Hello SB,
Have you heard about this?
I just came across a video and looked it up online.
I personally would never trust my dive (and my life) to a smartphone app (I dive with a SW Perdix AI) but I can see the marketing appeal for new, freshly certified, vacation-only rec divers who only rent gear (and obviously don't own a DC) and still want to take photos/films during their dive trips.
I can only hope whoever is developing this product knows what they're doing...
Then again I've seen a lot of those rec divers renting their gear without DCs altogether, just following the local DM throughout entire dives, so how hurtful could such a device be to them?
Here's the video and some literature about it:
Diveroid housing turns your smartphone into a dive computer and underwater camera
Diveroid housing turns your smartphone into a dive computer and underwater camera
Published Nov 22, 2019 | Damien Demolder
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A Kickstarter campaign has already gathered over ten times is funding goal for a campaign that aims to produce a smartphone dive camera system that uses your smartphone to take pictures as well as display live data about the dive itself.
Diveroid is an underwater housing kit that comes with a mini dive computer and a app that turn the users smartphone into an underwater camera while using the phones screen to display dive information and maintain a log of the dive. The housing accepts multiple models of smartphone and uses a set of three physical buttons to control the phone. The app connects to the mini dive monitor and the smartphone and displays depth, time and temperature information as well as guiding the diver around precautions such as avoid decompression.
The app takes over the phone’s camera function and offers ultra-wide-angle, wide-angle, zoom and selfie shooting modes, as well as options to record video. A red-filter effect can also be applied in the app to offer real-time preview and recording that compensates for the loss of red at certain depths.
The housing is said to be good for depths of 60m and keeps a track of your dive so it can tell you at what depths each picture was taken. Images can be overlaid with data graphs and the whole dive can be shared as a logbook through the app. When you need to summon a boat the app can send a text message with your exact location.
The campaign page shows the Diveroid kit with accessories attached for lighting the subject
The Diveroid kit is available for $249 via the Kickstarter campaign but will retail from $418 once it is in full production. The first units are expected to ship in February 2020. For more information see the Diveroid Kickstarter campaign page.
Have you heard about this?
I just came across a video and looked it up online.
I personally would never trust my dive (and my life) to a smartphone app (I dive with a SW Perdix AI) but I can see the marketing appeal for new, freshly certified, vacation-only rec divers who only rent gear (and obviously don't own a DC) and still want to take photos/films during their dive trips.
I can only hope whoever is developing this product knows what they're doing...
Then again I've seen a lot of those rec divers renting their gear without DCs altogether, just following the local DM throughout entire dives, so how hurtful could such a device be to them?
Here's the video and some literature about it:
Diveroid housing turns your smartphone into a dive computer and underwater camera
Diveroid housing turns your smartphone into a dive computer and underwater camera
Published Nov 22, 2019 | Damien Demolder
Share
A Kickstarter campaign has already gathered over ten times is funding goal for a campaign that aims to produce a smartphone dive camera system that uses your smartphone to take pictures as well as display live data about the dive itself.
Diveroid is an underwater housing kit that comes with a mini dive computer and a app that turn the users smartphone into an underwater camera while using the phones screen to display dive information and maintain a log of the dive. The housing accepts multiple models of smartphone and uses a set of three physical buttons to control the phone. The app connects to the mini dive monitor and the smartphone and displays depth, time and temperature information as well as guiding the diver around precautions such as avoid decompression.
The app takes over the phone’s camera function and offers ultra-wide-angle, wide-angle, zoom and selfie shooting modes, as well as options to record video. A red-filter effect can also be applied in the app to offer real-time preview and recording that compensates for the loss of red at certain depths.
The housing is said to be good for depths of 60m and keeps a track of your dive so it can tell you at what depths each picture was taken. Images can be overlaid with data graphs and the whole dive can be shared as a logbook through the app. When you need to summon a boat the app can send a text message with your exact location.
The campaign page shows the Diveroid kit with accessories attached for lighting the subject
The Diveroid kit is available for $249 via the Kickstarter campaign but will retail from $418 once it is in full production. The first units are expected to ship in February 2020. For more information see the Diveroid Kickstarter campaign page.