Hi there, we will ask the corresponding team to send you the beta firmware as soon as possible, sorry for the inconvenience, thank you for your patience.
DJI Susan Posted at 12-20 04:37
Hi there, we have asked the team to send the firmware to you, please wait and check for the update later, thank you for your patience.
TinkerTweak FPV Posted at 12-20 04:51
Still haven't received my update.. was one of the first to sign up for beta testing. please send, have important work to do with camera. Thanks
Hi there, please check again, the firmware has just been forwarded to you.
Sadly it's just a gyro, no sharpness control added and still no colour in darker areas which is visible in Jr_zzzzz video IMO. I will test this issue tomorrow and will make some comparison with GoPro:
Uncle Longbeard Posted at 12-20 09:38
Sadly it's just a gyro, no sharpness control added and still no colour in darker areas which is visible in Jr_zzzzz video IMO. I will test this issue tomorrow and will make some comparison with GoPro: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EDiVPqU-UEo&t=6s
It really is darkish here, sun doesn't rise more than 5° over the horizon at midday. And it was raining. Still, have to try out log - color and so on, just bought the cam on friday, when i saw that gyro data is coming.
Uncle Longbeard Posted at 12-20 09:38
Sadly it's just a gyro, no sharpness control added and still no colour in darker areas which is visible in Jr_zzzzz video IMO. I will test this issue tomorrow and will make some comparison with GoPro:
Yeah and after beta testing a firmware update is yet to come, heard someone saying they've been working on improving exposure and sharpness, nevertheless all the flaws that kept people complaining are related somehow to a lack of manual control:
- the auto audio fail weird thing can't be turned off to manual like a simple normal microphone
- the sharpness can't be reduced, for the sharpness defenders I remind that small optics are affected by diffraction
- factory's color look profile that turn shadows into black&white can't be overwritten by a simple normal color rendition
- Oh well the stabilisation now will work wonders with Gyroflow
Hello everyone!!!
I'm testing the firmware beta.
I give you a file you can use to test some settings on gyrofllow and i put here a proof of my stabilizzation.
You can see something strange from minute 00:55 (when i go into the trees) to 01:25, as if there were some nudges that the stabilization couldn't remove.
Let me know what do you think and if i'm wrong with my setup on Gyroflow (i have also syncronized points of syncronizzation)
Link transfer and screenshot of Gyroflow.
Just started testing. Too damn cold to be outside (-29 C)
Using Dji Beta test V 01.04.04.10 and Gyroflow 1.4.0
Action 2 set to 4k 100 FPS (Was in pro mode but not set properly for my indoor test) This is split screen and was rendered down to 1080p, just to speed up the test process. Looking forward to testing with the fpv quad.
So far looking good. Too soon to report if any other issues.
DJI Action 2 gyro beta test with Gyroflow
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=asoO9gmK0AI
I'm not sure if there isn't some improvement in colour rendition, would need to compare it to the older firmware but nevertheless no matter what I try, the old gopro 7 renders nicer colours and sharper image. Possibly a tad bit oversharpened but for a web use better IMO.
Uncle Longbeard Posted at 12-21 14:27
I'm not sure if there isn't some improvement in colour rendition, would need to compare it to the older firmware but nevertheless no matter what I try, the old gopro 7 renders nicer colours and sharper image. Possibly a tad bit oversharpened but for a web use better IMO. [view_image]
This post should be about beta gyro firmware but for the sake of busting some unfounded myths of color science it's worth reminding some known facts:
- About color, what has been having folks complaining is only a color look or LUT that is designed to desaturate both extremes of shadows and highlights, its intended use is for a finished image not a procedimental one where it's standard practice to preserve as much info in-camera, 10-bit idea is ok but why one would want to shoot anyways in the actual Normal or D-cinelike when they have a color cut-off that's basically erasing color data. A simple way to check that is by lowering the exposure compensation by -2 stops and then in computer bringing up the gain by 2 stops and see how much of a carnage has been done to color data.
- About sharpness myths, oh crap reached the word limit, check out this film-maker's video comparing an 8K smartphone cam versus a 2K Hollywood cinema cam: