@schoolpost2009

Hi Chris, Cheers on the CinePI V2 build! I really like the solutions you came up with for assembling / rigging you camera. Appreciate the showcase of the CinePI Project as a whole. Lots more on the near horizon for CinePI, stay tuned.

@MichelMorinMontreal

An excellent reminder of the origins of the raspberry pi: tinkering and creating affordable technological projects! This little camera is a pretty exceptional achievement; thanks for bringing it to life for your followers!

@skyak4493

The impressive part is that it worked plug-n-play!  That is the highest honor possible for an open source project.  
When I clicked on this video, I thought I would be in for 15 min of Chris expertly debugging only to conclude -better him than me fighting through.  
I like your mounting too.  Hand carve CNC -very effective.

@JeffGeerling

Stanley the knife got quite a workout this build! Exciting to see you play with CinePi. I hope to build my own little CinePi camera this year too!

@Apollo440

04:04 Nobody, and I mean nobody can make me as excited about what is in the package as this man can! Truly a marvel, thank you Mr. Chris Sir!

@perrymcclusky4695

If you had a better lense, i would have suggested trying to shoot a ExplainningComputers episode with that camera.  Of well!  Enjoyed your project.  Looking forward to your next video!

@Nza420

Excellent, Christopher!    I have a couple of C-mount lenses that have been sitting around for 20 years waiting for your video.   One is a Canon 15-150mm "TV Zoom Lens"...  woohoo

@dawoodjr

Thanks!

@TeeEllohwhydee

Can't wait to see what 3d printable cases/enclosures come out for this.

@ИванФаков-щ7щ

Hello, Hungarian resident here, "Csaba Nagy" is pronounced "Chaba Nadj" (ch as in chair, dj as in during). Happy to help, great video!

@trevorford8332

I'm always impressed by miniaturization, it's amazing what we can do nowadays. Although I wouldn't like to live forever, it would be nice to see what they can do in a thousand years.

@VeryUsMumblings

There''s been a lack of software to support the camera-hardware of raspberry pi 3,4,5. This suggests that someone has been working on it for  quite a while and it's good to see some of that software is finally coming to be. This looks like an impressive project and I wish them success

@brianwood5220

Loved the outdoor shots, Chris. It's a great little project. Thanks for sharing it.

@audas

This is absolutely fantastic - one of the most practical, easy and reproduceable ideas.
Thanks for your good work.

@wanyman

Excellent video. Very glad to see a new member of the crew working with Stanley the Knife...Poly Adhesive!

@RoboNuggie

This is so cool,  and so you Chris..... thank you!
And always nice to see Stanley out and about 🙂

@edwardharding5677

It is a nice contrast to see nature shots on a computing YouTube channel. There's just something about seeing someone who is passionate about technology also taking some nice nature shots! Looking forward to the Intel PC build in the next videos

@alanthornton3530

What a brilliant project & so nice to see Stanley in action.  I'm impressed with what you've acheived from the Pi HQ camera, the end results looked really good on my screen in 1080p HD.  Any camera (still or video) that has a small sensor coupled with variable lighting conditions is going to be a bit of a challenge, shooting in 12 bit RAW has the added advantage for more adjustments to play with.  My Sunday is now complete :)

@mattylamb658

If this makes the art of cinematography more accesible to all, then hurrah for that!

@MikeBBlack4Life

Having that quality of video to come from a minimal device is very impressive indeed.  Thank you for demonstrating that device. 👍🏿