PersonalAssistant-4x recording rod


The PersonalAssistant-4x was a consumer-grade recording rod manufactured by TaggeCo.. It was capable of recording high-quality video and audio using a visual-recording lens that incorporated a computerized automatic focus, zoom and light-adjustment features. The PersonalAssistant-4x could record anything in a range of up to fifteen meters.

The controls were easy to use on the PersonalAssistant-4x, incorporating one-touch and simple adjustment buttons. The recording rod had a small playback screen and a speaker which allowed the user to review a recording after it was made. Recording were stored on removable storage crystals, giving a total recording time for one hundred hours. A display would show the remaining time left in a recording, and the power cells allowed for two hundred hours of operation before they needed to be recharged.

The PersonalAssistant-4x was capable of connecting to datapads, droids, and computers through its integrated dataport. Interface ports allowed peripherals such as microphones and long-range imaging lenses, including those with sensitivity in the infrared and ultraviolet wavelengths, to be connected to the device.

The device could not record in a true holographic mode, but used coding that interpolated the data recorded by the PersonalAssistant-4x. Computers and holoprojectors then used the two-dimensional data and extrapolated it to display as a near-holographic image. The PersonalAssistant-4x cost thirty credits to buy.

Characteristics


The PersonalAssistant-4x was a consumer-grade recording rod manufactured by TaggeCo.. It was capable of recording high-quality video and audio using a visual-recording lens that incorporated a computerized automatic focus, zoom and light-adjustment features. The PersonalAssistant-4x could record anything in a range of up to fifteen meters.

The controls were easy to use on the PersonalAssistant-4x, incorporating one-touch and simple adjustment buttons. The recording rod had a small playback screen and a speaker which allowed the user to review a recording after it was made. Recording were stored on removable storage crystals, giving a total recording time for one hundred hours. A display would show the remaining time left in a recording, and the power cells allowed for two hundred hours of operation before they needed to be recharged.

The PersonalAssistant-4x was capable of connecting to datapads, droids, and computers through its integrated dataport. Interface ports allowed peripherals such as microphones and long-range imaging lenses, including those with sensitivity in the infrared and ultraviolet wavelengths, to be connected to the device.

The device could not record in a true holographic mode, but used coding that interpolated the data recorded by the PersonalAssistant-4x. Computers and holoprojectors then used the two-dimensional data and extrapolated it to display as a near-holographic image. The PersonalAssistant-4x cost thirty credits to buy.

Sources


  • The Essential Guide to Weapons and Technology

Appearances