Archive for the 'Digital Photography' Category

Hack Turns iPhone Camera Into HD Camcorder

Wednesday, December 26th, 2007

Hack Turns iPhone Camera Into HD Camcorder - Via Slashdot:

An anonymous reader writes “Monsters and Friends has just released the beta of Drunknbass, a new iPhone hack that allows the unit’s camera to capture video. ‘While the iPhone’s 2.0 megapixel camera resolution may be mediocre for a still camera, it is excellent resolution for a consumer video camera.’ A standard definition Canon digital camcorder uses a 680K pixel sensor chip (because a standard definition TV’s resolution is only 520 x 360), while one of Canon’s HD camcorders uses a 2.9 megapixel sensor. The beta presently allows 5 second clips at 10 frames per second, but the finished version will soon allow infinite recording at 45 frames per second. Video of Drunknbass in action can be found on YouTube.”

(Read Original Article - Via Slashdot.)

Hack Turns iPhone Camera Into HD Camcorder

Sunday, December 23rd, 2007

Hack Turns iPhone Camera Into HD Camcorder - Via Slashdot:

An anonymous reader writes “Monsters and Friends has just released the beta of Drunknbass, a new iPhone hack that allows the unit’s camera to capture video. ‘While the iPhone’s 2.0 megapixel camera resolution may be mediocre for a still camera, it is excellent resolution for a consumer video camera.’ A standard definition Canon digital camcorder uses a 680K pixel sensor chip (because a standard definition TV’s resolution is only 520 x 360), while one of Canon’s HD camcorders uses a 2.9 megapixel sensor. The beta presently allows 5 second clips at 10 frames per second, but the finished version will soon allow infinite recording at 45 frames per second. Video of Drunknbass in action can be found on YouTube.”

(Read Original Article - Via Slashdot.)

Hack Turns iPhone Camera Into HD Camcorder

Tuesday, December 18th, 2007

Hack Turns iPhone Camera Into HD Camcorder - Via Slashdot:

An anonymous reader writes “Monsters and Friends has just released the beta of Drunknbass, a new iPhone hack that allows the unit’s camera to capture video. ‘While the iPhone’s 2.0 megapixel camera resolution may be mediocre for a still camera, it is excellent resolution for a consumer video camera.’ A standard definition Canon digital camcorder uses a 680K pixel sensor chip (because a standard definition TV’s resolution is only 520 x 360), while one of Canon’s HD camcorders uses a 2.9 megapixel sensor. The beta presently allows 5 second clips at 10 frames per second, but the finished version will soon allow infinite recording at 45 frames per second. Video of Drunknbass in action can be found on YouTube.”

(Read Original Article - Via Slashdot.)

Hack Turns iPhone Camera Into HD Camcorder

Friday, December 14th, 2007

Hack Turns iPhone Camera Into HD Camcorder - Via Slashdot:

An anonymous reader writes “Monsters and Friends has just released the beta of Drunknbass, a new iPhone hack that allows the unit’s camera to capture video. ‘While the iPhone’s 2.0 megapixel camera resolution may be mediocre for a still camera, it is excellent resolution for a consumer video camera.’ A standard definition Canon digital camcorder uses a 680K pixel sensor chip (because a standard definition TV’s resolution is only 520 x 360), while one of Canon’s HD camcorders uses a 2.9 megapixel sensor. The beta presently allows 5 second clips at 10 frames per second, but the finished version will soon allow infinite recording at 45 frames per second. Video of Drunknbass in action can be found on YouTube.”

(Read Original Article - Via Slashdot.)

Decades of NASA photos, video coming to the Web

Saturday, August 25th, 2007

Decades of NASA photos, video coming to the Web: “

With the space shuttle Endeavour safely back on the ground, NASA is working on showing the world its photo album.

The space agency and the Internet Archive said Tuesday that they plan to scan and archive more than 12 million NASA photographs and 100,000 hours of film and video footage for free access online, under an five-year agreement. As part of the deal, the Internet Archive will host the media album on a new Web site, Nasaimages.org.

The two organizations didn’t say when the site will officially launch, but the project will presumably be well underway and public before NASA’s 50th anniversary next year. (The anniversary of space flight is next month.) They did say that the archive will feature more than 50 years of NASA history, including audio files, computer animations and images on experimental rocketry dating from as early as 1915. Archiving all of that might take a while.

The project is novel because it will finally give people a central outlet for viewing stellar photos and videos from NASA. That the space agency chose the Internet Archive as its partner is also remarkable, given that NASA has been working with Google in various capacities for more than a year. NASA has teamed with the search giant to develop Google Mars, for example.

After all, the Internet Archive, a site that offers access to digitized books and other media, has roughly the same mission as Google: making “all human knowledge” available digitally.

NASA representative David Steitz said that the project was no small endeavor, one best suited to the Internet Archive.

(Read Original Article - Via News.blog: Media (CNET News.com).)

Liquid Lens Can Magnify at the Flick of a Switch

Tuesday, June 12th, 2007

Liquid Lens Can Magnify at the Flick of a Switch: “An anonymous reader writes ‘German engineers have designed the first liquid camera lens with no moving parts that provides two levels of zoom. ‘Liquid lenses bend light using the curved boundary between watery and oily liquids. When the two liquids are held in the right container, the boundary between them can be made to curve in a way that focuses light simply by applying a voltage. Liquid lenses have attracted much attention because they are potentially smaller than conventional optics and cheaper to build. Samsung has already built them into some cellphones.'’

(Read Original Article - Via Slashdot.)

Fever Builds for iPhone (Anxiety Too)

Wednesday, June 6th, 2007

Fever Builds for iPhone (Anxiety Too): SAN FRANCISCO, June 3 — During an onscreen demonstration of the iPhone in Apple’s sprawling retail store here recently, an employee, clad in a black T-shirt, of course, surprised a potential customer.

Nonplused, the customer stammered, “You mean it’s a cellphone, too?”

Such is the spell that Steven P. Jobs has cast on the American consumer.

It has been almost six months since Mr. Jobs, the world’s consummate salesman, introduced the iPhone as the Ronco Veg-O-Matic for the Internet era. Tongue only partly in cheek, Mr. Jobs promised that Apple’s entry into the cellular handset market would be a better phone, Web browser and music player.

Mr. Jobs succeeded in building expectations for what some have called “the God machine.” The bar-of-soap-size phone is being coveted as a talisman for a digital age, and iPhone hysteria is beginning to reach levels usually reserved for video-game machines at Christmas.

Although the phones are expected to cost as much as $600 when they go on sale at Apple and AT&T stores later this month, each company has received more than a million inquiries about the product’s availability. Apple disclosed in television commercials Sunday night that the phone would be released June 29.

Further evidence that expectations have been wound up to a fever pitch: the phones, or promises to deliver a phone, are already on sale on eBay for $830. A pundit as unlikely as Arianna Huffington sought out Mr. Jobs directly for advice on being the first to score a phone. (He told her to go to an AT&T store.)

Last week, during an appearance at a technology industry conference in Southern California, Mr. Jobs teased the audience by briefly pulling an iPhone out of his jeans pocket and immediately slipping it back out of sight.

(Read Original Article - Via NYT > Technology.)