them on our walls. We鈥檝e spent years posting our iPhone shots to social media, but thanks to a series of both software and hardware upgrades, the new iPhones finally have enough resolution to allow us to print large, beautiful photos that will sit in our homes and offices and bring us much more joy and pleasure than some fleeting digital image flies by on our favorite platform.听听听听

How the iPhone 15 Lets You Make Big Photo Prints

What it really comes down to is the sensor size. Last year the iPhone 14 Pro got a larger, 48-megapixel (mp) sensor for the main 24 millimeter camera that drank in tons of information, and if you shot in Apple ProRAW (meaning uncompressed 48 megapixel files) you got giant, information-rich images that had enough detail to create high-definition prints. This year, a similar although updated 48 megapixel sensor is included in both the 15 and 15 Pro behind their main cameras (the main camera on the 15 is a 26 millimeter focal length, and the 15 Pro is a 24 millimeter focal length). That means anyone who buys a new 15, Pro or regular, now has a print-making machine in their pocket.听

Also new this year is the USB-C connector at the bottom of the 15s that will charge your phone, but also acts as a data port. Connect a USB cord that supports USB 3 speeds and you鈥檒l be able to move up to ten gigabits of data per-second off your phone and onto a hard drive. This will allow videographers to record directly to an external hard drive, and for the photographers it will allow you to move hundreds of giant, 75- to 100 megabyte ProRAW files from your phone to an external hard drive for storage. Someone working in a studio will also be able to shoot on an iPhone and tether it via the USB 3 cable to an external monitor so that the images can instantly be viewed on a large monitor for review.

I鈥檝e only had a limited time to test both the new ProRAW images and data transfer, but I鈥檓 very impressed. I love having a camera in my pocket that takes such rich photos that I can print them for posterity, and being able to easily clear my phone of giant ProRAW files so that I always have space is a damn nice feature. In terms of workflow, the data transfer capability is also nice because I can now quickly drag all my ProRAW files onto a hard drive and then use that hard drive for Adobe Lightroom on my MacBook Pro, which is the system I and many people use to select, tone, and print images. Gone are the days of having to select my favorite photos in the Photos app and then Airdrop just a select few ProRAW images to my MacBook Pro, or use Lightroom on my phone, which eats battery like nothing else.听

Will the 15 Replace My DSLR or Mirrorless Camera?

A high-resolution image of an iguana taken on an iPhone 15
A high-resolution photo of an iguana taken by an iPhone 15. (Photo: Courtesy Apple)

I come back to this question every time I review an iPhone, and the answer is still a firm no. For those of us who love to adventure, we now have an even more powerful camera that weighs almost nothing and slides into our pocket so it鈥檚 incredibly convenient to use on the trail, on a rock wall, in the water, on a bike, or wherever you鈥檙e out exploring.

But even with a large 48 megapixel sensor now standard, it鈥檚 still much smaller than what comes in any full-frame DSLR or mirrorless camera. And sensor size is ultimately what matters. Even though the Sony a7IV only shoots 33 megapixel images, those images will always beat 48 megapixel images from an iPhone, particularly in low light, because the full-frame sensor inside the Sony takes in more light, and more light equals better quality all around.听

It鈥檚 a smaller niggle, but when you try shooting a ProRAW 48 megapixel image on an iPhone it鈥檚 so big that the phone takes a second to process the image, so you can鈥檛 shoot in succession like you can on a Sony, Canon, Nikon, or Fuji camera, all of which allow you to shoot multiple ProRAW images per second.

Apple has done an amazing job of building different lenses into the back of the iPhone and the iPhone 15 Pro Max even gets a huge 120 millimeter (5x) zoom lens this year. But even so, all the major camera brands still win because they can offer interchangeable lenses that will always offer more range. I can guarantee you that photographers on the field during the NFL season will not be using iPhones because the iPhone lenses are too short. I can also guarantee you that Jimmy Chin will not be using an iPhone as his principal camera the next time he heads out to document climbers on a wall because he鈥檒l need the range of whatever pro system he鈥檚 using. That said, I鈥檓 also sure that Jimmy will be plenty impressed with the detail captured by the 48 megapixel sensor.

What About Average Photographers?

Apple knew most people who buy the iPhone 15s won鈥檛 use ProRAW images or quick file transfer as much as a photo geek like me , so they found a way for you to benefit from the giant new sensor as well. They did that by making the camera on both the 15 and 15 Pro default to a more reasonable 24 megapixel size so that you can shoot in succession without a delay, but still use all the light that the big sensor drinks in.

To get the 24 megapixel image, the camera shoots one 12 megapixel image that鈥檚 designed to gather a broad range of light (shadow details, etc,) and then a 48 megapixel image that captures tons of detail. The iPhone software then combines those images together for a 24 megapixel image that captures the best of both worlds. What鈥檚 cool is that the phone also realizes that there might be slight movements between when the two images are taken so it uses software to adjust for these movements and ensure there鈥檚 no mismatch.听

To make things more complicated, or varied, depending on how you look at it, the 15 and 15 Pro will also shoot a 48 megapixel image in something called HEIF MAX, which is a slightly compressed and toned format. The phone does this so that you still get the detail of the 48 megapixel image but don鈥檛 have the giant files (or the same amount of total information) that you get when you shoot a 48 megapixel ProRAW image.听

I鈥檝e shot several of the 24 megapixel default images since I got my hands on the 15 and 15 Pro a couple days ago and they鈥檙e very nice images. They lack some of the razor-sharp details you get with a 48 megapixel ProRAW image, but are still impressive, with individual eyelashes and dog hairs coming through, great color, and nice low-light information.

Other Updates

Some other updates that are not as impressive but that you should be aware of are the new focal lengths available on the 15 Pro and Pro Max, and the ability to turn a regular photo into a portrait after the fact.

On focal lengths, both 15 Pros now come with two new wide-angle focal lengths鈥28 millimeter and 35 millimeter鈥攖hat you can choose via a button in the camera app. It鈥檚 cool to have these pre-set focal lengths because many photographers find the standard 24 millimeter main camera focal length too wide. But it should be noted that neither the 28 or 35 millimeter focal length is created by its own camera. Instead, Apple uses the 24 millimeter main camera, shoots a 48 megapixel image, and then crops in and transfers detail from the 48 megapixel image to create the two new lengths. As a result both of those new focal lengths still produce nicely defined, and medium-res 24 megapixel images.听

For portraits, you can now shoot a regular photo of a person, dog, or cat on any of the 15s and turn that photo into a portrait, with a blurred background, after the fact. If you have multiple people in the shot鈥 one person in the foreground and one in the background鈥攜ou can also tell the photo which person to focus on and which one to blur out and switch back and forth as many times as you want.

Should You Upgrade to the iPhone 15?

If you have the 14 Pro already, don鈥檛 upgrade, the cameras are very similar. If you have an older iPhone and care about the quality of your photos and think you might want to print medium or large prints of the photos that come off your iPhone, then yes, you should upgrade. And this year you don鈥檛 have to spend the extra money on the Pro version of the iPhone to get the bigger sensor.

We know that an iPhone will never replace a pro-level, full-frame camera, but it鈥檚 extremely nice to have a high-resolution camera in your pocket at all times that you can pull out to capture the everyday moments that define our lives. And it鈥檚 also nice to have a high-resolution camera in our pockets that is so light we forget it鈥檚 there so that we can hike, ski, climb, ride and then stop to capture the moment without having to fumble with a backpack or some hard-to-carry mirrorless body and lens setup.

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The Case for Prime Camera Lenses Over Zoom Lenses /outdoor-gear/tools/prime-camera-lenses-vs-zooms/ Tue, 22 Aug 2023 15:43:01 +0000 /?p=2643377 The Case for Prime Camera Lenses Over Zoom Lenses

Fixed-length lenses offer higher-quality glass and wider apertures, but they鈥檒l also train you to become a more talented photographer

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The Case for Prime Camera Lenses Over Zoom Lenses

When I was traveling the country back in the mid-2000s doing photojournalism internships at various newspapers, I constantly heard the staff photographers say they were going to 鈥渕ake鈥 a photo. That word stood out to me because up until that time I, and most people I knew, had always said 鈥渢ake鈥 a photo.

When I asked these photographers why they swapped words, they told me that they preferred 鈥渕ake鈥 because their entire job was to enter a situation and construct a photo. To do so, they considered factors like light, moment, composition, and distance in order to create a photo that captured what was most important or visually appealing.

All this work was much better described by the word 鈥渕ake.鈥 To them, the word 鈥渢ake鈥 implied that they just waltzed into a situation and grabbed a photo out of thin air instead of putting in the hard work needed to build the photo that would appear in the next day鈥檚 paper.

I, of course, immediately adopted that lexicon and have used it ever since. It鈥檚 a constant reminder that good photographs are created through a process, just like good writing. Every time I get a photo assignment, I remind myself that the photo isn鈥檛 going to just appear. I have to work hard in order to make something worth capturing.

I鈥檓 giving you this background because one of the tools that has helped me and many photographers 鈥渕ake鈥 the best photographs possible is the prime lens. 鈥淧rime鈥 means that the lens is a fixed focal length鈥35mm, for example鈥攁nd does not change focal lengths like a zoom lens such as a听 24鈥70mm.

These fixed-length lenses are important tools in the photo process because without the advantage of a zoom, the photographer is forced to move in order to make the photo. Instead of standing in one place and using a zoom to get closer or farther away from a photo subject, a photographer using a fixed-length prime lens has to back up or walk closer. In the process of moving around, photographers often learn more about what they鈥檙e capturing. They find new angles, get a better sense for the action, and become more in-tune with whatever is going on in front of them.

The famous photojournalist Robert Capa once said, “If your pictures aren’t good enough, you aren’t close enough.鈥 He wasn鈥檛 saying that the best photos are captured just inches away, but that to create great photos, photographers should not be afraid to be intimate with whatever they’re photographing. They need to be in the action and next to the subject to really capture what鈥檚 going on. A zoom lens allows a photographer to stay at a distance, while a prime lens forces a photographer to be in the middle.

Because prime lenses have fewer mechanical parts, they鈥檙e often less expensive and offer better quality glass for the price鈥攃reating noticeably sharper, more defined images. You can pick up a or prime lens from most major brands (Canon, Nikon, Sony, and others) with mid- to high-quality glass for just a couple hundred dollars, and that lens will be capable of covering a wide swath of photographic situations. The same inexpensive prime lens will have a wider aperture than all but the most expensive zoom lens. This lets in a lot of light, enabling faster shutter speeds, shallower depth of field, and the ability to make sharp photos in low-light situations.

For those zoom-lovers who have hated my argument to this point, I agree that zoom lenses still, and will always, have their place. It would be nearly impossible to cover an NFL or soccer game without a long telephoto zoom lens that allows photojournalists to zoom in on and track players at a distance. Nature photographers also rely on zoom lenses to create intimate photos of animals that are constantly on the move or are too dangerous to approach.

Many photographers love a quality wide-angle zoom lens because it covers so many situations. At 24mm you can shoot a wide-open landscape and then use the 70mm part of the lens to shoot a portrait. In high-action situations, like a protest, for example, it鈥檚 nice to have a zoom so you can quickly shoot a variety of situations without having to swap lenses.

These days, the glass quality on zoom lenses is also phenomenal. It used to be that if you wanted razor-sharp images where every pixel was crisp, you had to use prime lenses. But many modern zoom lenses I鈥檝e tested from top companies create images that are equally sharp. The only drawback is that these sharp zoom lenses are wildly expensive.

So what should you buy? Pro photographers realize that if they want to have a complete lens kit, it鈥檚 going to include both prime and zoom lenses. Many photographers I know rely mostly on prime lenses, but they also carry zoom lenses just in case they鈥檙e shooting sports or other events where a zoom comes in handy.

For photographers just starting out, I, and most of the photographers I know, would suggest starting with prime lenses. With primes you鈥檒l save money, increase the lenses鈥 photographic capabilities, and be forced to move around, which will help teach you how to make better photos. As your photo skills grow you鈥檒l start to see what zoom lenses are needed to complete your kit, and you can invest accordingly.

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