Don't give up. Osmo 360 is actually great.
When I got my Osmo 360 a few months back, I was quite disappointed at everything it created: the photos and videos are not as sharp as I expected. The low light performance is pathetic. Basically most indoor video footage are unusable. I went to a museum and shot around 100 photos, and only half can barely be used.
Yes, I might have the same frustration like any of the new owner have. Dji advertised it as near 1 inch sensor but in reality I felt like I got sensors worst than my good old GoPro 11, which is only a half inch sensor.
Over the time, I used it on and off, doing this experiment and that experiment. And only now I see I was wrong. Osmo 360 can actually do much better than other normal 360 cameras, but only when you are willing to spend time and test out all the manual settings.
My 2 cents:
* In order to get the best resolution, you have to set the camera's ISO to less than 800 no matter what. Photos, videos all need to do it manual exposure. If you just point-and-shoot auto, you will get unusable footage.
* Don't be afraid of dark. Shooting in EV -1 or -2 is actually OK. You can lighten up the whole scene in the Dji Studio or other video editors to make it look normal. However, if something is too bright (like the sky) and showing purely white, there is no fixing. It will always be just white.
* Use 10bit D-Log M in video. This setting is like a magic bullet. Once you enable it, the whole scene lighten up a lot. Sometimes the EV goes from -2.7 to -0.7, and the colors are vivid. I don't know why this is not the default setting. It really deserves to be.
Anyway, the post is for every new owner of the Dji Osmo 360. Don't be discouraged by the initial images. There is a lot more to dig in and make great videos/pictures with this gadget.