Computer Active (UK)

Panasonicn­ic HC-WX970 A 4K video camerara from the future

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You could be forgiven for thinking 4K was just the latest way to sell us all an expensive new telly. Do we really need four timesimes as many pixels as HD? In short, no. But when you watch old pre-hd recordings,ngs, be honest: they do look a bit fuzzy now. The more detailil you can capture, the more future-tureproof your home videos willwill be.

And 4K has a new benefit:efit: the resolution is so high (eightht megapixels to be precise) that a single frame is as sharp as a high-h-qualityal phphoto. 4K camcorders like the WX970 help you take advantage of that. You are paying extra for 4K, but you’re getting it in a compact unit with lots of features that make it easy to use. Even profession­al film-makers will envy its light weight and built-in stabilisat­ion, which lets you point it anywhere and get a steady shot.

The 20x optical zoom means you can get much closer and retain the same image quality. The Leica lens has a fast f/1.8 aperture (falling to f/3.6 as you zoom in), which in plain English means it gathers lots of light. Combined with useful manual options, the lens gives you real control over depth of field, if you want to get arty. If you just want to point and shoot, the WX970 does that too. At any time, you can hit the separate

camera button to take a still shot. That gives you two ways to preserve your memories, but the WX970 doesn’t stop there. On the edge of the flip-out LCD screen is a miniature camera. You can adjust this to point at yourself or something else, and record it at the same time. The second image appears in the corner of your frame. It feels rather odd, but we do like the idea of getting two viewpoints simultaneo­usly.

Consumer cameras don’t cope well with very bright and very dark areas in the same scene. They deal with this by over-exposing, meaning the lightest areas get ‘blown out’. That’s why the sky in home videos is often white. The WX970’S HDR option brings some detail back to highlights and shadows, without making things look artificial. It does this by reducing the resolution from 4K to Full HD. The same trick is used to get 4x slow-motion recording (120 frames per second), or 8x with some digital enhancemen­t.

There’s no viewfinder, but the LCD is reasonably clear. You can also control the camera over Wi-fi using a mobile app; there’s a delay between what you see and what’s recording, but it’s a useful option. Moving to 4K at this early stage in the life of th the technology does bring some prob problems. You can play back 4K reco recordings straight from the ca camera’s microhdmi port to an HD HDTV or monitor, even if it do doesn’t support 4K. But just one ho hour of video will fill a 32GB SD card. For long-term storage, consider buying a 4TB external hard drive for about £100 – that’s 124 hours. Editing is another area of concern. Some consumer software doesn’t handle 4K yet, and even if it can, your PC may struggle. So you might first have to make a copy of your footage at reduced resolution. Alternativ­ely, you can opt to record in Full HD (1080p) to produce much smaller files.

Although the video modes offered by cameras with interchang­eable lens offer more creative potential, you can’t beat a camcorder for simple, flexible shooting. The WX970 will last you a good while, and let you create home movies that will look sharp and feel fresh long into the future. It’s overpriced, however, compared with the VX870, which lacks the secondary camera but deserves serious considerat­ion.

It lets you create home movies that will look sharp and fresh long into the future

VERDICT: It’s still not perfect, but at this price the Paperwhite is our new favourite e-reader – just

★★★★★

ALTERNATIV­E: Kobo Glo HD £110 This slightly smaller reader is also excellent. While the Paperwhite is linked to Amazon’s Kindle Store, the Glo uses generic EPUB and EPUB3 books from other sellers

AUTUMN 2015

Acer is releasing a range of ‘Cloudbooks’ running Windows 10. These light, cheap laptops are designed ed mostly to be used for web browsing, rivalling Google’s Chromebook­s.

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