it can account for
any small hand motions (the smallest shake goes on f - o - r - e-v-e-r when shooting at 960 fps) and can be programmed to enhance your video with other effects through the mobile app.
Not exact matches
A little
motion catches your eye and you glance at your four - year - old just in time to see a meatball fly across the table from a
small, sauce - covered
hand.
I was first set on getting a GB Pockit since it was
small enough to fit in my backpack, but when I saw the yoyo fold up in a one
hand motion I was pretty much sold.
Without that detail, astronomers can't tell whether a star's back - and - forth
motions come from a huge planet moving in a nearly face - on orbit from our viewpoint, like the minute
hand on a clock, or from a
smaller planet in an edge - on orbit.
Using your left
hand, move the pads of your fingers around your right breast gently in
small circular
motions covering the entire breast area and armpit.
The repetitive
motions tire out our
small muscles within our fingers and
hands.
A
small infrared camera mounted near the map lights «watches» for
hand motions near the shifter.
Any trip through town has jaws dropping, necks of either sex swivelling, and any number of
small, tanktop - clad boys making circling
motions with their
hands.
A
small infrared camera mounted near the map lights monitors
hand motions near the shifter.
You made a little gesture with your
hand that made me think you had seen me too, that you were waving, but it was a
small motion of your wrist that meant nothing — you were just bruising the cold November air, and before you caught my eye, I bolted.
For me VR is like
motion controls yeah it can be fun in
small batches but when I come home from work I want to sit on my sofa and chill not be waving my
hands around or still there with a head set on.
You could use
motion controls, but you had to have a
small handheld joystick for the other
hand... which wasn't wireless, but leached power from the Wii - mote itself via a cord, hence «nunchuk».
A home system / portable handheld hybrid, the Switch features a controller that can be disassembled into two
smaller «Joy - Con» controllers for use as two -
handed motion - control devices or individual SNES - style controllers for two players.
As mentioned in T3's
hands on review (which can be found by scrolling down the page), slotting in and taking out the Joy - Con controllers to and from the Nintendo Switch is incredibly straight forward, with a sliding
motion from the top down culminating in a satisfying click noise, and a
small, rear - mounted button on each Joy - Con allowing detachment with an upward slide.
In other pieces, Drew constructs a horizontal banner of folds and waves created from thousands of
small,
hand - cut wood pieces, fitted and glued together to create a seemingly undulating wall of suspended
motion.