In optics, the "axis" refers to the line of symmetry through a lens. However, in stabilization and gimbal technology, the "axis" refers to the plane of motion: Pan (Yaw), Tilt (Pitch), and Roll.
Remote broadcast: multiple field journalists stream camera feeds to a control room. A director grants exclusive PTZ control to one operator for a live shot (token with 90s TTL). Viewers follow the operator’s framing. If an emergency occurs, the director (higher priority) preempts control; the operator receives a 3-second warning before takeover. All actions are logged and the video feed is tagged with the controlling user’s ID. live view axis exclusive
In high-vibration environments (a Jeep off-roading or a police foot chase), standard electronic image stabilization (EIS) crops the image heavily, ruining the field of view. However, a device utilizing Live View Axis Exclusive uses optical axis correction. The live view shows you the true, uncropped edge of the lens because the sensor is physically shifting to counter the vibration in real-time (IBIS or Sensor Shift). You don't "lose the edges" of the frame because the axis is correcting faster than the shaking occurs. In optics, the "axis" refers to the line