Thursday 1 March 2012

'A revolution in photography': New £300 camera lets you focus AFTER taking the photograph

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"The first world" shoot first, focus later 'the camera has gone on sale -'. A revolution in photography a completely new technology that critics have described as the first

The $ 400 camera small 'light field' Lytro does offer takes every possible image at a time, "focus" especially in a movie shot click.

The technology inside is so revolutionary that Apple CEO Steve Jobs Lytro met to discuss the construction of the technology in future iPhone models.





When you look at pictures Lytro through a PC, mobile phone or tablet, the images are stored as still images, but are stored as animations - just to touch anything on the picture to focus on it.

The Wall Street Journal Walt, Mossberg said the camera was "a revolution in consumer photography, with more benefits in the future."

Other critics were more reserved, saying the lack of camera flash stopped - but most agree that the new technology was one to watch.

The heads of the camera are a Silicon Valley start-up of $ 50 million in guaranteed funds.


The idea is not new - but the first cameras "plenoptic" or "light field" were fourth the size of the lens arrays connected to high-powered computers. The Lytro is pocket-sized - and could turn the photography world upside down.

The 'focus on the images have already been taken - the camera absorbs "all available light in front of it, and stores all the information prepared to digest.

You can exchange image files such as Flash animations Lytro via email or Facebook - and once you or your friend has decided on the approach you want, you can save the image as a JPEG file.

Instead of one or two lenses, is a set of tiny lenses absorb all available light in front of the camera, to create what its makers describe as a "tableau".

Lytro sensor captures a wealth of information - not just the color and location, but the direction of each ray of light that flows into the chamber.

Software inside the camera that reconstructs an image '3 D ', where you can select what to focus. Lytro images can be viewed in 3D, without any conversion.


Mail Online

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