![]() To be clear, I am not referring to the "super slow motion" mode in any way. This change, that Samsung has never recognized or explained, has crippled the usefulness of slow motion videos. 5 second snippet to see him swing and have the rest of the video at 1x speed. ![]() That is no longer possible because the Samsung video player software requires a minimum of ~3-4 seconds (of real time) for the slow motion part of the video. Say your kid is hitting a baseball and you only want his swing to be in slow motion and then you want to see him sprint to first base in full speed. This isn't a small tweak, the minimum is now upwards of 3-4 seconds, depending on the length of the video. With Samsung's unfortunate update you can still designate which portions will be played in slow motion, but Samsung has, with zero explanation or even recognition, instituted a very significant minimum duration for the slow motion part of the video. This was awesome for videos I took of my children because regardless if they were hitting a baseball, doing a science experiment, or whizzing by on a rollercoaster I could designate a tiny portion of the taken video to be displayed in slow motion. You could designate the entire video or just a tiny portion to be in slow motion. Previously, after taking a slow motion video you would be able to slide the triangles to designate which portion you wanted to be in slow motion. That feature related to editing slow motion videos. ![]() A year or so ago Samsung rolled out an update that crippled a loved and widely used feature across its camera line, including its flagship at the time, the Note 9. Over a year ago I loved editing slow motion videos using my S8 and S8+.
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