The crazy Chronos 720p 1,500fps camera got massive financing through Kickstarter!
The crazy fast Chronos camera managed to get three times the requested financing goal to start the project. You can still give your few $$$ at Kickstarter.
The crazy fast Chronos camera managed to get three times the requested financing goal to start the project. You can still give your few $$$ at Kickstarter.
The image above shows the new October worldwide system camera shipment data (DSLR+Mirrorless). If you are the kind of guy that like to see a glass as half full well the good news is that sales were almost as good as the previous year. Which after 5-6 years of continuous fall is not so bad.
But the glass is also half empty because 2016 will be again a year with worse sales than we had in 2015 (which was already very bad).
Source: Cipa
Interview: Hasselblad Asia featuring the X1D
The early Hasselblad X1D preorders are now shipping out (slowly) at BHphoto. In Europe they will ship out in 10 days at Calumet.de and at WexUK. I still haven’t found any official full review to share. I would love to see an image quality comparison between the best FF cameras and the X1D to see if there is really a major difference.
In the meantime the X1D got presented on various events in Spain and Asia. Here are a few videos:
Toma De Contacto by Photolari.
First Look by Keydrin Franklin
Tom Potisit had travelled the the North Of Thailand with the Hasselblad X1D
An Open Boxing video in italian.
Presentacion cámara X1D de Hasselblad en Provideo Sevilla
Tamron announced a new sensor (yes they make sensors too) that Exceeds Far Beyond Human Visual Capability. Impressive:
Tamron Co., Ltd. (Headquarters: Saitama City, Japan; President & CEO: Shiro Ajisaka), an integrated optics manufacturer announces successful development of an innovative technology, with support of Japan Science and Technology Agency (JST) of National Research and Development Agency, that enhances imaging capability far exceeding that of human vision, with critical consistency established between ultra-high sensitivity and wide dynamic range.
This technology is aimed at consistent enhancement of ultra-high sensitivity and wide dynamic range, which has been considered difficult in the past. The ultra-high sensitivity technology enables capturing clear full-color images even under an extreme low brightness of 0.003 lux, which is darker than starlight. The wide dynamic-range performance assures luminance resolution of a range of brightness in excess of 140 dB (a lightness-and-darkness difference of 10 million times).
Consistent implementation of these two technologies opens a new imaging potential that enables vision far beyond human visual capability.
Three key technologies – Optics, Image Sensor, and Image Processing – have been identified essential, and their effective integration has been studied for the new imaging technology.
Development of an extremely low-reflection technology to suppress optical artifacts that arise in ultra-high sensitivity and wide dynamic range, and optical focusing system optimized for imagers.
A proprietary low gain-noise, wide dynamic-range CMOS image sensor was originally developed.
Development of a digital noise-reduction technology that does not compromise the resolution of an object in focus or under motion, and a dynamic brightness-range technology that enables luminance resolution for an extreme wide range of low and high brightness.
Thanks Barry!
Quick update on the Leica M10. According to one source the Leica M10 will be announced around mid January (after the CES show).
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This news was first posted on Mirrorlessrumors. If you report the enws on other rumor sites please give us a proper credit. Thanks!
Years ago Sony patented a Full Frame curved sensor design for a fixed lens camera. They yet have to unveil such a product but in the meantime Toshiba and Canon patented such designs too:
The Toshiba patent looks like this:
The Canon patent proposes two variations. A fully curved sensor and a sensor flat in the center and curved on the edge:
A fully curved sensor would require the launch of a completely new system camera as the lenses would have to be redesigned. While the Canon sensor design with flat center and curved edges might work with current lens designs too.