Skip to main content

This stabilizer gives smartphone cameras auto follow, physical controls

A Kickstarter project is aiming to give smartphones three-axis image stabilization along with a handful of physical controls. The Vimbal S is a motorized smartphone gimbal, but in addition to capabilities like stabilizing footage and following faces, the gimbal also puts camera controls off the touchscreen.

Launching on Kickstarter today, the Vimbal S stabilizes smartphone video, preventing movement from three directions to allow for smooth footage while in motion, or to minimize vibrations when holding a phone.

The gimbal’s motor, paired with the Vimbal app, gives the smartphone accessory a number of different features, including the ability to follow faces. In the face tracking mode, the camera will recognize a face, and keep that person in the frame, following their movement on the motorized 360 degree rotating base. The developers say the feature works both when the accessory is used handheld or when freestanding, making it possible to record a video selfie without standing in the same place.

Vimble S Coming Soon

The Vimbal S, developed by the Hong Kong-based DelTron Technology, also uses the motor to automatically shoot 180-degree panoramas. The app also includes a time-lapse mode, as well as live shooting capabilities.

Outside of the stabilization and automated features, the Vimbal S puts several controls inside the gimbal’s grip. Without using the touchscreen, exposure, zoom, focus, and white balance are all adjustable using the handle’s built-in controls. The function button at the top-back of the handle adjusts the various settings while a shutter button sits at the front. Above that, a joystick controls the gimbal’s motor for composition .

“This isn’t just some fancy selfie stick, the technology we’ve implemented into the Vimble S sets your photo and video content apart from the mundane,” said DelTron Technology Founder and CEO, Rian Cheng. “Vloggers, extreme sports enthusiasts, travelers, or anybody else can use features such as our intelligent face tracking to breathe new life to their videos.”

The Vimbal S has an eight-hour battery life and a super quiet motor, the company said. The ergonomic handle is also designed to stand on its own as a mini monopod.

The adjustable mount accommodates a number of different smartphones, including iPhone, Huawei P9 and P9 Plus, Google Pixel, Samsung Galaxy, and others with similar dimensions. Bluetooth enables the gimbal to communicate with the phone. The device itself folds down to about 11.2 inches.

The Vimbal S is available for pledges beginning at $179, provided the crowd funding campaign successfully reaches its goal. The S is an upgrade over the company’s previous Vimbal X, which did not offer live streaming or time-lapse support.

Editors' Recommendations

Hillary K. Grigonis
Hillary never planned on becoming a photographer—and then she was handed a camera at her first writing job and she's been…
The DJI OM 4 is a smartphone gimbal with drone-like tracking
dji om 4 smartphone gimbal lifestyle1

With a folding design, gesture control, and subject tracking, the list of features for DJI’s latest Osmo stabilizer reads almost like the one for the company’s line of folding drones. Announced August 26, the DJI OM 4 is a $150 three-axis smartphone gimbal designed for portability, simple attachment, and intelligent recording modes.

The OM 4, which shortens the product line's name, is an update to the Osmo Mobile 3. The fourth Osmo stabilizer boasts several upgrades over earlier options, including new motors and shooting modes. Unlike the earlier model’s clamp-style attachment, the OM 4 uses a magnetic attachment for quickly mounting the gimbal to the phone. A magnetic mount with a ring holder removes the need to balance the phone before each use. Alternatively, a metal clamp can be used for a quick attachment that requires balancing, but the attachment piece that remains on the phone is slimmer. Both options are included with the stabilizer.

Read more
The Xperia 1 II brings Sony’s mirrorless camera tech to a smartphone
sony xperia 1 ii camera launch date xperia1ii lifestyle design man large

Sony’s Alpha-series mirrorless cameras are known for the best-in-class autofocus and fast continuous shooting, and those same features are now trickling down into Sony’s latest phone. The Xperia 1 II will ship July 24, with pre-sales beginning June 1, Sony announced today. The Android 10 device also borrows tech from Sony’s gaming and entertainment products.

No, the phone won't get a large APS-C or full-frame sensor like an Alpha camera, but Sony is integrating several key performance features of its camera line into the Xperia 1 II, like a 20-frames-per-second burst mode. That's as fast as the sports-oriented -- and $4,500 -- Sony A9 II mirrorless camera.

Read more
Can switching to an old, outdated smartphone cure your addiction?
how to set up voicemail on an iPhone

Living with a dumb phone for a week was revelatory for me. The experience underlined how unhealthy my relationship with a smartphone had become. I emerged out of it more mindful about the time I spend staring at a phone and the apps that I allow to hack my attention.

But while I enjoyed the simpler times -- albeit for just a few days, I did miss the comfort of modern apps. Plus, even though I was returning with a fresh perspective on a smartphone’s role in my life, it didn’t take long for those same apps to consume and intoxicate my attention again.

Read more