![]() ![]() *The WEARPRO Mic is not compatible with the HERO4 Session camera. This product is not waterproof, and does not provide earphones functionality. Open-air structure allows outside sounds to reach your ears, providing safety while recording in crowded environments.Included clip mounts enable use for webcasts, interviews, and music.Powered by the connection to the GoPro camera, eliminating the need for batteries or external power.Ultra-small condenser mic units deliver high-quality sound.Easy to use-just place in your ears and connect to the mini-USB jack on the HERO camera.Compatible with GoPro’s HERO3, HERO3+, and HERO4* cameras.Capture amazing 3D stereo sounds with the binaural recording effect.Ideal for web content creators and GoPro hobbyists, the WEARPRO Mic brings an extra dimension to action and location videos, giving viewers the sense of actually being there. Simply wear the ultra-small microphones like earphones, connect to the GoPro, and start shooting! The natural binaural effect provides a first-person audio perspective, delivering a hyper-realistic 3D sound experience. Here’s to more sounds of space exploration.Discontinued Add Impact to Your GoPro® Videos with Immersive First-Person Soundĭesigned specifically for GoPro’s HERO3, 3+, and 4 cameras, the WEARPRO Mic from Roland allows you to easily capture high-quality audio to accompany your videos. There’s that clip again, just so I can reminisce about when I had a beard and … when I maybe should have practiced a bit more on Push. Here it’s nice to hear that at a safe distance, in real life. I got the chance to tour the European Space Agency’s facility for testing vibrations produced by sound, so a sound system capable of reproducing the mighty noise you hear here (only at the equivalent distance of being strapped to the rocket). So it’s not just about corporate PR.Īnd it certainly reveals something about the nature of sound. ![]() It also inspires much-needed future scientists and engineers. I do hope that this inspires space program PR to allow other, more sophisticated recordings – yes, I’m packed up and ready to go to Baikonur Cosmodrome whenever you call, Soyuz.īecause space programs operate with public support, this sort of communication is important. The sound is terrific – not only of the launch itself, but the ambient sounds that put you in the experience of being there. That’s a rocket the size of which this launchpad hasn’t seen in some years – so you can bet it made a heck of a noise.Įven if you have seen the video before, they’ve posted an extended cut: (The technique is far from perfect, because head and ear shapes are different, but it at least records some of the way sound naturally reaches your inner ears.)Īnd, lucky them, they got to the top of Cape Canaveral’s Vehicle Assembly Building, where the Space Shuttle tiles were applied and the Apollo rockets were prepped, to hear the Falcon Heavy launch. The Sound Traveler is a YouTube channel that offers “3D” sound experiences using binaural recording, a recording technique that more closely captures sound the way it would enter your head. ![]() But hearing it is essential, too – and if you haven’t yet, you really want to hear the Falcon Heavy launch like this.
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