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VicoVation Opia1 Dash Camera

VicoVation Opia1 Dash Camera

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Product Description
Offering excellent video quality and a slew of modes, the Opia1 from VicoVation is a solid bet for any driver. Thanks to the Sony STARVIS sensor and Novatek chipset, the dash cam provides full HD footage at 60 frames per second Read More

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captain
240
Feb 3, 2019
Only 1080P in this day where 4K is de rigueur, and 8K is already on the horizon? Also, when is somebody going to include a solar panel for these things so that they JUST WORK all the time? ...and some kind of permanent affixation that will prevent attempted theft?
captain
240
Feb 5, 2019
Those are all valid points. I think that h265 compression shinks 4k down to less than double what the same video in h264 would be, and I’d only want to offload short clips for legal needs very occasionally—I hope! ;-) My problem with HD is it just doesn’t have enough resolution to pick out details like license plates and faces—details required for criminal pursuit. However, what I most want is speed, location, and TWO WAY video for those times I get stopped “speeding” when I know I was not. I haven’t found a solution yet, but I have hope. :-)
(Edited)
hasues
6
Feb 5, 2019
captainI've played with h264 and h265 and there are some interesting results on the amount of storage that can be saved, and perhaps that helps. As the storage sizes increase with microSD, that gives one hope for the size that can be stored which results in larger video assets. Obviously, one could simply make a custom storage for such, but depending on one's travel times and implementation, I don't know how much of a necessity that is. The other factor is noting the more sophistication one has with their encoder, the more power consumption and computational power needed to get those results. Again, probably not an issue here, but I'm just making sure that is recognized. To sort that out, I guess I would have to ask about the implementation. Do these dash records run all the time regardless and at the end you simply take your clips off if you choose? Or do they activate based on an event such as a button press, etc to tell it to start recording? If it is the latter, then I would think it would be reasonable to use 4K. Regarding the comment about HD not having enough resolution to pick out a license plate and faces, I would think that it would, but I think the quality of lens and sensors would be an issue here. Don't get me wrong; I recognize that the more pixels one has for producing an image, the better definition one has. I guess I base this on the quality of cameras that have been used in the past for this work. Typically, many of these solutions have a better analyzer to know how to recognize these plates and such. Granted, it sounds like you are discussing your ability to see the license, but I note that people have approached this issue on their own: https://medium.freecodecamp.org/how-i-replicated-an-86-million-project-in-57-lines-of-code-277031330ee9 If you could modify the recognition part of code, read the coordinates of the image where the plate is, then have a camera system (like what one finds in cell phones for example) and have it zoom on that location for the read, that would be a decent method for handling it, but I'm deviating from the original purpose as you are stating you simply want the clips to be recognizable for a human and not bring AI in the mix. That being the case, I really think you would need a much better camera system to get the results you want, so I think you would be justified in passing over this system regardless (unless you can get a try before you buy).
ontheroadtonull
11
Jul 24, 2018
Looks good, but the orange details scream "I'm a camera". A dash cam should be as stealthy as possible.
First, you don't want something that would attract the attention of a thief. Second, in case of an accident you don't want anyone involved to notice it and attempt to change their story to fit the narrative of what the footage will show.
Also it's unlikely but someone involved in an accident might attempt to steal the memory card.
It's not meant to be a fashion statement, it's meant to protect you in case of an accident that wasn't your fault.
g_stuna
7
Oct 5, 2018
ontheroadtonullTell it how it is .... nothing but the truth
Recent Activity
I've played with h264 and h265 and there are some interesting results on the amount of storage that can be saved, and perhaps that helps. As the storage sizes increase with microSD, that gives one hope for the size that can be stored which results in larger video assets. Obviously, one could simply make a custom storage for such, but depending on one's travel times and implementation, I don't know how much of a necessity that is. The other factor is noting the more sophistication one has with their encoder, the more power consumption and computational power needed to get those results. Again, probably not an issue here, but I'm just making sure that is recognized. To sort that out, I guess I would have to ask about the implementation. Do these dash records run all the time regardless and at the end you simply take your clips off if you choose? Or do they activate based on an event such as a button press, etc to tell it to start recording? If it is the latter, then I would think it would be reasonable to use 4K. Regarding the comment about HD not having enough resolution to pick out a license plate and faces, I would think that it would, but I think the quality of lens and sensors would be an issue here. Don't get me wrong; I recognize that the more pixels one has for producing an image, the better definition one has. I guess I base this on the quality of cameras that have been used in the past for this work. Typically, many of these solutions have a better analyzer to know how to recognize these plates and such. Granted, it sounds like you are discussing your ability to see the license, but I note that people have approached this issue on their own: https://medium.freecodecamp.org/how-i-replicated-an-86-million-project-in-57-lines-of-code-277031330ee9 If you could modify the recognition part of code, read the coordinates of the image where the plate is, then have a camera system (like what one finds in cell phones for example) and have it zoom on that location for the read, that would be a decent method for handling it, but I'm deviating from the original purpose as you are stating you simply want the clips to be recognizable for a human and not bring AI in the mix. That being the case, I really think you would need a much better camera system to get the results you want, so I think you would be justified in passing over this system regardless (unless you can get a try before you buy).
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