Vecnos’ Camera Makes Capturing 360 Content Easy. Too Easy
To simplify the world of 360-degree photos and videos, the company might’ve gone a little too far with the Iqui….
Last year was just about the worst possible time to launch a 360-degree camera—capture 360 views of you and all your friends out having fun! That just wasn’t 2020.
Somehow, Vecnos, a brand spun out of the Japanese company Ricoh, managed to survive the pandemic collapse of social life and incrementally kept improving its Iqui 360 camera. Unlike most 360 cameras, this isn’t an action camera. The company recently released a new version with more colors available, and, more importantly, a significant update to its companion app.
Over the Hurdle
360-degree content has yet to hit mainstream popularity largely because these cameras aren’t easy to work with. Unlike a video captured with a smartphone or regular camera, 360 footage needs to be flattened out before it can be shared online. The typical “tiny globe” spherical images are the most common form of 360 photos because they’re the easiest to share.
Facebook is one exception to this rule. It allows you to share 360 images your friends can pan and tilt to explore, but if you want to put your 360 vids and images on Instagram, Twitter, or elsewhere you’re probably going to have to edit them first. And let’s face it, tweaking video footage before you can put it on the web? That’s enough friction to keep most people away.
Where 360 footage has found a toehold is in the action camera market. That’s partly because the major camera brands in this category, like GoPro and Insta360, have released 360 cameras, but it’s also a natural fit. When you strap a camera to your head and point your mountain bike down a 30-degree slope, you have no idea what the story is going to be. A head-on view as you wipe out might be good footage, but it also might miss the reason you wiped out—the Sasquatch that was off to the left, out of the field of view of the camera.
If you had a 360-degree view of the scene, you could go back after the fact and use editing software to pan around inside that 360 footage, highlight Sasquatch, and then pan back to show yourself going head over heels.
Editing video is complex and time-consuming, and most of the software you need usually requires more powerful (and more expensive) hardware to run. Those YouTube channels you follow that make everything look professional, easy, and effortless? Those people do a ton of work—work the rest of us aren’t going to do just to share some 360-degree footage with our 20 Instagram friends.
Vecnos’ Iqui camera aims to remove most of these barriers by simplifying the process of both capturing and sharing 360 photos and videos. It largely succeeds at the first goal.
More Cameras, Less Distortion
The Iqui goes a long way to making 360 cameras approachable to the non-professional, non-action-cam-loving market. Perhaps the best trick is that this is probably the only 360 camera you won’t need a manual to use.
The design is simple and intuitive. There are three buttons: power, shutter, and a switch to toggle between video and still images. The only thing you won’t discover on your own is that you need to hold down the toggle button to pair the Iqui with your phone, but the app walks you through this.
The simplicity is nice, but the Iqui uses a proprietary charging plug. It’s not a deal-breaker, but it is annoying. Even worse, the adapter you connect to the bottom of the Iqui has a USB-C port on the bottom, and this goes into a stand that keeps it upright. But … you need to lay it on its side to recharge it. Why have a charging base to hold the camera upright if you can’t charge it in that orientation? By laying it flat, you risk scratching the lenses, and there are a lot of lenses to scratch.