Showing posts with label Camera. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Camera. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Camera. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Camera. Show all posts

Friday, 30 November 2012

Samsung Galaxy camera now in India at Rs 29,900


Samsung Electronics launched its Android based camera in India that enables users to run Android applications in addition to doing the usual. Priced at Rs 29,900, the Android powered camera allows users to shoot, edit and share photographs and video easily and quickly through social networks


The new device, which looks like a camera in the front and a smartphone in the back, allows users to shoot, edit and share pictures with their social networks
The Galaxy Camera is a perfect fit for those who wish to shoot, edit and share brilliant photographs and video easily and quickly through social networks without connecting to a laptop or PC

The Galaxy Camera features a 4.8-inch HD Super Clear LCD screen, boasts a 21x optical zoom lens and a super-bright 16MP backside illuminated CMOS sensor for shooting high-quality images close up and in low light conditions

This device is powered by a quad-core 1.4 GHz processor for quick and responsive performance
The Galaxy Camera combines high performance photography features with Android 4.1 (Jelly Bean) and the freedom of 3G+ Wi-Fi connectivity.

Boasted by a 21x super long zoom lens and a super-bright 16M BSI CMOS sensor, the Galaxy Camera also features 'Smart Mode' technology; a series of 15 default modes and settings
Smart Mode gives amateurs the tools of the pros, with Rich Tone HDR mode, Light Trace for 'light painting' photos and features like Best Face and Best Photo, which help users pick the best shot

The Galaxy Camera allowing users to shoot, edit and share high quality images and video from anywhere, at any time through a single device

Galaxy Camera includes powerful manual controls with its Expert Mode, which allows for manual setting of shutter speed, aperture, and ISO
The Galaxy Camera includes a comprehensive set of 35 powerful photo editing features through the 'Photo Wizard', allowing users to make professional quality edits on the go

Saturday, 28 April 2012

Lytro camera ignites a digital revolution


Bringing revolutionary Shoot First, Focus Later technology into consumers’ hands. The first light field camera, the compact Lytro, introduced us to the megaray with its infinite focus feature, as well as an incendiary debate about the future of photography.


A New Way to Take & Experience Pictures
The Lytro Light Field Camera represents the most significant shift in photography since the transition from film to digital.
Lytro camera ignites a digital revolution

Capture everything:
Only the Lytro lets you capture the entire light field, which is all of the light traveling in every direction in every point in space.
Lytro camera ignites a digital revolution

Focus after the fact:
The first major capability of a light field camera is focusing a picture after the fact, something conventional cameras can't do
Lytro camera ignites a digital revolution

Focus after the fact:
The first major capability of a light field camera is focusing a picture after the fact, something conventional cameras can't do
Lytro camera ignites a digital revolution

Share interactive, living pictures:
Your friends and family will have fun exploring and interacting with the living pictures you capture with the Lytro, on nearly any device without having to download any special software
Lytro camera ignites a digital revolution

A revolutionary digital camera that allows photographers to focus their pictures after taking them has gone on sale.Lytro, which looks nothing like a conventional camera, captures data about the intensity and direction of all the light entering the lenses rather than recording a single version of an image
Lytro camera ignites a digital revolution

The information taken can be reorganised later with the option of changing which parts are blurred and which are sharp
Lytro camera ignites a digital revolution

The "light field" technology, which was developed by company founder Ren Ng while he was at Stanford University, is in some ways analogous to the practice of shooting RAW images with a current generation digital camera
Lytro camera ignites a digital revolution

The device records all of the light falling on its sensor without running it through processes such as colour balancing or sharpening and these can be applied later on a computer
Lytro camera ignites a digital revolution

"Light field photography was once only possible with 100 cameras tethered to a supercomputer in a lab," the BBC quoted Ng as saying.
Lytro camera ignites a digital revolution

According to the company, Lytro's image sensor is capable of capturing 11 megarays of data, whereas the feature of producing 3D images will be added at a later date. (Text :ANI)
Lytro camera ignites a digital revolution

Camera Details 
Technology
Lytro Light Field Sensor and Lytro Light Field Engine 1.0
Lens
8x optical zoom; Constant f/2 lens
Controls
Power button; Shutter button; Zoom slider; Touchscreen
Lytro camera ignites a digital revolution

Camera Details 
Display
1.46 in | 33 mm back-lit LCD display with glass touchscreen
Exposure Control
Tap on touchscreen to set exposure
Battery
Long-life Li-Ion internal battery
Lytro camera ignites a digital revolution
Camera Details 
File Output
Light field picture file (.lfp)
Light Field Resolution
11 Megarays: the number of light rays captured by the light field sensor
Lytro camera ignites a digital revolution

Camera Details 
Software
Includes a free desktop application for importing, processing and interacting with living pictures from the camera. It is built for Mac OS and requires Mac OS 10.6 or higher. A Windows application is in development
Lytro camera ignites a digital revolution

Camera Details 
Picture Viewing
View and interact with living pictures on the Lytro camera as well as any supported computer, smartphone or tablet.
Lytro camera ignites a digital revolution

Camera Details 
Light Field Engine
Version 1.0. This is the software that processes light fields to produce interactive pictures. Keep watching this space!
Shell
Ultra-light anodized aluminium structural skin
Grip
TPSiV-Injection Silicon Rubber
E-waste
RoHS certified
Lytro camera ignites a digital revolution

Shoot First, Focus Later With Lytro's New Camera Tech

Shoot First, Focus Later With Lytro's New Camera Tech 

Lytro Camera: Look Ma, No Focusing! (ABC News)

Lytro Camera: Look Ma, No Focusing! 

 


Friday, 23 March 2012

Nokia launches 41-MP camera smartphone


At the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, Nokia announced the 808 Pureview, a flagship Symbian device with a 41-megapixel camera. In addition to superior still imaging technology, the Nokia 808 PureView, also includes full HD 1080p video recording and playback with 4X loss less zoom and the world's first use of Nokia Rich Recording.

 
This is the first smartphone to feature Nokia PureView imaging technologies, bringing together high resolution sensors, exclusive Carl Zeiss optics and Nokia developed algorithms, which will support new high-end imaging experiences for future Nokia products 
 

The Nokia 808 PureView features a large, high-resolution 41 megapixel sensor with high-performance Carl Zeiss optics and new pixel oversampling technology 
 

n addition to superior still imaging technology, the Nokia 808 PureView, also includes full HD 1080p video recording and playback with 4X loss less zoom and the world's first use of Nokia Rich Recording 
 
Rich Recording enables audio recording at CD-like levels of quality, previously only possible with external microphones 
 
The camera will use its over-the-top resolution capabilities to "over-sample" the image you shoot, says Nokia, so that if you shoot at 5 MP, each pixel in the final picture will actually use image data from the pixels around it. 
 

The Nokia 808 PureView also features Dolby Headphone technology, transforming stereo content into a personal surround sound experience over any headphones and Dolby Digital Plus for 5.1 channel surround sound playback 
 


With superior low-light performance and the ability to save in compact file sizes for sharing in email, MMS, and on social networks, the Nokia 808 PureView makes it possible for anyone to capture professional looking images in any conditions 
 

The device uses a 1.3 GHz processor, comes with 16GB of storage and runs a 4" screen at 360 x 640, which is below HD resolution. 
 

Mary McDowell, the firm's executive vice president for mobile phones, said the company's engineers had been working on the product "for years" 
 

Friday, 2 March 2012

Lytro camera will change photographic industry


The Lytro camera officially launched, February 29, 2012. Bringing revolutionary new technology into consumers’ hands. The first light field camera introduced us to the megaray with its infinite focus feature, as well as an incendiary debate about the future of photography.

Shoot First, Focus Later With Lytro's New Camera Tech
Shoot First, Focus Later With Lytro's New Camera Tech

Lytro Camera: Look Ma, No Focusing!
Lytro Camera: Look Ma, No Focusing!

There is no caption with this photo, we believe this photo tells story by itself.
Lytro heads into production, readies for debut
There is no caption with this photo, we believe this photo tells story by itself
Lytro: The camera that could change photography forever

There is no caption with this photo, we believe this photo tells story by itself.
Lytro unveils its digital camera

Three Lytro Light Field Cameras stacked

Thursday, 1 March 2012

Nokia launches 41-MP camera smartphone


At the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, Nokia announced the 808 Pureview, a flagship Symbian device with a 41-megapixel camera. In addition to superior still imaging technology, the Nokia 808 PureView, also includes full HD 1080p video recording and playback with 4X loss less zoom and the world's first use of Nokia Rich Recording


At the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, Nokia announced the 808 Pureview, a flagship Symbian device with a 41-megapixel camera.

This is the first smartphone to feature Nokia PureView imaging technologies, bringing together high resolution sensors, exclusive Carl Zeiss optics and Nokia developed algorithms, which will support new high-end imaging experiences for future Nokia products.

The Nokia 808 PureView features a large, high-resolution 41 megapixel sensor with high-performance Carl Zeiss optics and new pixel oversampling technology.

In addition to superior still imaging technology, the Nokia 808 PureView, also includes full HD 1080p video recording and playback with 4X loss less zoom and the world's first use of Nokia Rich Recording.
Rich Recording enables audio recording at CD-like levels of quality, previously only possible with external microphones.

The camera will use its over-the-top resolution capabilities to "over-sample" the image you shoot, says Nokia, so that if you shoot at 5 MP, each pixel in the final picture will actually use image data from the pixels around it.
The Nokia 808 PureView also features Dolby Headphone technology, transforming stereo content into a personal surround sound experience over any headphones and Dolby Digital Plus for 5.1 channel surround sound playback.

With superior low-light performance and the ability to save in compact file sizes for sharing in email, MMS, and on social networks, the Nokia 808 PureView makes it possible for anyone to capture professional looking images in any conditions.

The device uses a 1.3 GHz processor, comes with 16GB of storage and runs a 4" screen at 360 x 640, which is below HD resolution

Mary McDowell, the firm's executive vice president for mobile phones, said the company's engineers had been working on the product "for years"