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Great product, but a question about the trailer video...

Since the app seems to seamlessly adjust the picture so it doesn't rotate when you change the actual smartphone's physical orientation, what's the point of rotating the phone mid-shot?

Take the example of the two women sitting for coffee... why does the camera-person bother rotating the phone to horizontal in the middle of the shot? Why not just stay in place?




It feels like an attempt to battle the plague of vertical video and for that I'm thankful. Otherwise it's a great way to end up with a horizontally stable shot while allowing you to hold the phone any way that feels comfortable.

I can't think of any time when that isn't what I want.


I don't understand why otherwise savvy techy people ate so Luddite about vertical video. Adding an extra 200% of worthless landscape to a video of a person is an ancient plague that smartphones provided a cure for.


Goes back to why we switched to widescreen displays.

Area of vision man. It is not wasted space to see a horizontal plane, as that is what we expect to see when looking at anything. Vertical video simulates the effect of straining to see through a partly closed door it is tangibly horrible.


Vertical video simulates the effect of straining to see through a partly closed door it is tangibly horrible.

Horizontal video simulates the effect of straining to see through a partly closed Venetian blinds it is tangibly horrible.

Now, is this any more correct? Or is it an equally arbitrary personal opinion?

The move to "wide" screen was also the move to short screen. I don't find anything natural about it; I expect to be able to move my eyes up and down as well as left and right.

A preference for short and wide screens seems more cultural than natural. Even granting that humans have better peripheral visions along the sides than top and bottom the current screens fall short in capturing this range.

My beef with most vertical videos is that people typically do not make good use of the format; there's nothing intrinsically bad or wrong about it.


There is no personal opinion in the observation that normal human field of vision is wider than it is tall.


No one said it was, so I'm not getting your point.

In another comment you said that 4:3 is a reasonable approximation of normal human visual field. 19:9 screens don't map to this; this restricted height works well for consuming certain current entertainment offerings but I don't see that a preference for it is objective.

If area of vision were guiding screen design we would likely see more of what the current Surface 3 offers.


Well, why are movies horizontally oriented? Why is the screen rectangular at all, and not square? Why were wide-screen movies such a big deal when they came out? Obviously it's because filling the viewer's visual field creates a more intense, immersive effect; engaging more of your peripheral vision makes you feel more like being there.

Vertical-format video has the opposite effect: you might call it anti-immersive. It boxes the subject up in an intrusive frame and makes you feel like you're looking through a hallway or some other obstruction.


The only problem I have with vertical video is that most screens are horizontally oriented, so vertical video always looks bad with tons of wasted screen space when viewed on anything other than the vertical smartphone it was recorded on.


When I'm watching a video on my phone, I'm always glad when it's vertical so I don't have to disable orientation lock and rotate.


I would want to rotate simply to get more resolution.. but then i'd wonder why i wasn't using the highest resolution from the start.. and then bam, i'm back to using the a normal camera app and holding it sidebars haha.

Though, i think i'd prefer this style app if it just picked portrait or landscape, and adjusted between just those two states dynamically. That would be nice if you accidentally shoot in one, and decided you wanted the other. Which happens quite frequently for me.


They wouldn't fit in as nice. You get quite wider shot when holding it horizontally.


There's a mode that zooms in and out when you rotate. There's also another mode that just keeps it level, and there's no point in rotating it in that mode, you're right.




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