Nachiket 'therapist' Mhatre, Jan 08, 2012 1559 hrs IST
We kickstart our video review section with Apple's flagship phone.
As you have already witnessed, TechTree.com is going through a major shakedown with a brand new website and all. The novelty doesn't end there. We proudly present a spanking new video section dubbed TechTree.tv. What better way to kickstart the section than Apple's flagship smartphone? Without further ado, here's a video review of the iPhone 4S - TechTree style!
Making video reviews, however, isn't all fun and games. Like they say - you can't make a Six Million Dollar Man without ending up with a few Frankenstein's monsters along the way. You see, our designated video reviewer Chandrakant 'ck' Isi had fallen into a vat full of starch, which explains why he appears so stiff in the outtakes. That version never made it to the final cut, but that doesn't mean we can't share it for laughs.
@ Nachiket and BADJAG, Excuses aside, it seems your guys at techtree have gotten pretty complacent of late.
Take a look at the relatively new site called 'iGyaan.in' and learn a thing or two from them. Thanks to the quality of their reviews esp. video reviews, I've become a regular visitor there and I'm quite sure I'm not alone looking at their youtube subscriptions and comments.
You guys really need to evolve and change yourself according to the competition.
Techtree used to be a great site for reviews and all once upon a time. It's sad to see Techtree going down without a fight.
and you don't need Michael Bay to fight for you.
It's an honest feedback from a regular visitor and a fellow tech. enthusiast. Take it or ignore it.
Very poorly made video. Did you give the video to a monkey to edit? The video is pillarboxed and anamorphic, the white levels are haywire & the motion graphics are simply terrible.
Thank you for the feedback. While I agree that the video needs more polish, but your anamorphic argument isn't applicable here. The anamorphic format deals with the manner in which widescreen video is stored on a 4:3 aspect ratio frame. In fact, there is no way to tell if a video is anamorphic just by looking at the rendered image. That is unless the video is squeezed horizontally, which isn't the case here anyway.