Spies Vs. Spies 720p
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Spy vs Spy is a game published by First Star Software in 1984 for the Atari 8-bit family, Commodore 64 and Apple II computers. It was a two-player, split-screen game, based on MAD Magazine's long running cartoon strip, Spy vs Spy, about the slapstick antics of two spies trying to kill each other with improbably complex and elaborate traps and weapons.
The arena is an embassy, constructed from a series of interconnected rooms laid out on a grid pattern. Higher levels have more rooms, and therefore a larger play area. As well as hand-to-hand combat (achieved by wiggling the joystick or directional pad left and right or up and down when the spies are in proximity to each other) the spies can place traps on the furniture and doors which occupy the playing area. These traps are triggered when a spy searches a piece of furniture for an item or opens a booby trapped door, resulting in a cartoon style animation showing the subject being shot, blown up, etc, and floating up to heaven as an angel. The game is an example of the broad "trap-em-up" genre, which also includes games like Heiankyo Alien (1979), Space Panic (1980), and Lode Runner (1983).
Spy vs Spy: The Island Caper (also known as Spy vs Spy II: The Island Caper)[6] introduced a side scrolling play area, which effectively allowed for a small number of very wide "rooms" (the action actually takes place outside, on a tropical island).[5] It also introduced the idea of traps being built from the sticks and coconuts on the island, meaning that each spy no longer started with a fixed number of traps, but must compete to acquire the raw materials necessary to build their traps. The spies must gather the three segments of a rocket and then dive into a sea where a submarine awaits them. However, only connected segments can be carried at any one time. The second installment also included more complex scenery and continued the dual-screen interface present in the first.[5] The game starts with the two players parachuting onto an island in search of a buried missile. As they search, players are able to build traps to slow their enemy's progress.[5] This game was going to come out on the NES in North America from Kemco but was scrapped because of poor sales of the first game on NES, but in 2009 reproductions of the game in cartridge form were released in both regular and black and white limited edition cartridges.
Spy vs Spy: Arctic Antics (also known as Spy vs Spy III: Arctic Antics)[9] was the third game in the series, and switched the location from a tropical island to the frozen wastes of the Arctic. The spies fought by means of throwing snowballs at each other and setting traps, which decreased their body heat bar. Tools the spies used included a saw which allowed a hole to be cut in the ice for the second player to fall into and lose body heat. Lost body heat could be restored by moving into an igloo with a heater inside.
The overall effect works well; without close inspection they look like cool, if oddly bulky, sunglasses from a reasonable distance. Face to face, your subject is likely be able to see the camera lens, so real spies would probably not use these for their covert recordings.
Here are some sample video clips. Keep in mind there is some quality loss when uploading to YouTube, even in HD. The first sample is taken standing still, while holding/recording 720p/30fps video with a Lumia 920. View both to gauge the video quality of the Inventio-HD.
"AOBO Hidden 720p Camera features a high definition 1280x720P video resolution. This hidden camera is the world's smallest HD camera which makes it the perfect camera and video recording or forensic tool for anyone. With its portable and hidden nature can record what happens at every moment."
This covert mini battery-powered spy camera video recorder records crisp 720p video to MicroSD card, providing a perfect covert camera solution. It features motion, voice and vibration video triggering modes and a built-in battery allowing up to 10 hours of recording.Please note: vibration triggering mode is not currently available.
Camera Plus on the iPad carries over the same gorgeous interface and brings a nifty Soft Flash option to make photos brighter! It also makes good use of the iPads beautiful screen to offer a customizable layout wherein users can change the position of the capture controls according to comfort. Camera Plus also does video recording in 720p on the iPad for those who need it. 2b1af7f3a8