The interface between, let us say, social media, and print, is a blue ocean.
Really the camera should sit on its support and point itself towards wherever the action is.
Its support should be a slender thing with a small base that can be put on counters and in corners, and clipped to sun visors, and it should be controlled by a remote. And Google had a thing you wore like glasses that took movies of whatever you looked at, and it was completely great and amazing, but it was incredibly high tech. A simplified version would determine where you are looking - you still wear it, but it just performs this more limited function - and transmit that information to the camera, which you are not wearing, so it's a form of separation of concerns, which is structured programming.
When yu're working on writing - let's say yu are lunching at Ikea and yu want to document some receipts - yu set the camera on its tripod on the table near yur documents, and it scans them. It's not that it converts them into some kind of abstracted file, it just looks at first one part and the other, sometimes close, sometimes far, and then yu get to assemble the images any way yu like, which yu do on the remote, which yu can leave in the picture.
I suspect that the idea that there is not enough physical memory for all this data is an illusion, a fantasy, and not the truth at all. The real problem is how yu are going to guarantee that yu see the images yu've captured again and again. Shortly after yu have captured a sequence of frames yu are going to want to review it, and label certain frames, and even assemble them into notebood pages. It's not so yu can throw out superfluous frames - there can be no such thing, there need be no such thing - it's so yu can find them again.
Everything, ever frame needs to stream directly to the Web. I mean, it doesn't need to all stream to the server right away, but if there's a connection to the server, video should be streaming to the server over it - one feed, two feeds, even more. These are your instructions. Follow them. Like Blogger, everything will persist, in yur cloud, almost no matter what yu do.