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Skycam HD at an ESPN on ABC–broadcast University of California, Berkeley football game.. While "SkyCam" is a registered trademark, the term "Skycam" is often used generically for cable-suspended camera system, and competing systems like CableCam (invented by Jim Rodnunsky but also a subsidiary of Kroenke Sports & Entertainment, LLC), Spidercam and Robycam 3D.
A widely used system is the Defy Dactylcam, which travels along the cable with a motor, and the Newton stabilized camera head [1] which controls the camera and lens. This system is for example used at the live TV broadcast of Major League Baseball, UEFA (football), track and field, concerts and ski competitions.
SportVU is a camera system that collects data 25 times per second. Its main objective is to follow the ball and all players on the court. [1] SportVU provides statistics such as real-time player and ball positioning through software and statistical algorithms. Through this data, STATS presents performance metrics for players and teams to use. [2]
Hawk-Eye camera system at the Kremlin Cup tennis tournament on 20 October 2012, Moscow. Hawk-Eye is a computer vision system used to visually track the trajectory of a ball and display a profile of its statistically most likely path as a moving image. [1]
Day 11 of the Olympics brought the final in the women’s 200-meter, knockout play in soccer and basketball, a shocker on the track and more.
Archives containing photos of helmet cameras have surfaced over the last decade. One shows Denver Broncos backup quarterback Jacky Lee wearing a helmet camera at football practice in 1965. [1] [2] A mocked-up helmet camera appears in the opening scenes of The Private Afternoons of Pamela Mann, released in 1974, used by a character for voyeurism.