Insta360 ONE RS modular action camera lets you choose how you roll

GoPro may have made the action camera a household name, but the brand is no longer the dominant player in the market that it popularized. In addition to audacious clones, there have also been other brands that dipped their hands in the same cookie jar, sometimes with interesting twists and turns. Although it initially started out with 360-degree cameras, Insta360 has started making a name for itself in the action cam market in the past few years. Its latest take builds upon the foundations of a modular action camera that lets you decide how and where you want to start recording those precious memories and daring stunts.

Designer: Insta360

The Insta360 ONE RS definitely doesn’t look like your typical action camera. Most of these recording devices come as narrow boxes, while Insta360’s version is wider and is visually busier. And that’s just the default look because the Insta360 ONE RS can actually take on many forms, depending on how you combine the different lenses and accessories available for it.

If the Insta360 ONE RS almost looks like a Fisher-Price toy you can disassemble and reassemble, you won’t be too far from the mark. The camera’s modular system allows you to combine different parts and attachments together, though there are some that are basic to any combination. The wide red battery is, of course, necessary for powering everything, and you’ll need at least one camera lens and the “core” that contains most of the processing power as well as the touch screen monitor.

Other than those three, it’s almost fair game what you connect. In particular, you can have a few choices when it comes to lenses, including a typical 360-degree camera that has two lenses back to back, a new 4K Boost Lens, and a 1-inch wide-angle lens developed in collaboration with famed camera maker Leica. Additionally, you can actually combine the lens and the core in any position, so you can have the screen facing in the opposite direction like a typical action cam, or you can have it face the same direction as the lens for a vlogging setup.

The true test of Insta360’s modular promise actually comes with this second-gen camera. It is actually possible to mix and match parts from the older ONE R with the ONE RS, so you don’t have to buy the whole ensemble if you simply want to upgrade the lens or the core. It’s definitely a bold move that goes against conventional action camera business models where companies want you to buy new ones just to get new features, even if the older models are still completely serviceable.

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Milo x LEICA children’s camera introduces kids to photography in a fun, intuitive way!

Children are curious. I genuinely believe kids learn more from copying everything we do rather than what we say. And they want to copy us by using the same gadgets we do. For example, my husband picked up his passion for photography from his dad. His dad’s love of tinkering with cameras and picture taking converted this into a lifelong of passion for his son. Understanding this inherent need to pass on our love to our children in a constructive way, Milo x LEICA is a camera that encourages fun, intuitive exploration in children of all ages.

LEICA is known for creating bespoke cameras that are almost collectible. While this clashes with the idea of handing them over to a kid, the quality of the output they deliver are sure to encourage the kids into taking up this hobby with increased frequency. The form of the camera is designed to encourage exploration – with soft rounded edges and a viewfinder that resembles a donut. The design names the viewfinder the visual inspection tool – letting the kid peek through it to discover the world they want to click a picture of. The aesthetics use a soothing yet vibrant white-yellow combination, sparking joy in all they do. Functionality-wise, the camera has a viewfinder, a button to click, a battery level indicator, and a lot that shoots the printed paper out once we click the photo.

Instant cameras are the gatekeepers of our memories. In a world going quickly digital, each printed picture is a gateway into a memory that we can cherish more often. The Milo x LEICA lets us do just that, making photography a fun activity and allowing your child to click pictures that go on and decorate your fridge every day!

Designer: Yang Lei with Yifeeling Design

Leica just launched its first smartphone that houses the company’s world-class camera technology

Leica Leitz Phone 1 Softbank Yanko Design

The Leica Leitz Phone 1’s camera comes with a massive 1-inch sensor. In fact, it’s so comparable to a DSLR, the phone comes with its own camera lens-cap.

Earlier today, Leica announced its first-ever smartphone, the Leitz Phone 1, centered around its revolutionary camera tech. Announced at a virtual press event in Tokyo, the phone sports a familiar clean design that we’ve come to expect with Leica. It houses a Snapdragon 888 processor on the inside, and sports a 20MP primary camera with a massive 1-inch sensor (the largest for any smartphone). To complement the powerful camera, Leica even ships a magnetic lens-cap that lets you conceal it, for protective + privacy reasons.

Leica Leitz Phone 1 Softbank Yanko Design

On the front, the phone sports a large 6.6-inch OLED display with a scalable 240Hz refresh rate (a camera is only as good as its viewfinder, no?) The display even houses a hole-punch selfie-camera, logging in at 12.6MP. Other specs include the Snapdragon 888 processor with 12GB RAM and 256GB of storage, along with an impressive 5,000mAh battery so you could shoot all day long and not worry about depleting your phone’s energy.

Leica Leitz Phone 1 Softbank Yanko Design

While the smartphone market is pretty saturated at this point (with some companies like Samsung releasing more than 20 different smartphones in a given year), the Leitz Phone 1 at least looks really refreshing. That matte black back is a beautiful contrast to the glitzy and glossy smartphones of today, and there’s definitely a lot of praise for that grippy textured-metal frame, that isn’t just great to look at, it’s wonderfully tactile too. Lastly, that Leica logo on the top-right corner is just perfectly executed, tying in with how the German company brands its cameras. The Leitz Phone 1 is currently just limited to Japan, and will be exclusively sold by Softbank. It isn’t cheap, with a price tag of 187,920 Japanese Yen (or $1703 USD)… but then again, the Leica brand-name doesn’t come cheap either.

Designer: Leica

Leica Leitz Phone 1 Softbank Yanko Design

Leica Leitz Phone 1 Softbank Yanko Design

Celebrating the Leica Oskar Barnack Award, Leica releases a Kevlar-enforced edition of their M10-P camera!

Photojournalists are spectators by passion and participants as consequence. Stealth is the name of the game for most, but sometimes getting the photograph comes at the price of being found out – the fourth wall’s just gotta give at some point. While remaining anonymous is important when it comes to photojournalism, it’s all about the camera, everything from its lens and shutter speed to its ergonomics and durability makes a difference. I need two hands to count the number of times I’ve accidentally dropped or knocked over my film cameras and consequently paid the price on eBay auctions.

Leica Cameras, a German manufacturing company known for superior build and sharp lens when it comes to building cameras, recently released a special edition of their M10-P “Reporter” camera in celebration of the Leica Oskar Barnack Award. Coated in Kevlar armor, a light, polyacrylamide plastic fabric, that has a tensile strength so high, its fibers cannot be stretched. Kevlar armor is traditionally used in making bulletproof vests as the fabric has an incredibly strong molecular structure. Why the need for a bulletproof camera? Well, Leica might not be suggesting that you should use their camera as a bulletproof shield during wartime, but you can feel rest assured that you’ll be handling a relatively unbreakable piece of machinery – it’d probably still take some practice, however, before my heart can stay in my chest after dropping it. The M-10 P “Reporter” wears camouflage with a moss green border and nonslip, diamond-etched Kevlar center, whose black stain will eventually oxidize into the color of the rangefinder’s matte sage metallic case following continued use and exposure to natural UV rays from sunlight.

Just like the photojournalist, the M-10 rangefinder is naturally discreet, with a virtually silent shutter that Leica boasts as the quietest of any M camera in production past and present. From behind the camera, photographers can find a digital display screen that reveals the scene ahead as registered by the lens, menu buttons that can adjust light value settings as well as zoom features, along with the rangefinder’s film advance wheel. The special edition of M-10 P features well-known features from the same models that preceded it such as the 24MP sensor for high-quality photographs, a 2GB internal buffer for improved performance time, an integrated digital level gauge for steady shooting, and Leica’s hand-assembled promise in offering lenses constructed with the highest-grade glass available.

Designer: Leica

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Insta360’s modular action cam gets 360-degree and ‘Leica’ mods

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