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This Camera System Lets You Unleash Your Creativity with Super-Telephoto Zoom and Capturing Power

Imagine zooming into distant wildlife or capturing expansive landscapes with crisp clarity directly from your smartphone. The Excope DT1 is designed to make this a reality, providing photography enthusiasts at all skill levels the power to take super-telephoto imagery effortlessly. Weighing just 1.32 pounds, the Excope DT1 is engineered for ease of use and portability. It features one-touch shooting and recording, with power and shutter buttons conveniently located on the right side of the grip for quick access.

Designer: BEAVERLAB Tech

Click Here to Buy Now: $219 $379 ($160 off). Hurry, only 4/158 left! Raised over $790,000.

The camera is powered by a large, non-removable 3,000mAh battery that supports fast charging via a Type-C connection and typically lasts for 2.5 hours on a full charge. For longer shoots, a power bank can be connected, providing extended use without interruption. The camera’s design includes a phone holder and grip that can be tilted up and down to adjust the camera angle and height for optimal shooting comfort and perspective. Additionally, the rotating focus ring on the lens allows for precise manual focusing, enhancing control over image sharpness and depth.

With a focal length of 400mm, Excope DT1 magnifies the distant subject 200 times and brings it to your phone screen.

With a 48-megapixel sensor, this camera ensures that every distant object is rendered in tack-sharp detail, whether it’s the fluttering wings of a bird or the intricate contours of far-off mountains. The Excope DT1 is well-equipped with two interchangeable lenses—40mm and 400mm—delivering sharp, high-quality images at fixed focal lengths. The 400mm lens, for example, brings your subject 200 times closer, making it feel like you’re standing right next to distant objects. This lens features a 12-layer coating, enhancing image quality by reducing reflections and increasing light transmission. Weighing 600g, the Lens 400 is surprisingly lightweight for its capabilities. The sensor size of 1/1.8″ and a pixel size of 2.0μm on the CMOS enhance its sensitivity, allowing it to perform exceptionally in various lighting conditions.

Powered by the large 1/1.8″, 2.0um CMOS sensor and image algorithm, Excope DT1 enables up to 48-megapixel resolution.

With plans to introduce a versatile zoom lens, the Excope DT1 is gearing up to meet a wide range of photographic needs. Stability during shoots is crucial, especially at long distances, and the Excope DT1 meets this challenge head-on with its advanced EIS gyroscope and AI algorithm anti-shake technology, ensuring that your captures are consistently clear and stable, no matter the conditions.

The Excope DT1 app is designed to significantly enhance your photography experience, allowing you to make real-time adjustments to settings, engage in high-speed burst shooting, and manage high-definition 4K videos and photos directly from your connected device. This seamless integration boosts the camera’s effectiveness, especially in varying lighting conditions. The camera is also equipped with a powerful 1.5Tops Novatek processor for advanced AI processing, HDR shooting capabilities, and wifi control, making it versatile and highly adaptive to complex photographic tasks.

Reduce noise level through algorithms to output a more clear image.

The Excope DT1 also offers six dedicated shooting modes tailored for various photography scenarios: Moon, Landscape, Portrait, Night Mode, Sports, and Cloudy. Each mode optimizes camera settings to ensure the best possible results under specific conditions. Whether you’re capturing the granular surface of the moon, vibrant landscapes, detailed portraits, dynamic sports actions, or scenes under cloudy skies, these modes make it easy to achieve stunning, professional-quality photos without needing to manually adjust settings.

Discover different kind of beauty in the night, see the unseen.

Additionally, the app’s Burst Shooting mode is perfect for capturing action sequences. It allows you to take up to 25 frames per second, ensuring you don’t miss the critical moment, whether it’s a bird in flight or a dramatic sports play. Beyond shooting, the Excope DT1 app simplifies photo and video management. You can conveniently browse, save, or delete files from online storage, streamlining how you handle your digital content. This integration focus is to save you time while also enhancing the overall user experience, making it easier to share and enjoy your creative work.

With 64GB of storage, the Excope DT1 accommodates an adequate amount of high-resolution photos and videos. It supports common image file formats such as JPG and RAW, providing flexibility in how you manage and process your images. Furthermore, the camera’s mounting mechanism is compatible with all straight-screen smartphones and standard tripods, ensuring it integrates seamlessly into your photography setup.

Click Here to Buy Now: $219 $379 ($160 off). Hurry, only 4/158 left! Raised over $790,000.

The post This Camera System Lets You Unleash Your Creativity with Super-Telephoto Zoom and Capturing Power first appeared on Yanko Design.

Nothing pokes fun at Apple for discontinuing the iPhone Mini with the Phone (2a) Micro

There are some people who still buy the iPhone 13 Mini in bulk because it’s the last small smartphone Apple ever made. In the pursuit of ‘bigger and better’, smartphone companies have abandoned the very concept of ergonomics, and phones nowadays are so large and heavy, people quite literally have indented pinky fingers as a result. The iPhone 13 Mini and perhaps the Asus Zenfone 9 were perhaps the last ‘small’ phones before the concept was retired – so Nothing decided to do something about it. Or rather, poke fun at it at least.

Meet the Phone (2a) Micro – an alternative to the Plus and Max phones of today’s world. Announced as a rather fitting April Fool’s Prank, the Phone (2a) Micro is functionally miniscule, measuring probably no larger than a Zippo lighter. However, it still manages to hold up rather well considering its size. The prototype (although we’re 99% certain it’s CGI) features a rather usable (yet tiny) screen that still somehow manages to be usable. The video above is a tiny (no pun intended) demonstration of the phone in action… and it also takes aim at major smartphone companies for abandoning the relatively large (again, no pun intended) audience of people with small hands!

Designer: Nothing

Roughly 3 inches tall, the Phone (2a) Micro comes with the same design as its predecessor, albeit scaled down. It ditches the dual camera on the back for a single one (there’s really no real estate for 2 lenses), but still retains every aspect of the phone’s design including even its Glyph Interface (which apparently works, in the video demo). Flip the phone over and you’ve got a virtually bezel-less screen (clearly even the tiniest of bezels weigh heavily on a phone that size), but the lack of bezels is made up by a whopper of a front-facing camera, which eats into a significant portion of the display. I guess good selfies are an important part of owning a phone, right?

I’ll be honest, April Fool’s Day jokes have all but died down ever since the pandemic, when corporates decided it just wasn’t worth the effort. Sure, sometimes a company like Volkswagen DOES crack a joke about rebranding to Voltswagen, sending economies and stock markets into a flurry, but overall, larger companies have sort of lost their sense of humor (Google used to crack elaborate jokes every year before Sundar Pichai took the reigns). However, it’s good to see newer companies taking things in their stride and trying to engage with their fans and communities using humor. Whether it’s Nothing’s tiny phone, or Razer’s chair with robotic arms, a good corporate joke just makes large brands feel more human, allowing people to resonate and connect with them on a deeper level… but as far as the Phone (2a) Micro goes, does it have a 3.5mm audio jack, though??

The post Nothing pokes fun at Apple for discontinuing the iPhone Mini with the Phone (2a) Micro first appeared on Yanko Design.

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