There's been lots of talk here at CES 2014 about 4K video and TVs. You can shoot 4K (3840x2160) video yourself, with the Sony 4K Handycam FDR-AX100, which gives you a completely new level of ...
If you need a further indication that 1080p is on its way to becoming the standard second-highest resolution for consumer video cameras, here you go – at CES 2015 this week, Sony is introducing a 4K ...
We assure you, the camera above is not Sony's HDR-AX200. While it shares a similar body, this is the new FDR-AX1 that leaked this morning -- a fixed lens 4K videocamera for prosumers, priced at a cool ...
Sony has followed the launch of its first 4K Handycam at IFA 2013, with a much handier UHD Handycam, the compact FDR-AX100 camcorder. Reported to be 74 percent smaller and 66 percent lighter than the ...
Sony is displaying a curiosity at its CES booth this year: a 4K Handycam for consumer use. Kept in a glass cage, the Handycam is a non-functioning prototype that no one at Sony USA seems to know ...
Check out our full Sony FDR-AX100 review. When Sony announced the FDR-AX1 Handycam last September, it was a 4K camcorder that was beyond the means of most consumers, considering all the pro bells and ...
Today at CES, Sony introduced their new 4K Handycam. Sony's push for 2014 is bringing 4K across your devices, and while they've had a 4K video camera for some time, Sony acknowledges it was a bit out ...
No question, today's Sony press conference was all about the 4K. TVs, media services and even 4K recording for consumers. The latter arrived in the form of a couple of prototypes. First off was the ...
I've been reviewing hardware and software, devising testing methodology and handed out buying advice for what seems like forever; I'm currently absorbed by computers and gaming hardware, but ...
Jacob Kastrenakes is The Verge’s executive editor. He has covered tech, policy, and online creators for over a decade. Shooting 4K usually means making a choice between getting a good price and good ...
One of the major themes at CES 2015 is that 4K is here to stay. The coming year will see far more UltraHD sets, far more readily available 4K content, and probably more new 4K TVs than 1080p sets.