Lytro - light field camera
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- pinkfloyd0
Why not just take a sharp photo, and use a blur effect in photoshop on the areas you want blurred?
- aldebaran0
"In terms of photography it adds next to nothing."
What? This is a game changer and will eventually be part of every camera and photographers tool kit.
- jaylarson0
i'm curious to see how the sharpness, contrast, and bokeh works itself out after a few builds.
- NonEntity0
^
H C-B wouldn't (or any other photographer worth their salt for that matter).Anyone who is any good knows how to get what they want first off — as ever; in photography or anything else.
Seems interesting tech, but kind of geeky. In terms of photography it adds next to nothing. Being able to un-mess up an OOF snapshot or shift the viewpoint a few inches? hmmmm...so what
Which might be why they decided to pitch it at the consumer level — seems a bit of a lo-res, lo-quality, snapshot-friendly tool/gimmick.
- aldebaran0
Is there a photo of the actual camera anywhere on that site?
- pizzafire0
^ seems to be. but soon available to every beautiful, unique snowflake ... er, consumer.
- __TM0
same tech?
http://www.qbn.com/topics/642074…- AH! That's the one, I was racking my stupid brain for that tech. Thanks! (which is to say—I'd expect it is this tech)detritus
- detritus0
I kind of dig the sardonic tone they employ..
“This year, Lytro will debut the first light field camera for everyone. OK – you’re not everyone. You are a beautiful, unique snowflake”.
- pizzafire
Shoot first, focus later. Interesting, to say the least.
Click on an area of the image to "refocus".
http://www.lytro.com/picture_gal…