A high - speed video camera running at over 1000
frames per second watches your wrist and fingers as you begin to form the shape.
Not exact matches
(ESV) Ultimately it matters not if there's a hidden camera
watching you --- the eyes of the Lord penetrate far further than a grainy twenty -
frames -
per -
second camera could ever go.
By
watching videos of caterpillars at 300
frames per second (above), researchers identified how the tiny insects» uncoupled muscles fire it into a somersault to escape an annoying poke.
When they
watched the cells at frequencies higher than 10
frames per second, they mostly observed particles jiggling in place; these vibrations appeared to be caused by temperature alone.
The next step to getting the most out of your movie -
watching experience at home is making sure it's in «movie» or «cinema» mode, which will ensure a proper color balance, and that any auto - smoothing settings that fill in gaps in the
frames per second is also turned off.
Likewise, if you're
watching a movie that's filmed at 24
frames per second, the Razer will set its refresh rate to match, so you don't get the «soap opera» effect commonly seen on TVs that use 120Hz rates.
The problem, and where all those engineers» hard work falls apart, is when you're
watching regular old movies or shows with traditional 24
frames -
per -
second speed.
When you're
watching newer HD content like sports broadcasts that offer 30
frames -
per -
second content, those motion - blur - fixing algorithms work really well.
This is why people were unnerved
watching The Hobbit at 48
frames per second as opposed to the 24 fps we've been seeing from film reels for decades, later mimicked by digital cameras and projectors.
You can look forward to 60
frame -
per -
second video and YouTube's live DVR function regardless of what platform you
watch on.
The software tries to smoothen the video out, similar to the Soap Opera effect available with some HDTVs, so if a movie you're
watching is intended to be shot at a cinematic 24
frames per second, the tablet will try to smoothen the video to make it look like it was shot at 60
frames per second, making it seem very strange looking.
Video output is full 1080p, up to 60
frames per second, so whether you're
watching Netflix, Hulu Plus, Vevo or your own content via Plex, you'll be able to get the highest visual quality possible (unless you're an early adopter of 4K content).
The
watch has a color e-paper display that can push 30
frames per second.