Typical price: £470
What is it: Flash-based camcorder with an external lens that can be mounted on a head, helmet or arm for an intimate look at the action
What we think: Though image quality falls short of an entry-level miniDV camcorder, the unusual first-person perspective on your extreme-sports mishaps more than compensates
Samsung Miniket VP-X100L Review
Reviewed on: 12 January 2006
Nonetheless, the Miniket has a standard 800,000-pixel sensor and a minimum illumination rating of 3 lux -- which can cope with moderate low-light. The 51mm (2-inch) LCD is big enough to check that your scenes are roughly in focus, but you essentially have to rely on the accuracy of the fairly good built-in autofocus system.
Video is stored on an internal 1GB flash chip, but this can be supplemented with Memory Stick PRO cards inserted in a slot at the back of the Miniket. Alongside routine video recording functions, the Miniket can take photographs in JPEG format at 800x600 pixels.
The external head-mountable lens uses a proprietary AV cable that connects to the main camera body. Samsung have bundled two straps with the Miniket -- one large, one smaller, to cater for various head sizes. The smaller head size can also be used to mount the camcorder on a leg or arm. Yes, for the record, our head size was the large one.
Performance
Using the Samsung in the field is a familiar experience. Though the menu systems differ from model to model, the setup here is similar to what we've seen from other Samsung camcorders. Anyone who's used a video camera before, whether tape or hard-disk based, will feel right at home with the logical arrangement of menus and record button.
As with other solid-state camcorders, the Miniket generates thumbnails of the first frame of each scene you record. This makes it easy to navigate clips using this first frame as a reference point. The clips are displayed in a grid that becomes scrollable as the clips stack up.
The external lens attachment is not automatically activated when you plug it into the main body of the camcorder. This can cause some confusion at first -- it would make more sense if the Miniket automatically switched to the external lens. Instead, there's a menu option that enables the head-mounted unit and lets you record footage from a first-person perspective.
The Samsung fared well during skateboard trials, but we did experience a small problem with the device when we took it ice skating -- it stopped functioning. We initially thought this was down to the cold, but it later turned out that the battery needed charging. So much for our belief that the extreme cold of a London winter could defeat the Miniket. In a later experiment we left it in the fridge for an hour. This seemed to have no effect on the performance of the camera, though sometimes extreme temperatures affect battery life, so your experiences may vary. We'd feel fairly confident taking this camcorder snowboarding.
Though the Miniket is fairly rugged, it is far from indestructible. During the review we noticed some small stress lines in the external lens housing. Whether this was a sign of breakages to come, we can't be sure, but you'd be advised to treat the Miniket with some degree of respect. A tough order when you're hurtling down a vertical slope, bleeding from the eyeballs.
Samsung has bundled Mac and Windows software with the Miniket. This can be used to edit and convert your movie into formats including DivX -- a refreshingly open format for a mainstream manufacturer. As is so often the case with bundled editing software, this is functional but far from impressive. There are a range of ways to convert the Miniket's footage into a format you can edit in Final Cut Pro or Premier, and serious filmmakers will want to explore these.
Image quality
The Miniket's strength does not lie in the quality of the footage it generates. Though image quality is acceptable, it doesn't come close to what we've seen from an entry-level miniDV camcorder. However, there is a good reason why this pixel gazing isn't the final word on the Miniket. The main appeal of this camcorder is its portability and the unique type of footage it can capture. Given that you can hardly strap a traditional camcorder to your head, image-quality comparisons become slightly moot.
We would have given the Miniket a much better rating if the image quality was improved, but even with its noticeable compression artefacts and average low-light abilities, it still makes a tempting proposition. If you're uploading footage in fairly low resolution to the Internet, the Miniket's short-comings may not affect you.
Because most footage shot on the Miniket will be rapid action, capturing the basic essence of the experience may be more important than capturing every detail in lucid brilliance. Though cinematographers will want to look elsewhere for their head-mounted camcorders, sports enthusiasts who'd like to give their friends a taste of the action will find the Miniket to be not only the sole mainstream consumer head-mounted camera currently available, but an obscenely fun one at that. Breaking an arm or cracking a rib becomes infinitely more rewarding when you've got a movie of the disaster to forward around the office afterwards.
Edited by Mary Lojkine
Additional editing by Nick Hide
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