The One X2 fits in your pocket. It is 46x113x29mm and weighs 149g. It has two wide-angle fisheye lenses, each with an aperture of f/2. They can record at a resolution of 5.7K at 30 frames per second (fps) at a bitrate of 100 mbps, which can be previewed on its spherical 360o touchscreen.
Standard, HDR, Timelapse, TimeShift (a time/perspective changer), Bullet Time (a visual effect that slows down time during an action scene and pans around a subject), and Steady Cam (a new ultra-wide one lens mode that shoots regular GoPro-style footage) are all video modes. They all use Insta360’s own INSV format, except for Steady Cam, which uses MP4. There will soon be a mode called “Starlapse.”
Specifications
- Image Sensor: 1/2.3″ 12MP
- Aperture: F2.0
- Dimensions: 4.45 x 1.82 x 1.17 inches
Where to get insta360 ONE X2 360?
The One X2 is an interesting 360-degree camera that fixes most of the things we didn’t like about its predecessor. It is now waterproof up to 10 meters, has a new screen, and has a bigger battery. It’s also fun, versatile, and great for making videos for social media because it has so many ways to shoot and effects. If Insta360 can fix the bugs in the One X2 before it comes out, it could be one of the best choices in its niche market.
Also, 360 cameras will never be good at image quality in and of itself. The 5.7K video resolution is there to give you room to cut into frames and pick your 1080p highlights. Also, when you use only one of the lenses in “Steady Cam Mode,” you can only shoot the equivalent of 2.7K video with a very wide-angle lens, so it can’t compete with the best traditional action cams.
In exchange, you get a lot of flexibility because you can record everything in a scene at once and change the way your videos are framed later. Insta360 also seems to have fixed some early problems with 360 cameras, like stitch lines that were easy to see.