Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed. is a former senior video producer at The Verge. She worked at Vox Media from 2016 to 2024, producing more than ...
Today the folks at FiLMiC released DoubleTake, an app that allows more than one camera to be used on an iPhone at once. DoubleTake was released as a sort of "early look" at what'll be released in the ...
Utkarsh has over 15 years of experience traveling and documenting his adventures through words, photographs and films. Being an MBA, Utkarsh comes from a marketing background. But his quest to travel, ...
The Doubletake Adventure Mirrors are a quality aftermarket mirror constructed from quality materials and offering multiple positioning and adjustability options. Fitting a number of different ...
Katie is a UK-based news reporter and features writer. Officially, she is CNET's European correspondent, covering tech policy and Big Tech in the EU and UK. Unofficially, she serves as CNET's Taylor ...
A free iPhone app which allows videographers to shoot 1080p HD video from two different cameras simultaneously with selectable frame rate and full-frame focus and exposure. As if a new third camera on ...
A new iOS app lets users simultaneously record video using multiple iPhone cameras. DoubleTake is created by the makers of popular camera app Filmic Pro. In the words of the app’s makers, DoubleTake ...
A new iPhone app allows you to capture two high-quality video streams simultaneously from any of the mobile device’s cameras. Called “DoubleTake,” the free software is produced by FiLMiC, based in ...
“We are confident in saying there is nothing like this on the market,” says Darcy Daugela, 58, chairman at NexOptic Technology Corp. He’s referring to the DoubleTake, which he describes as a ...
WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. - A mobile application that allows Purdue University students to submit videos to fulfill classroom assignments is now available from the Apple iTunes App Store and as a website.
Start with Alfred Hitchcock and the shower curtain. At his movie-making best, Hitchcock could evoke more genuine horror, more terror, than a generation of his blood-spattering idolators and imitators.