According to the search giant’s local arm, #GoogleMissKoNa is the first locally-produced 360-degree video. Users who watches the video on Google Chrome or on Android devices with YouTube app can change the angle of the camera by dragging the screen or using their mouse. It uses dual 1/1.1-inch CMOS sensors and can record 8K 360-degree video as well as 120MP 360 photos, which gives creators plenty of resolution for reframing content across YouTube, TikTok, Facebook, and other platforms. YouTube has updated its desktop site so it now remembers how users sort videos on a channel. Read more in our articles including "YouTube Releases #GoogleMissKoNa 360-degree Video for OFWs" and "DJI Avata 360 -- why it changed the way we shoot videos".
According to the search giant’s local arm, #GoogleMissKoNa is the first locally-produced 360-degree video. Users who watches the video on Google Chrome or on Android devices with YouTube app can change the angle of the camera by dragging the screen or using their mouse.
It uses dual 1/1.1-inch CMOS sensors and can record 8K 360-degree video as well as 120MP 360 photos, which gives creators plenty of resolution for reframing content across YouTube, TikTok, Facebook, and other platforms. YouTube has updated its desktop site so it now remembers how users sort videos on a channel.
Our coverage of YouTube 360-degree Video includes: "YouTube Releases #GoogleMissKoNa 360-degree Video for OFWs"; "DJI Avata 360 -- why it changed the way we shoot videos"; "YouTube now remembers your video sorting preference". Each article provides unique insights and information.