Apex Legends Review - (AWESOMEGAME)
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Western Digital Elements Review 2019 - Why To Choose Western Digital Elements? - Duration: 0:43.
Western Digital Elements Review
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Turbo - Arcade - Review - Duration: 12:58.
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Ultra Luxury Coupe !!! 2019 Bentley Continental GT Road Test | Lobud Review - Duration: 3:31.
Ultra Luxury Coupe !!! 2019 Bentley Continental GT Road Test | Lobud Review
Ultra Luxury Coupe !!! 2019 Bentley Continental GT Road Test | Lobud Review
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THE BREAKER UPPERERS (2019) - Netflix Original Movie - One Minute Movie Review - Duration: 1:26.
the breaker uppers is the Netflix original comedy starring QE comedians
Madeleine Sami and Jackie Van Beek this raunchy comedy is also written and
directed by the same duo from New Zealand the pair played BFFs who run a
business focused on helping people get out of relationships for the right price
they'll put an end to any romance both women have a very complicated past but
it managed to put their differences aside and try to help couples in need
now I will say this film has a very different feel in comparison to most
buddy comedies but that was actually kind of a nice change of pace and I
really think this movie is gonna bring a lot more opportunity to Sammy and Bambi
the situation's they put themselves into are not only pretty funny there's some
of the most original sequences I've seen in a comedy the movie does Dragon parts
and it does take a little bit of time to get into it first but it's still
definitely worth watching overall the breaker uppers is one of the
better netbooks original comedies I've seen both Sammy and Bambi play very well
off of each other and make for a pretty great comedy team it's not the funniest
movie I've seen but it's enjoyable enough to put on if you just want to
turn your brain off and have a good laugh that's why I give the breaker upperers at THREE!
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2019 Bentley Continental GT Walkaround - Exteriors & Interiors !!! | Lobud Review - Duration: 4:19.
2019 Bentley Continental GT Walkaround - Exteriors & Interiors !!! | Lobud Review
2019 Bentley Continental GT Walkaround - Exteriors & Interiors !!! | Lobud Review
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Clindoxyl gel review in hindi|कील मुहांसों की दवा|muhase ki cream|muhase ki dawa| - Duration: 2:17.
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Bukan sekedar jam tangan anak biasa! - Review imoo Watch Phone Y1 Indonesia - Duration: 5:37.
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Review Bus double decker, agung sedayu group - Duration: 2:03.
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REVIEW: vintage dream furniture bedroom 🛏 💖😍 - Duration: 4:46.
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easy1up Review with Team Mansell and Babskenky - How to make money online? - Duration: 13:46.
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FO4 Review | Nhạc Trưởng ManCity - Kevin De Bruyne TOTY 19 - Duration: 4:04.
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2019 Bajaj Avenger ABS Bike Actual Review | best abs bike in india 2019 | Bajaj Avenger ABS | - Duration: 9:52.
Thanks you all my viewer ,friends and brother who encourage to do me this
I have used this more than 2 WEEKs AND 400 KM and giving my honest review. I have used in City as well as Highway
2019 Bajaj Avenger ABS Bike Actual Review | best abs bike in india 2019 | Bajaj Avenger ABS |
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Sony 35 f1.8 Review - The BEST Prime Lens for the A6400 | A6300 | A6000? - Duration: 7:40.
If I could only buy one prime lens for my Sony APS-C camera, even in 2019 I would still
buy the Sony 35 1.8 mm.
In this video I will give you a brief overview of this lens and show you what I think are
its most important strengths.
My name is Werner, I live in the Italian Alps and this channel is about filmmaking and GoPro.
There is not the one perfect lens that is optimal for all situations and needs.
Many things I say about this lens today are directly related to my personal situation
and my personal needs.
It may be that you yourself have completely different needs and that a different decision
would make more sense for you.
For this reason, I would like to briefly explain my situation before showing you the strengths
and weaknesses of the lens.
The region I live in is called South Tyrol.
It is located in the southern Alps and only about 14% of the territory is under 1000 meters
altitude.
Actually it is the perfect area for landscape photography.
Nevertheless, my focus is clearly on filmmaking.
I just want to capture the beauty of this country and spend as much time as possible
in nature.
For me this is a hobby and I am lucky to be in a position to film and shoot what I like
and do not have to earn my living with it.
This is another reason why my needs and approach differ from those of a professional filmmaker
and photographer.
Of course, this also applies to the equipment requirements.
I need equipment that is small, handy and versatile.
In most cases I want to film hand-held.
Only in rare cases I want to use a tripod or a gimbal.
As I said, my main focus is on filmmaking, but photography also plays a role.
It often happens that I film myself, especially to make these videos for Youtube.
I've been using a Sony A6300 for a year and a half, but most of what I say in this video
also applies to the recently introduced A6400 or the now very affordable A6000.
The 35 1.8 was the first lens I bought after the KIT lens.
If I have to judge a lens, then the following aspects are important for me: Which features
does the lens have and how is the build quality, what is the lens suitable for and how versatile
can it be used or do these properties meet my needs, how is the optical quality and what
look can be created with this lens, how do I like the bokeh.
The 35 1.8 is a very small lens.
It therefore fits perfectly to the small body of the A6000 series.
It looks very high quality and stable, even if it is mostly made of plastic.
The lens is relatively light and the camera seems well balanced.
In combination with an A6300 or A6400 you have a very small and light package that you
can take with you anywhere and that can achieve very high-quality results.
The first special feature of this lens is of course the large aperture of 1.8.
This wide aperture makes it very easy to create a shallow depth of field and thus obtain a
cinematic image.
In addition, a wide aperture lets a lot of light onto the sensor, which leads to advantages
in low-light conditions.
The Sony 35 1.8 OSS has an excellent autofocus.
Since I often film myself, a reliable autofocus is very important to me.
In combination with the A6300 and probably even more so with the A6400, the autofocus
works extremely fast and absolutely reliable.
A large part of the videos on this channel and almost all of the shots I speak into the
camera were shot with this lens.
I can't remember a single time that the lens didn't capture me correctly.
The autofocus is almost silent and can't be heard on video recordings.
The lens also has a focus ring for manual focusing.
It is a Focus by Wire and therefore an electronic Focusing system.
In general, you can focus very well manually with it.
However, the distance between near and infinity is relatively long - you need a whole turn,
which can make it difficult in some cases to pull focus manually.
On the other hand you can set the focus very precisely.
Besides the very good autofocus, the image stabilization of the lens was absolutely crucial
for me.
In most cases I shoot my videos hand-held and often I shoot in 4K.
Like the A6400, the Sony A6300 has no internal image stabilization.
In addition, both cameras in 4K have a problem with rolling shutter.
This is another reason why a good stabilization of the video image is especially important.
It's clear that there are other ways to stabilize the image, for example in post.
However, all alternative ways of stabilization have decisive disadvantages.
Whether an image stabilization in the lens is really necessary for you is up to you.
Of course, it depends on how you shoot and whether you usually use a tripod or whether
your main focus is on photography.
Personally, I wouldn't buy a lens for the Sony A6300 or A6400 that isn't image stabilized.
However, this has to do with my needs and because handheld filming is important to me.
The image stabilization is also probably the biggest difference between the Sony 35mm and
the Sigma 30mm 1.4.
What is the lens particularly suitable for and what is not.
35mm on APS-C corresponds to about 50mm on full frame.
It is often said that this is the typical field of view of the human eye.
The special strength of this focal length is that it is very versatile.
It is still wide enough to capture an action scene, an establishing shot or a landscape
shot.
And it's still good for potraits or close-ups without causing too much distortion.
On the other hand, with 35mm the lens is not a specialist for wide landscape shots, nor
it is a specialist for portraits
With an aperture of 1.8 you can achieve a nice shallow depth of field even at 35mm.
As you can see, you can make beautiful cinematic shots, which is very important for me.
The lens also has an acceptable minimum focusing distance of 30cm, which means you can get
relatively close to objects.
You can make beautiful B-Roll close-ups in this way.
Due to the focal length of 35mm, which is perhaps wider than that of a typical macro
lens, objects in the foreground appear a little larger.
But of course, this lens is not a macro lens.
Now I'd like to show you some examples of the look you can create with this lens.
The Bokeh is pleasantly soft and beautiful with the aperture wide open.
I would also say that the lens is really sharp, even though this feature probably doesn't
play such a decisive role in filmmaking.
Overall, the optical quality of the lens is very good.
There are no particular distortions or other major flaws.
Even the sun stars get beautiful.
Especially from Sigma there are some interesting alternatives.
However, these lenses do not have image stabilization.
But you can only decide for yourself whether this is decisive for you or not.
In a nutshell, the lens has the following strengths:
a good build quality and a size that fits very well to the small body of the A6000 series.
The combination of camera and lens is very handy.
with 1.8 a very wide aperture, which allows you to take nice cinematic images as well
as great portraits.
an image stabilization that also allows you to shoot video handheld
with 35mm a focal length that is very versatile good optical quality and a very nice and soft
Bokeh.
With this I would like to say goodbye from the Alps for today.
If you liked this short review, give me a Like as feedback and I will see you next time.
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Top 3- GIFTS FOR WOMEN / Holiday Gift Guide review 2019 - Duration: 2:22.
3 DIY Valentine's Day Gift Ideas You'll ACTUALLY Want!
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Lần đầu làm chuyện ấy | Review phòng quay tay cực đã - Duration: 13:27.
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The Curse of Oak Island S6E13 Review - Duration: 4:26.
Season 6, Episode 13 of 'The Curse of Oak Island' begins at Smith's Cove, where
a mysterious concrete wall was discovered at the end of the previous
episode next to the suspected slipway. Using his trowel, archaeologist Laird
Niven uncovers two rubbery pipes protruding from the wall's base, which
seem to indicate that the structure was made by 19th or 20th Century
searchers and not by the original builders as was initially hoped. Later, at
the Money Pit area, the team lifts and lowers the H8 caisson using the
oscillator, causing 24 feet of muck to collect at the bottom of the shaft. That
accomplished, they removed the mud and debris with the hammergrab and transfer
the spoils to a wash table, where the debris is manually inspected Jack Begley.
Charles Barkhouse and Dan Henskee discover a number of interesting
artifacts in the spoils pile, including fragments of wood, leather, and parchment.
Upon close inspection, one of the parchment fragments appears to bear
markings rendered in red and yellow paint or ink. Doug Crowell suggest that
the markings might be the remains of a stylized initial or drop cap of the type
used in illuminated manuscripts of the Middle Ages. Another interesting item
discovered in the H8 spoils is a fragment of what appears to be human
bone, evocative of the late 17th or early 18th Century human bones extracted from
H8 in Season 5, Episode 5. About halfway through the episode, the crew is
visited by Randall Sullivan, the journalist who has been tasked with
writing a History Channel-sponsored book on the Oak Island treasure hunt.
Sullivan remarks that he is partial to the theory that Elizabethan and Jacobean
English polymath Sir Francis Bacon is a man behind the Oak Island mystery.
As evidence to support his theory, he cites a passage from Bacon's natural
history book 'Sylva Sylvarum', which instructs the reader to dig a pit on the
seashore starting above the high-water mark to a point below sea level. The
implication is that Bacon was describing the construction of the Money Pit. A
closer look at this passage reveals it as a description of a supposed method
for straining salt water in order to produce fresh water. The first sentence of the
passage reads:
Bacon goes on to explain that
this method of water purification saved Julius Caesar in his Roman army from
thirst during the Siege of Alexandria in 47 BC. Later,
Randall Sullivan expresses his belief in the South Shore Cove flood tunnel- a
supposed original working, the existence of which Oak Island treasure
hunters have debated for over a century. In 1897, the Oak Island Treasure Company
poured red dye into the Money Pit in order to locate the head of the Smith's
Cove flood tunnel. The dye soon appeared on the shores of Smith's Cove. However, in
an unexpected turn of events, the dye also showed up at several locations on
Oak Island South Shore Cove. This discovery led the Oak Island Treasure
Company to believe that another flood tunnel connected the waters of the South
Shore Cove with the Money Pit. Eight three years later, in February 1980, Dan Blankenship
observed four circular holes in the ice about 700 feet off the South Shore Cove,
each of them spaced about 150 feet apart. Blankenship and his business partner
David Tobias both considered these holes to be another piece of evidence
supporting the existence of the South Shore flood tunnel, suspecting that they
indicated the termini of the supposed South Shore Cove box drains. Thanks for
watching! If you enjoyed this video and would like to learn more about Season 6,
Episode 13 of 'The Curse of Oak Island', please check out the link in the
description.
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Behringer Xenyx X1204USB Review 2019 - Why To Choose Behringer Xenyx X1204USB? - Duration: 6:16.
Behringer Xenyx X1204USB Review
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OnePlus 6T Review: Premium at an Affordable Price - Duration: 6:58.
The OnePlus 6T is OnePlus' latest flagship which aims to bring great features such as
an under-the-display fingerprint reader, AMOLED display and high-quality camera in an affordable
package – in an otherwise expensive phone market.
The design of the OnePlus 6T is extremely nice and high quality.
The device has a glass front and back with metal sides, giving it a premium feel, although
the glass on the back does feel a little slippy at times and it is also a bit of a fingerprint
magnet.
The front of the device features a "teardrop" notch to house the camera and the device's
display which comes in at 6.4" with a fingerprint reader beneath it.
Despite having a large display, the phone is still comfortable to hold and use and I
also think the teardrop notch looks quite good and that's all there is on the front.
The sides have a good layout with the power button and volume buttons on separate sides,
with the volume button on the left and power on the right so you don't accidentally press
the power button instead of the volume button and vice versa – this has been an issue
that I've experienced on some Android phones.
The left-hand side also has your SIM card slot, unfortunately, there's no card expansion
available so make sure you pick the correct amount of storage you'll need when you purchase
the device.
The OnePlus 6T also features a hardware silence switch above the power button.
This is something that I find super handy, coming from an iPhone as I think hardware
controls for silencing your phone are so convenient to use.
The switch has three different modes, ringer on, vibrate only and fully silent.
I really do wish that more Android phones had a physical switch like the 6T.
On the bottom of the phone is the USB-C port which supports fast charging and the speaker.
The phone doesn't have a headphone jack, which is one of the differences between the
OnePlus 6 and 6T.
There is a 3.5mm to USB-C dongle included in the box, no headphones though.
On the back of the device is the rear dual-camera array which I shall go into a bit more detail
later in the review.
The display on the OnePlus 6T looks great.
It's a 1080p AMOLED display that comes in at 6.41" and provides a crisp viewing experience
that also manages to get bright enough for the daytime and dark enough for night-time.
The display follows the body shape of the phone, giving it rounded corners and a small
cut-out for the teardrop notch.
As the display is an AMOLED, it features bright whites and deep blacks – giving great contrast
to content viewed on the display, colours are also well saturated, and OnePlus allows
you to select between some different colour profiles on the initial setup of the device.
The colours of the display also look great, with them being well saturated and vibrant.
Viewing angles for the display are decent, although when looking from more extreme angles
I did notice a slight green tint.
The display doesn't support being Always-On or HDR fully, but it does have support for
the DCI-P3 colour gamut.
HDR appears to work within the YouTube app, but not on any others at the time of this
review.
The OnePlus 6T comes with Android 9 Pie running OnePlus' OxygenOS 9 interface on-top.
Pardon the pun, but OxygenOS is like a breath of fresh air compared to many of the other
Android phones I have reviewed in the past.
OxygenOS' interface has been barely modified from stock Android, so it runs really smoothly
and fluidly.
Instead of changing the interface drastically, OnePlus has taken the approach of adding extra
functionality to Android such as the App Locker, Gestures and Shelf.
There are also two OnePlus apps installed out of the box, which is a pleasant surprise
in comparison to many other phones which seem to bundle as much of the Play Store as they
can.
Just like how you can swap out the navigation buttons for gestures, you can also black out
the notch bar if you want to, although I think it looks pretty good stock.
Like most modern smartphones, the OnePlus 6T can perform well and provide a smooth and
stable experience without any hiccups.
The 6T delivers a good amount of performance, with fast app opening and loading times, games
also manage to run smoothly and the 6gb or 8gb RAM make app switching smooth.
The 6T is powered by Snapdragon's 845 processor with 4 high speed processor cores and 4 lower
speed processor cores.
I would assume this is to help conserve energy and so the device would use the lower speed
cores when it is not doing intensive tasks.
Graphics are handled by the Adreno 630.
The device has a good range of connectivity options with Bluetooth 5.0, AC Wi-Fi and NFC,
which supports Google Pay – so you can make contactless payments using your phone.
The speakers on the 6T aren't that great and I was expecting them to sound better.
They sound very tinny with very little bass and I am quite surprised that OnePlus don't
use the bottom speaker for lower-end frequencies and the earpiece for higher-end frequencies
like many other Android smartphone manufacturers.
The fingerprint sensor isn't as good as the one I tried out on the Huawei Mate 20
Pro, but it manages to read my fingerprint most of the time.
One thing to note is that the display will go into full brightness momentarily so it
can see your fingerprint.
There's also face unlocking on the device, but it uses the front facing camera instead
of more secure infra-red unlocking methods.
The OnePlus 6T has a dual-camera array featuring 16MP and 20MP cameras on the back to assist
with portrait mode.
The camera does a good job of capturing the environment around it, with good amounts of
dynamic range for overcast days – which there are a lot of at the time of writing
this review.
Overall the images look decent with them all being correctly exposed and able to provide
good amounts of detail when zooming.
The camera app also has a night shooting mode which allows you to take a long exposure image
of around 3 seconds.
This worked well and comes in useful if you're looking to take some photos during the night.
The camera manages to shoot up to 4K video electronically stabilized with 60fps options
not being electronically stabilized.
The footage that comes out is extremely smooth after it has been processed, when recording
it looks a little shaky but once it is previewed in the Photos app, the footage looks great.
The front facing camera looks great, there's no annoying face smoothening going on and
it even manages to get a nice background blur going on sometimes.
The camera app is simple enough to use and has a pleasant interface for navigating between
different modes, the 6T also supports high-framerate slow-motion video.
The battery on the OnePlus 6T is 3,700mAh – which doesn't make it the largest battery
out there, but it also isn't the smallest.
It was able to get me through a day's use – which is browsing on some social media
apps, listening to some music and maybe watching some videos.
I'd say the battery is too small to go two days, but this is where quick charge comes
in handy.
Unfortunately, despite the glass back of the device, it doesn't support wireless charging
which is a big shame, but I suppose cost-cutting measures like that keep the cost of the device
down.
If you're looking for a smartphone that costs less than £500, the OnePlus 6T manages
to deliver a well-built phone with a pleasant software experience at that price tag.
If you are looking for a new phone or an iPhone alternative, I'd highly recommend the OnePlus
6T – I've really enjoyed using it.
So that's been it for this video.
Thank you to Vodafone for sending out the phone to review.
I will leave a link in the description if you're interested in taking a look or buying
the phone.
That's been it for this video, thanks for watching and I will see you in the next one.
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