This cinema dolly makes short work of uneven terrain to make your filmmaking dreams come true

The rise of smartphones has made almost anyone an aspiring filmmaker, trying to capture precious moments in an almost dramatic fashion. Some of these budding creatives graduate from phones to more sophisticated cameras, but the amount of extra equipment they need can be a bit overwhelming. What if you could replace a gimbal, a drone, and a dolly track with just a single piece of equipment. That’s the proposition that the Snoppa Rover is making, allowing cinematographers to roll the camera, even on the roughest of roads.

Designer: Snoppa Technology

Click Here to Buy Now: $2398 $3599 (33% off). Hurry, only 2/165 left! Raised over $425,000.

The Rover is a cinema dolly that boasts an advanced electronic stabilizer, a simple yet vague phrase that belies the true power this unassuming filmmaking tool really offers. What gives the Rover its ability to shoot stably on uneven ground is the fact that each of its three wheels can work independently of each other while also working in harmony together. Each wheel has its own damping system, sensors, and steering system that allows it to perform tricks that few dollies can do with ease. For example, each wheel can turn 360-degrees on its own, making it possible to do zero-radius turns in place without breaking a sweat.

Three wheels each with independent power control and steering system via three electric stabilizer arms.

That stabilization gives the Snoppa Rover almost unmatched flexibility, allowing cameras to roll on anything from concrete to rocky roads to uphill paths. In fact, flexibility might actually be the cinema dolly’s biggest superpower, allowing you to replace some equipment or remove the need to hire an extra person on your team. Need an extremely low-angle shot? Simply hang the camera upside down at the bottom of the Rover’s pole. If you do already have those other pieces of equipment around, you can also use them in tandem with the dolly, like using a tripod head or gimbal to control the tilt of the camera.

Active Damping System – Has built-in gyroscopes and acceleration sensors in each of its three stabilizer arms.

Steering System – The angle sensor (Hall sensor) at the joint between the stabilizer arm and the wheels of the Rover, the electric steering mechanism can be rotated 360.

Power System – The built-in gyroscope detects wheel speed in real-time, and the intelligent algorithm can distribute the power of each wheel individually.

You can control the Rover whichever way you prefer, whether from a phone or tablet, a dedicated transmitter control, or even manually. You can also pre-program the path that the dolly will take or have it lock on to a subject and follow that around. Hyperlapse is a piece of cake for the Rover, especially since it can “walk” at a steady pace and path, no matter the terrain. Even the best-planned paths fail, however, and you might have to change some points along the way. Fortunately, this dolly is smart enough to memorize the path it did take and replay that exact same route when you need to re-shoot later.

Arc Mode – Rover keeps the lens and the subject always equidistant, rotating one/half turn at the same rotation speed.

Lock Mode – Whether you are manually or remotely manipulating the Rover’s movement, the lens orientation will always remain the same.

Follow Mode – The lens will smoothly follow the movement of Rover. For use when a moving subject or a different subject needs to be shot, etc.

Target Mode – No matter how Rover moves, the subject is always in the center of the frame. This mode is only suitable for use when shooting fixed / still objects.

Smart Object Tracking – If you want to do a self-tracking shot, you can leave it to Rover to perform the tracking while saving manpower.

The Snoppa Rover is built for flexibility to cater to the varied needs of filmmakers, including the need for long hours of work. The dolly’s dual battery system allows it to continue working even when one battery dies out. Simply swap in an extra pack and watch the hours go by. And when it comes time to leave or change locations, simply fold the Rover up and roll out without missing a beat.

Click Here to Buy Now: $2398 $3599 (33% off). Hurry, only 2/165 left! Raised over $425,000.

The post This cinema dolly makes short work of uneven terrain to make your filmmaking dreams come true first appeared on Yanko Design.

The CliqueFie Sway offers battery-less single-axis stabilization in an incredibly slick, pocket-friendly design

Working on just one axis to cut out your hand’s jitter, the CliqueFie Sway gives you shake-free footage that doesn’t need to be optically stabilized in post-production. The slim little gimbal runs without a battery and is perfect for small-time creators or even enthusiasts who like taking videos in and around the city. While the gimbal isn’t equipped to work on rough trails while in your car, or while trekking, it’s perfect for a casual walk around the city.

A finalist at the iF Design Award, the Sway’s sleek design is perhaps its biggest highlight. The product relies on a foldable design, with plain cylindrical surfaces that have a minimalist style that makes the product look simple to use and lightweight enough to carry. The gimbal itself is smartly designed to work without a battery and a motor by utilizing the strength of gravity to help cancel out any hand-jitter, resulting in smoother videos.

With its tension dial and slide lock, either professional or amateur videographers can easily control and adjust the swing rate while filming and can lock the angle when needed. This simplifies operation and shooting, yet maximizes the phone camera’s built-in capabilities to capture footage from any viewing angle.

Designer: CRE8 for CliqueFie

This UberEats delivery scooter comes with an incredibly clever 3-axis gimbal to keep your food intact in transit

The Uber Balance may seem like a clever fusion of a scooter and the stabilizer rig often used with video cameras, but honestly, it’s an extremely natural pairing if you ask me. Gimbals/stabilizers have been used on boats and yachts to prevent them from tipping over on rough waters, and even if you look strictly at the domain of dining and hospitality, bartenders have perfected the ability to perform tricks while flipping bottles, trays, glasses without getting your drink to tip over. The initial spark for the idea’s always been around, but Korea-based designers, Min JU Kim and Hyeonji Roh decided to put the concept together, creating Uber Balance, a fleet of delivery scooters for Uber Eats, equipped with 3-axis stabilizers that ensure your food reaches you in one piece.

There’s a simplicity in the Uber Balance’s design that’s worth admiring. The all-black scooter is retrofitted with a slim, lightweight gimbal that helps to stabilize the food box in the middle. The stabilizer sits where a pillion-rider would, making the scooter a single-seater that’s big enough for the driver, and has ample space at the back to store food parcels in a heat-proof box, keeping them warm through the journey of the trip.

The stabilizer on the back of the scooter neutralizes any bumps in the road or sudden swerves the rider may make to deliver your food to you on time. It swivels on different axes, keeping the food upright while the rider makes their way from the restaurant to your home… and from someone who’s seen his fair share of completely botched cakes/cupcakes, absolutely upturned pizzas, and Indian gravy dishes with spills and leaks, the Uber Balance may sound like a lot of effort, but it serves a pretty elementary purpose – to bring food to you the way the restaurant intended.

At the center of this stabilizer unit is the redesigned food box, which comes with a pivot-and-slide door that doesn’t need to open 180°. Given that the stabilizer’s rings would come in the way of a traditional hinged lid, this current mechanism is perfect for allowing delivery agents to quickly store and retrieve their food parcels, no matter how big they are. The lid obviously locks too, to prevent accidental opening and theft.

While Uber Balance is currently just a conceptual vehicle, what it proposes is pretty unique and game-changing. Food delivery has absolutely taken off in the pandemic, and by redesigning the way the food is delivered, Uber Balance aims at providing customers with a better user experience by giving them food that’s been transported with care… the focus being on the last two words.

Designers: Min JU Kim & Hyeonji Roh

This Rose-Gold and White Gimbal-operated camera stabilizes your videos with style!

We’ve come to really expect rather wonderful concepts from the mind of Yash Gupte, and the Manouvre is surely one of them. Designed as a 3-axis stabilized action-camera made appropriately for influencers and vloggers, the Manouvre sits at the intersection of tech and style. Its body sports a pretty large f3.2 portrait camera lens mounted on a sleek 3-axis arm, ensconced in rose-gold and white.

The Manouvre looks less like a camera and more like a fashion accessory, as it should. Designed for people who want to capture the wondrous world around them, the gimbal-camera looks like a part of the set, rather than a behind-the-scenes gizmo. The gimbal can be operated via a button near the grip, and you can toggle recording on/off using a red button on the camera’s body. The Manouvre even comes with its own circular display on the back, allowing you to cycle through features, get updates on your recording format, and even preview recordings by using the screen as a viewfinder. The lens features a knurled grip, which makes me wonder whether the gimbal camera has manual focus control (sounds like a very interesting feature), but alas, the Manouvre exists only as a concept, so there’s no real way of finding out. I’ve got to say though, the form language and that deadly color-combo is DEFINITELY working in this handheld gimbal-camera’s favor, don’t you think?

Designer: Yash Gupte (Wacko Designs)

Ditch the selfie stick. It’s Gimbal time.

Pair a powerful camera with a powerful stabilizer and your opportunities are endless. The X-Cam Sight 2S is an insanely reasonable $49 stabilizer that packs a good punch in the specs as well as feature areas. Tiny enough to fit into your pocket, the Sight 2S clamps onto any smartphone you have, working in both landscape as well as portrait. Built with a smart 2-axis gimbal, the Sight 2S has four operational modes and a free iOS and Android app that allow you to access the gimbal’s much more advanced features. Aside from your regular vibration reduction (which the Sight 2S does remarkably well), the Sight 2S comes with Object Tracking capabilities, Timelapse Shooting abilities (in both day and night), 360° Panorama Capturing skills as well as the ability to be operated not just as a hand-held gimbal, but also remotely via another smartphone. The app that comes bundled with the stabilizer allows you to edit and modify your video content, rendering out hi-res files that you can share on your social media, or even use for work!

Designer: X-CAM

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