Before You Buy 172 (Transcript)
Father Robert Ballecer: Coming
up we’ve got the last word on the Galaxy S6, It’s a cube, that’s instant, a
drone that’s made for film makers. That’s all next. You’ve got to watch Before
You Buy.
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Hey,
welcome to Before You Buy! It’s Twit’s product review show where we take the
gizmos and gadgets that we get into the brick house and we give them to various
members of the studio. That’s right, a place to get honest reviews from people
who honestly use technology. Now a few weeks back we had a chance to take a
look at the Galaxy S6 Edge. Leo LaPorte told us that it was bar none the best
phone that he had played with including the iPhone. It had the best camera, it
had a beautiful screen, it was just gorgeously
designed. But that’s the S6 Edge. We also wanted to take a look at the Galaxy
S6 so we gave that Android phone to the master of all Android Phones – Jason
Howell and this is what he thought.
Jason Howell: Hey,
what’s up? I’m Jason Howell and I’m here to review a phone that I’ve been
waiting to review for the past month. It’s the Galaxy S6 by Samsung. I’ve got
to say I’m super impressed by this phone and I’ve had a lot of fun playing
around with it. It starts with 32 gigs of storage inside for around $765
unlocked, that’s the price on Amazon and goes all the way up to 128 gigs for
$1,285 unlocked on Amazon so take it for what it’s worth. You can find
different pricing all over the internet as well as deals through your carriers
if you sign up for a contract. So let’s take a look at the specs of the Galaxy
S6. This is not the edge, this is the straight forward
S6 design. It has got a 5.1 inch QHD, that’s 2560 by 1440 resolution. It’s
powered by a Exynos octa core processor that Samsung
makes. 3 Gigs of Ram, then like I said 32, 64 and 128 gigabyte storage options
internally. It’s got a 16 megapixel rear facing camera on the back and then you
have a 5 megapixel front facing camera for your selfies. 2550
milliamp hour battery underneath. It is non-removable. The S5 was a 2800
milliamp hour battery so it’s kind of a reduction in capacity for battery here
and it is running 5.0.2 Lollipop out of the box. 1st let’s take a
look at the design which is absolutely 1 of the killer features of the Samsung
Galaxy S6. They made some changes from previous iteration and I think they’ve
all been for the best here. It’s a super narrow thin device, pretty light, nice
rounded aluminum edges along the sides. Both the front and the back are glass
so you’re going to need to be a little careful handling the device because it
can break on both sides now so be aware of that. Down at the bottom here you
have the home button which I’ve never been a huge fan of but now it acts as a
finger print sensor. So literally you just tap your finger on the home button
and hold it there for a split second. It’ll recognize your finger print and
pass you through to the home screen and it works really well, I love this. It’s
going to be hard for me to not have it on my own phone. On the back you have
the heart rate monitor which is kind of a feature that Samsung’s been adding. I
could give or take on that 1. There’s an IR blaster on top if you want to use
your phone as a remote control for some of your devices at home. Samsung Pay is
a part of the Galaxy S6, which was once known as Loot Pay, it was an
acquisition not too long ago to enable contact list payments at stores and its
compatibility is kind of crazy. It’s using magnets to talk to the registers.
But that has actually not been activated software side so once that is
activated sometime in the coming months this phone will be compatible with
that. So that’ll be a feature then. The battery of course is non-removable.
It’s stuck in there, it’s the 1st Galaxy line phone where the battery
doesn’t pop out and also there’s no micro SD for storage expansion. They had to
kind of cut those in order to get this new striking design. Personally I like
those changes but true fans of those features are going to be a little
disappointed. Now for the display. I think once again
the display is top notch. It’s gorgeous, colors are vibrant, and everything is
super sharp. It’s a QHD display so it’s even more resolution than their 1080-P
display. For a 5.1 inch device I’m personally not convinced that that’s
necessary. Yes things look amazing but that comes at the cost of your battery
which I’m going to talk about here in a second. Personally I think the QHD is
kind of overkill for this particular form factor and I think they would have
done better just sticking to 1080-P and giving you more of that battery life as
a result. So speaking of battery I’d say battery is 1 of the downsides of this
device. It’s actually a smaller capacity battery than what was on the S5 and I
don’t know, it’s just kind of mediocre performance. I
definitely had to charge up throughout the day hoping that I get through to the
end and it didn’t happen pretty regularly. I will say on the plus side though
that quick charging is on board here so if you have a quick charger it’s going
to charge your phone super-fast. I think it’s somewhere around 6 hours per 15
minutes. So if you do have to top it off throughout the day it doesn’t take
very long to do that. It also supports Chi and PTMA wireless charging so keep
that in mind. Now as for the cameras you’ve got the front facing camera and the
rear facing camera. Without a doubt this is the phone you get if taking
pictures with your phone is the most important thing to you. I don’t think you
can get much better. Just to kind of show you here if we double tap the home
button it takes you right to the camera app and the volume rocker on the side
actually (let’s see here, oh there I am) works as a shutter. So you can use
your volume button to take the pictures which is kind of a nice feature. I actually
really like the camera software here. Samsung’s refined it a lot to make things
a bit easier to find inside. That’s as far as the software is concerned. As far
as the performance of the camera itself it’s excellent in low light. Both the
front and back cameras are the same in that they have 1.9
f-stop lens, they just have different megapixel capacities there. That
basically means that it lets in more light and without a doubt this is the best
camera that I’ve used on an android device and a lot of people are comparing it
to the iPhone. As far as side by side the pictures are as good as each other so
very cool stuff. It’s super-fast to snap. I will go ahead and take it and it
just responds really quickly. There’s also some extra
features like slow motion, auto high dynamic range, panoramic. There’s a
pro-mode that kind of allows you to dial in and get a bit more specific as to
how you take your pictures. That’s also really nice for Macro shots. The front
facing camera I will say kind of feels a little like it’s a wide angle lens and
I’m not sure how I feel about that. If your face ends up on the edges it kind
of stretches out a little bit but I think you mileage may vary as far as that’s
concerned. I don’t feel like it really affected the quality of my images that
much. Over all best camera you can find on an Android
device right now and I can say that without a doubt. As for performance of the
device as I said earlier Samsung is using its own Exynos processor inside the
Galaxy S6 bypassing the Snapdragon 810 which is what they were going to go with
initially. They said they had problems with heat but I think it kind of works
out in Samsung’s favor that they’re using their own processor here. I think
it’s a pretty good switch for them and I have the feeling we’re going to see a
lot more of this. I found everything to be pretty speedy, browsing was fast save for a few hiccups when I did my verge test when it was
first loading. But once everything loaded in it was super smooth. Gaming was
smooth as well. Racing 3 is my current favorite for testing out gaming
performance and everything moved without a hiccup. Touch whiz in general about
as smooth as I’ve experienced but that’s you know with the asterisk involved
that Touch Whiz kind of tends to slow some things down at times. For example
going to the side screen – there’s the flip board screen that sometimes takes a
while to snap into place. Right now it looks like it is doing alright. Over all
I would say I encountered a few handoff issues between WIFI and mobile networks
if I was moving from 1 location to another where it wouldn’t automatically
connect to WIFI and I wasn’t quite sure. I had to turn it off and turn it back
on again for that to happen. So that was a little frustrating but that could
have been the wireless access point more than the phone. It was very hard for
me to determine that. Now speaking of software this is Touch Whiz and Samsung
has definitely kind of gone in and brought Touch Whiz a little bit further forward to match some of
Lollipop’s design choices. I wouldn’t say it’s definitely totally looking like
a Lollipop device though. Samsung really kind of sticks to their version of
what Android OS should look like and that’s more in line with their kind of
design choices as opposed to what’s been chosen for the platform in general. I
am a fan of the camera software. I thought the camera software was great.
There’s a theme store that you can access in the settings if you want to
totally apply a new theme to your device and there’s a bunch of free options in
there as well as paid. They have some motion gestures that are included; for
example I can move my hand over the top and it’ll take a snap shot, not
necessary but kind of neat. Also if you have a contact showing on the screen
and you pick the phone up and put it to your ear it’ll automatically call that
contact. Little things like that that I supposed could be kind of handy.
There’s a split screen mode so if you hold down your multi-tasking button it
will pop up 2 different apps on both sides of the screen. It
kind of helps with multi-tasking there. There’s a wake up command that
only works with s-voice, it doesn’t work with Google Now so if you wake up the
screen from off it will do a search using S-voice and you might not want to use
Samsung’s S-voice. So that’s kind of a bummer. Finger print implementation is
bang on, it works almost without a hitch every time and takes your right
through. I found it super handy in particular with Last Pass for managing my
passwords instead of having to type in my long master password I just put my
finger print on there and it would automatically do it for me. It’s a game
changer and I’m going to be really sad to not have that feature. Pre-installed
software just so you know takes up around 9 gigs of space on here and you can’t
uninstall it, you can only hide it so keep that in
mind. Maybe you want to get a higher capacity version of this phone when you
get it. Alright let’s take a look at the pros and the cons of the Galaxy S6.
First the pros; the camera is fantastic, best camera on an Android phone right
now. The display is super sharp, very vivid and very detailed maybe to a fault
which I’ll talk about in a second. The design I think is just a striking
design, it’s super comfy and it just feels good holding this phone in your
hard. Then the finger print sensor, man I’m going to be really bummed to not
have a finger print sensor on my Nexus 6 when I go back to it. As far as the
cons; battery performance, I really wish they would have maybe gone with a
lower resolution display or tweaked battery or gone with higher capacity
because it doesn’t perform as well as it should. Touch Whiz is better than it
has been but that’s not saying a whole lot, some of the software feels kind of
unnecessary and then the un-removable battery and lack of micro sd card is going to bum out fans of previous versions of
this device that have relied on those features. But over all I would have to
say without a doubt buy on this. It’s a little expensive obviously, it’s a
premium line device but you are going to get what you pay for. The Samsung
Galaxy S6 is a phenomenal phone and it’s 1 of my favorites of the year right
now and I don’t know, I’m pretty bummed that I have to send this back. My name
is Jason Howell, you can catch my reviews on All About Android and of course on
Before You Buy here and thanks for watching my review of the Samsung Galaxy S6.
Fr. Robert: That was
Jason Howell with a buy for the Samsung Galaxy S6. If you’re looking for a Next
Generation phone and maybe the Edge isn’t quite right for you the S6 may be
your next phone. Now we wanted to take a look at something a little bit
different so we talked to Miriam Joire and we gave her the Instacube and this
is what she thought.
Miriam Joire: It is
Miriam with Before You Buy and what you see here in front of me is called the
Instacube. It is essentially a photo frame that you can hang somewhere… well
probably not hang, it’s a little thick but put on a shelf or something and it
shows you your Instagram feed. Kind of cool. There’s
lots of digital photo frames out there, some of them are connect to now days
but you have to understand that context of this product. It was launched, it was crowd funded about 2 1/2 -3 years ago now
and for a long time it looked like we weren’t going to get any product from
these people. Now you know that crowd funding doesn’t mean you’re going to get
something necessarily but they did reach their goal. I actually was a backer, I
paid $100 for this device and it took them forever. We had all but given up on
them and they finally shipped this thing late last year. Unfortunately it was
designed 3 years ago so the guts of it are horrendously terrible. It’s
basically a very cheap Android tablet from 3 years ago, put into this enclosure
and turned into a digital photo frame that connects to your Instagram feed and
displays it for you. I wanted to show you quickly what it looks like. First of
all it has this kind of retro vibe with the Polaroid kind of look and feel. It
looks like the Instagram App icon which is really cool. You can see that that
the top half has a soft touch finish on it. The bottom half is has a shiny gray
finish and then there is this rainbow look around it. These are actually
stickers. That’s how cheap this thing is. You can peel them off. They aren’t
painted on or anything like that. The front is really kind of low quality, 600
by 600 pixel display. It looks kind of bluish here
because it is kind of bluish in real life. So it’s a capacitive screen but it’s
an incredibly cheap plastic cover on top of this and as you can see it’s a
fingerprint magnet and reflects light like no one’s business. The Instacube was
cool though. Then on top you’ve got 3 buttons and they are kind of interesting
actually. You’ve got a power on and off button that is round and then you’ve
got this grid button which is square and then you’ve got a heart button. The
heart button lets you do what you expect, you can like
a photo as you see it. Let me go to 1 that I actually like and this is where
you’re going to see how abysmal the UI is. As you see it’s very slow and so you
push the little heart and guess what? It hearts it and if you push again on the
same picture… I guess it doesn’t even un-heart it so you pretty much have to go
in the settings like this, let me show you, and un-heart it. There is an option
to do that. Then this grid view here brings you to think cube UI that lets you
pick things like the night library of your photos, photos you’ve liked,
hashtag; I have a hashtag pre-programmed in here. It hasn’t loaded the pictures, let’s see if it actually does it. But it’s going
to load all the Instagram photos that are public that say nomogram and do a
feed of that. There you go. So that’s really it in a nutshell. It’s designed to
show you your Instagram feed in this manner and to look through like this all
day happily and when you walk by and see a picture you like you can push the
heart button on top here and heart it, like this can of beans. But the strange
thing about it and this is kind of the killer flaw, other than the cheapness of
the device to start with is that the battery lasts about 2 hours. So if you’re
trying to have this run maybe 4 hours, I’m being a little factitious here but
it doesn’t last really even half a day. So what you’re saying is that if you have
this on a shelf you pretty much have to connect it to a micro USB charger
because the battery on this thing is just terrible. So that’s 1 major drawback
other than the cheapness and the display quality. You saw the software is very
slow and unresponsive and that’s because this thing is running an Android
tablet underneath that is like from 3 years ago and possibly cost $30 3 years
ago and you know how abysmal these things were. Probably single core with 512 megs of RAM or 256 megs of RAM. You can also do gestures
like this and see a grid view and you can see it’s loading the grid view so
let’s wait for this to happen shall we. Yes it is loading my grid view off of
WIFI and you know at Twit here we have good WIFI so it’s really not a WIFI
performance issue. Anyway I’m going to spare you this but you get the feel for
what I’m trying to say here. This is not really a great product. And then
here’s the killer, you can actually reboot this thing into the Android desktop
because it is running Android and what happens then is you realize that behind this panel is
actually an 800 by 600 landscape tablet that goes edge to edge and has been
masked to be 600 by 600. When you do that you see part of the user interface
hidden behind the black frame. So you can’t even use this as an Android tablet
if you wanted to recycle it somehow unless you take it apart. So I’m not sure it’s
worth $100 in a nut shell. It was a cool idea, it took a while to deliver, it
was a pretty painful campaign that they had in terms of satisfying their users.
Lots of people were complaining, nobody thought it was ever going to ship. They
shipped so kudos for that but what they did ship is exactly what they promised
but very poor implementation of it. So pros and cons. Pros; it’s cool, it’s an
interesting idea. Cons; it’s terribly executed, the performance of the device
and the software are terrible, the display isn’t very good, the battery life is
abysmal and it’s built like crap. Really the cheapest possibly material you can
put together. It scratches just looking at it. So yes, this is an absolute
definite don’t buy. I have spent $100 on this and it’s my own and I’m glad that
I contributed to it because I believe in the idea but this is what crowd
funding is like. You pledge and might not get anything and if sometimes you do
get something it might not actually be very awesome. So this is the Instacube
here on Before you Buy and I’m Miriam Joire.
Fr. Robert: So it is
slow, it’s poorly executed, it scratches just by looking at it and it’s built
like crap. That means that Miriam Joire is going to give the Instacube a “don’t
buy”. Well there’s a lot of frames out there, it’s
just not that one that you’re going to want. When we come back we’re going to
go ahead and jump back into NAB. We wanted to take a look at a couple more
segments that we took at the show but before we do that let’s go ahead and
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Let’s go
ahead and take a trip back over to NAB. That’s right, the National Association
of Broadcasters Show in Las Vegas. Scott Wilkinson and I were there taking a
look at some of the latest and greatest in broadcast tech and I thought you
might want to take a look at a camera that’s wooden.
(Video: Fr. Robert: Ok so you’ve got your gear,
you’re set up, you’ve got a nice camera, maybe some nice audio gear, maybe
you’ve even got yourself the right lighting but now you need something to put
all that gear on top of which is why we’re here at Wooden Camera standing next
to Ryan who’s going to explain some of the newer gear that they brought out for
your rig. Ryan, thank you so much for talking to us.
Ryan: Thank you. So we’ve got many
new options at the show today; 1 of which is our new matte box which is on the
front of this rig here. So it’s a 4x5.65 matte box with 2 rotating stages. It
also has a tray catcher on the bottom so you don’t accidently drop your filter
through to the floor. It has Nano-standard quick releases on each end here
which is great for positioning monitors using our new Nano lock magic arm. So
you can unlock, side to the end and quickly remove your monitor. You can also
go on to the side of your matte box if you want to attach your monitor in front
of you for hand held shooting. Then on the other side here, we can spin this
around; we’ve got our new D box which is for power distribution. So it enables
you to choose your own connectors. You can choose from D tab, 4 pin hirose, 4
pin or 2 pin lemo, 3 pin fisher and a 5 volt USB so it
is completely customizable. You have the ability to change the connectors
yourself even. So it’s easy to do, you just unscrew these 4
screws and you can pop the connector box out and inset a new panel yourself.
Fr. Robert: 1 of the
things that you’ve done that I really like is you’ve put in the voltage
regulators in line so that you don’t have to worry about accidently cross
connecting something or miss-soldering something and sending the wrong voltage
to your devices.
Ryan:
That’s right. So this is a good example of that. This is a 5 volt USB, it
provides up to 3 AMPS and it has the voltage regulator built in here so you can
disconnect it and pull this out and put another connector in and get 12 volts
out or 24 volts just depending on which one you use.
Fr. Robert: Of
course this is to build up a rig of your choosing. You get to choose what you
have on it, what kind of devices are powered and what
kind of batteries you use. But I think 1 of the things that makes the Wooden
Camera approach so neat is the customizability. You have so many mounting
points, so many different devices and like the Matte Box they are so precision. We were playing with this before we started
filming and it just feels right. You don’t ever feel like you’re forcing a
part. How long have you been doing this and why does your gear seem so nice?
Ryan: I started as a camera operator
so that gave me a good background and the knowledge for what’s needed and we’ve
been in business for manufacturing for about 4 years. We started with simple
products and then as we learned and evolved we added a lot more products that
are complex including video distribution, power distribution and now the Matte
Box.
Fr. Robert: Ryan,
thank you very much for talking to us. Now if our audience wants to find out
more about Wooden Camera, they want to see where maybe they could pick up some
parts for a rig of their own, where do they go?
Ryan: woodencamera.com.
Fr. Robert: You have
it; woodencamera.com. I’m Father Robert from NAB 2015. We’ll see you next year.
(End of video)
Fr. Robert: That was
actually the very last booth that we took a look at. Carson needed us to take a
look at just 1 last thing because he really liked it and I’ve got to admit the
tech that they have is great because it enables you to use the tech you already
have in a better way. Speaking of using tech that you already have in a better
way, 1 of the things that I’ve been interested in doing is building these
things – quad copters, multi rotor crafts. Some people call them drones. But
there’s a different between building a quad copter for fun which is what I
prefer to do and building a copter for the perfect video shot. The smooth,
silky, blah blah blah shot, the overhead 360 view, the selfie view. These are
the kinds of capabilities that we’re starting to see in quad copters that are
released from manufacturers like DJI and 3D Robotics. But here we took a look
at the Aries Blackbird. You want a quad copter but you don’t want to build it.
You want a capable aerial camera but you don’t want to buy parts from dozen
different vendors and budge them together, you want a stable multi rotor but
you don’t want to get a masters in quadology just to
make it fly. If that’s you then you are the person that the engineers at Aries
had in mind when they built the Blackbird X10. An all in 1
almost ready to fly aerial photography and videography platform. When
the folks at Aries say that the Blackbird is ready to fly out of the box they
mean it. The kit literally includes everything you need to be up and flying
within 30 minutes without having to purchase or find any additional parts or
tools. That includes the body with preassembled electronics and motors, 2 sets
of self-fastening props, 5300 milliamp hour 3 cell lithium power battery, prop
guards, a transmitter, 2.4 gigahertz signal repeater that pushes a safe
operational range past 1600 feet and accessories. They even included a screw
driver and wrench that you need to attach the prop guards and tighten the prop.
With everything out of the box you can plug in the chargers for the Blackbird’s
battery and the signal booster and let them go while we finish the kit. You can
run the Blackbird without prop guards but I’d advise against it until you’re comfortable with its handling characteristics. Simply
remove the front2 screws from the end of each arm, attach the prop guards and
secure them with the included extension screws. With the prop guards on install
the props remembering that you want clock wise props, the ones with the black
caps on the front left and rear right arms and counter clock wise props, the
ones with the white tops on the front right and rear left. Use the included
wrench to grab the motor housing to make tightening easier. The props and prop
nuts are integrated and they’re reverse threaded against the rotation of the
motor. In other words they’ll tighten themselves in operation. Once the battery
is charged (easy to gauge because each battery has a LCD indicator) you can
slide it into the back of the Blackbird and lock it into place. The Blackbird
has a 16 megapixel still camera that can also shoot video at 1080p/30 frames a
second. Toggling transmitter 3 tilts the camera up and down and once you’ve
locked the camera into an angle it’ll try to hold that angle by automatically
tilting up and down as well as flying the craft around the target. Video can
bet transmitted to an Android or iOS device, clipped to the top of the
transmitter, just load the app on your device of choice, sync it to the
repeater and voila, instant fpv… kind of. There is
considerable lag on a WIFI connected device so while it can be used to position
the camera it’s not really for flight. For those who want the best possible
video and stills the Blackbird has a micro SD slot on the underside to record
high quality media. It also has buttons for starting and stopping video as well
as a trigger for stills. After taking the Blackbird outside, calibrating the
compass and locking onto a GPS signal it’s time to fly. The central feature of
the Blackbird is a camera driver auto hoover. Unlike the throttles of
traditional transmitters the throttle of the Blackbird is spring loaded to
center. Arming the Blackbird will start up the motors, pushing the throttle up
from center will make the Blackbird rise. Releasing the throttle will put the
Blackbird into hoover. Only pushing down from center will make it descend. The
Blackbird includes “return to home” in case of signal loss and is actually
quite good with rain. But if you’ve ever flown a homebuilt quadcopter it will
take some time to properly fly the Blackbird because it’s been built as a camera
platform 1st. It’s got plenty of power and stability put it doesn’t
fly like an acrobatic quad. In GPS mode the Blackbird is smooth and responsive
to stick movement but only when you’re holding the controls off center. The
moment the stick centers the Blackbird will assume that it should hold its
current position and altitude. Furthermore the camera will actually fly the
Blackbird to keep its tagger in frame. This will look like uneven flight but
it’s actually better for video and photo. The effect is unnerving to those who
are accustomed to flying quads in full manual or just with self-leveling but it
also makes sense. As a camera platform with a quadcopter attached the Blackbird
should do everything it can to stabilize the picture even at the expense of flight
characteristics. The 5300 milliamp power battery holds enough juice for about
15 minutes of aggressive flight or up to 25 minutes of station keeping with no
wind. Now as a camera platform let’s talk about video quality. At least I would
like to talk about video quality. You see I took the Blackbird out to fly 4
times. Each time the Blackbird failed to record its aerial sessions despite the
flashing green light on the transmitter and the recording light on my phone.
The last time I took it out I even recorded while it was on the ground, tested
that card in my laptop to make sure it had recorded and then started the
recording again and took flight. At the end, nothing. Later I lucked out and it happened to be recording while I was practicing in
the parking lot and the camera and the self-stabilization is actually
incredible. At 1 point I was comfortable enough with it on auto hoover to lift
the Blackbird into the air, then put aside the controller and fly a second
quadcopter. There is so much promise in the Blackbird but unfortunately the
camera issue is a deal breaker. You can’t have an aerial videography platform
if it won’t record every time without fail. You especially can’t have 1 that
tells you that it is recording while no data is being written to the memory
card. I actually do like the Blackbird. It is a decent device, it’s got a nice wing span so it’s nice and stable. I like the idea of having
the camera platform 1st. Some people could see that as a con but if
you’re looking for an aerial filming platform that’s what you want. It’s got
many good things. I like the auto hoover, I like the simple operation, I like
the feature of the range extender that they have on the transmitter. This thing
was really designed for people who want to film first and maybe fly 2nd.
But the biggest con, the thing that just pulls it away has got to be the fact
that it didn’t work. If it’s going to be a camera platform 1st it
has to work every single time. Any photographer or videographer is going to
tell you that the worst camera is a camera that’s unpredictable. If it says it
is recording and you come back and it didn’t get anything you just destroyed a
shoot and that shoot could be worth thousands or tens of thousands, hundreds of
thousands of dollars. That’s just simply unacceptable. The other thing that I
don’t like is the proprietary nature of some of the parts; specifically this
battery. You’re going to want to get more than 1 battery and these are going to
cost you $125 a pop. This is just a standard battery that they incased inside
of this enclosure. In fact I’d already opened this thing up. I know how to put
a regular battery inside of here so it’s kind of silly that Aries is going to
make this Blackbird so that you have to go ahead and buy another 1 of their batteries.
The pricing is going to change. Right now it is about $700 but with the release
of the Phantom 3 and with 3DR coming out with their solo you’re probably going
to see this drop down to the 600-500 dollar range which still does make it a
bargain. It’s a bargain at the pricing once they fix it. What I would say about
the Blackbird right now is that it is an absolute don’t buy. But it is an
absolute potential possibility – that’s a lot of potentials – for a redemption. If they can fix the recording glitch, if they
can maybe drive the price down a little bit this could go from a “don’t buy” to
an absolute buy. Now when we come back we’ve got a 1st look at a
product that might turn your iPhone, your iPad, your Android device, your
Windows laptop into a high definition audio device. But before we do that let’s
go ahead and thank the second sponsor of this episode of Before You Buy and it is Smart Things. Now Smart Things was rated as the number 1 home
automation product at CES 2015 and the reason why was because it is so good.
Now there are a lot of home automation products on the market but they all
suffer from the same problem and that is you have to buy all your modules from
them which Smart Things has done and what makes it such a neat solution is that
they’ve given you this. This is the Hub and this hub doesn’t just control
everything from the door sensor and the smart sensor and the light control and
the door switch and the audio box; it controls all your devices. If you want to
integrate your drop cam or your Nest thermometer or let’s say your audio system
into your home automation system you can do it with the Hub. My personal
favorite part is this; this is a smart sensor that I can carry on my person.
That means that my home knows when I come up to the door and it can do things
like unlock the door, turn on the lights, set the temperature to where I want
it, maybe even turn on my favorite music. This is the sort of thing that we
dreamed of when we started creating our smart homes in our minds. Now if you’ve
dabbled with home automation in the past, stop dabbling and get smart by
getting Smart Things. Smart Things works for iOS, it works for Android, it
works for Windows phone and because it is an open platform it will work as well
with its own sensors as it does with connected devices from Drop Cam, Honeywell
Thermostats and many more. Again it was a CES 2015 editor’s choice award and
you should try it and see exactly why it got that acclaim. You can use it for
home automation to turn on your lights or off from your phone. You can use it
for security so that you can get an alert from your drop cams every time
someone approaches your home. You can use it for energy savings so it will
automatically drop your thermostat when you don’t want to be using up power and
you could use it for water detection to find out if water is building up in
your basement. These are just a few of the things that you can design on your
own turning your home into a true smart home. Now right now there’s
no monthly required fees and the kits start at just $189. Smart Things
is an affordable way to create your smart home and just for our Twit audience,
Smart Things is offering you a chance to save even more. Get 10% off any home
solutions kit or security kit and get free shipping in the United States when
you go to smartthings.com/twit and use the offer code twit. That’s
smartthings.com/twit and use the offer code twit and we thank Smart Things for
their support of Before You Buy.
1 last
bit, a first look… now for a while people have been looking at products like
the Pono Player or even the Philo that we had on Before You Buy a few weeks
back as a way to get better quality audio out of your phone, your laptop etc.
You see the problem is the audio that’s built into our devices; it’s good, it’s
decent, it works but if you’re an audiophile you’re going to notice the pops,
you’re going to notice the hiss, you’re going to notice the sub hard noise
isolation that you’ll get on everything from your latest Galaxy S6 to your
iPhone. There is a way to get around that and that is to not use that onboard
audio at all and that’s what HRT did with the IDSP and the DSP. Simply put this
takes a digital to analog converter and a DSP and an ultra-clean headphone
amplifier that makes it a separate unit from your device. Here’s how it works.
This is a DSP, this will work with your Windows box, this will work with your
Mac OS10 box and this will work with your Android device. It’s simply a USB
device so I can take any one of these plugs that I need for that particular
device and plug it into my Windows laptop or I can use it with this cord so
that I can plug it into my USB L equipped Android device. Once I’ve got that
connected I can play pretty much any file format that I want. This will support
MP3 AAC, PCM Apple and Windows Lossless and all streaming audio and video
formats and because it has an onboard DAC that’s separate from the power supply
that’s inside your phone or your laptop you’re not going to get that hum.
Because it has a DSP it means you can do signal processing inside the device so
that you can get really, really, nice audio. Get rid of all those artifacts and
because it’s powered over the USB bus means you’re not going to have a whole
lot of cables hanging off your device. Now that’s good, this is better. This is
the IDSP and they specifically designed this for I devices so your iPad or your
iPhone. Again they could have gone with a standard dongle approach and you
would have had to use a dongle. You’d have to use a dongle like this from a
Lightening to a USB or from a 30 pin to a USB and then you’d have to put the
connector so that it would do something like that. That’s not elegant, that’s a
whole lot of mess hanging off your device. Instead they devised the IDSP so
that it will take a standard 30 pin or lightening connector to USB and integrates it as part of the device. Now that’s pretty slick
and that’s the kind of engineering that I like to see. It’s got all the same
specs as the regular DSP, it supports all the same formats, it is bus powered
but this 1 will work on a lightening phone, it will work on the 30 pin standard
iPhone, iPad connector and it will give you all that same audio quality that
you’d get off of the little red box. Now each of these is $69, it started off
as a kick starter campaign. We’ve got a couple in the studio, what we want to
do is we want to show this to a couple of the audiophiles that we have and see
if this finally turns your hand-held device into that ultra-high definition
device of choice.
Now
that’s all we’ve got for this episode of Before You Buy. Remember that you can
always get all of our episodes at twit.tv/byb. If you go there you’ll find not
just our back episodes and not just our notes, our pros and cons but you’ll
also find a place where you can subscribe so that every episode is
automatically downloaded into your device of choice. Also please follow me on
Twitter. You’re going to find me at twitter.com/padresj, that’s @padresj. If
you follow me you’ll find out what I do for every episode. I always announce it
ahead of time, you’ll be able to suggest products that you want on future
episodes of Before You Buy and you’ll also see what a day in the life of
Padresj looks like. Thanks to everyone who’s submitted reviews for this episode
of Before You Buy. Of course that’s Jason Howell, that’s Miriam Joire and
that’s Chad Johnson and a special thanks to Lisa and to Leo my super producer
Carson and my absolutely fabulous Cranky Hippo Mr. Bryan Burnett. Bryan can you
tell the folks where they can find you every week?
Bryan Burnett: Every
week doing Know How with you on Thursdays. We have a lot of fun doing that show
so check it out.
Fr. Robert: Yes,
please do. Until next time I’m Father Robert Ballecer just reminding you that
you’ve got to watch Before You Buy!