Casio – New EXILIM series digital camera “EX-TR15″ – For those who care a lot to look beautiful in photos – Only 3,000 cameras will be available

Casio - New EXILIM series digital camera "EX-TR15" - For those who wants to look beautiful in photos - Only 3,000 cameras will be available

Casio is going to release New EXILIM series digital camera “EX-TR15″ in a limited quantity – 3,000 cameras ONLY.

“EX-TR15″ is definitely for someone who cares a lot to look beautiful in photos and likes to take a photo of yourself.

It added new “skin-whitening” mode to the existing make-up function so that you can brighten up your face and give your skin a glow. Also, to make it easier to take a self-shot, the camera frame includes a shutter-release button.

“EX-TR15″ has “EXILIM Engine HS Ver.3″ with mixture of high-speed image processing technology and high-speed shooting technology built-in. The display screen features 3.0 inch TFT color LCD (921,600 dots).

Size: 128.9×61.6×14.9mm
Weight: 149g
Lens: F2.8 lens, Focal length: 3.8mm
Effective pixels: 12.1 mega pixels
Image sensor: 1/2.3inch CMOS image sensor, 12.76 mega pixels

Sony – Action Cam “HDR-AS15″ – Chosen as the official camera of The Isle of Man TT Race 2013 – Released a dynamic video taken with “HDR-AS15″ on Youtube

Sony - Action Cam "HDR-AS15" - Chosen as the official camera of The Isle of Man TT Race 2013 - Released a dynamic video taken with "HDR-AS15" on Youtube

Sony’s Action Cam digital video camera recorder “HDR-AS15″ was chosen as the official camera of The Isle of Man TT Race 2013, which is a famous international motorcycling event, and Sony just released a video that was taken during the race with “HDR-AS15″ on Youtube.

Action Cam digital video camera recorder “HDR-AS15″ was released on last October. It has a small, lightweight body (90g, 24.5mmx47mmx82mm), and it’s a waterproof, dustproof, and shockproof camera with built-in image stabilization, which makes it the best to use for outdoor activities.

Because of Sony’s Exmor R CMOS image sensor (total pixels: 16.8 mega pixel) and the ultra-wide angel Carl Zeiss Tessar lens built-in, “HDR-AS15″ is capable of shooting clear full HD video in dark situations.

Price: ¥29,800

Samsung unveils 20-megapixel WB110 bridge camera with 26x optical zoom

Samsung unveils 20megapixel WB110 bridge camera with 26x optical zoom

While its mostly been busy blurring the lines between smartphone and camera lately, Samsung’s still churning out regular shooters as well. Case in point: it just launched the WB110, a 20-megapixel successor to last year’s 16-megapixel model packing the same 26x optical zoom. That’s far from superzooms like Nikon’s 42x P520, but Samsung’s model does go a touch wider with a 35mm equivalent range of 22.3mm to 580mm. Other highlights include 720p AVC/H.264 video, 3,200 max ISO, Smart Auto mode to aid in tricky still and movie exposures, a pop-up flash and a 3-inch HVGA (480 x 360) display. None of those specs will set the world on fire, so hopefully the price won’t burn your wallet once Samsung gets around to announcing it. There’s no date for availability either, but the rest of the story’s in the PR after the break.

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Pentax – PENTAX K-01 Lens Kit White x Blue – Special color model will be added to PENTAX K-01 series designed by a internationally famous industrial designer Marc Newson

Pentax - PENTAX K-01 Lens Kit White x Blue - Special color model will be added to PENTAX K-01 series designed by a internationally famous industrial designer Marc Newson

Pentax is going to release “PENTAX K-01 Lens Kit White x Blue” on July 25, which is a special color model of their digital single-lens reflex camera “PENTAX K-01″ designed by a world-famous industrial designer Marc Newson.

For “PENTAX K-01 Lens Kit White x Blue”, he also designed the color and the accompanying thin fixed focal length lens “smc PENTAX-DA 40mmF2.8 XS”.

The regular models of “PENTAX K-01″ have been already discontinued in Japan.

PENTAX K-01

Size: 121 x 79 x 59 mm
Weight: 480 g
Image sensor: 23.7mm×15.7mm size CMOS (1.649 million pixels)
Effective pixels: 1.628 million pixels
Monitor: 3.0inch TFT color LCD (0.921 million dots)

smc PENTAX-DA 40mmF2.8 XS

Focal length: 40mm (Equivalent to 61mm in 35mm format)
Min Aperture: f22
Max Aperture: f2.8
Size: 62.9 x 9.2 mm
Weight: 52 g

Vine Adds New Tools for 6-Second Auteurs

Vine Adds New Tools for 6-Second Auteurs

Vine has just added some new features. The camera tools have been improved, and discovery of interesting clips inside the app has been made easier.

    

An Army of Beatboxing Cameras Is One Expensively Awesome Drum Kit

As far as entry costs go, a drum kit can be a little expensive compared to a beater guitar or bass. This Nikon shutter percussion symphony takes it to a whole new multi-thousand-dollar level.

Read more…

    

No jail time for Olympus bosses who committed $1.7 billion accounting fraud

No jail time for Olympus execs who committed $17 billion accounting fraud

You might think a harmless white collar crime would escape the wheels of justice. After all, what’s a little $1.7 billion accounting scandal in the grand scheme of things? As it turns out, you wouldn’t be far wrong: none of the three senior figures sentenced in Japan today for falsifying Olympus Corp.’s financial accounts have been sent to jail. Former Chairman Tsuyoshi Kikukawa received a three-year suspended sentence, in light of the fact that he didn’t make the original decision to hide the firm’s financial losses, while a former executive VP and a former auditing officer also got suspended sentences after making similar defenses. The company itself was fined $7 million.

Meanwhile, the two men accused of starting the fraud, former presidents Masatoshi Kishimoto and Toshiro Shimoyama, have escaped all charges because, as reported by Kyodo News a couple of months ago, too much time has elapsed since the original crime. Oh well. If there’s any upside to this sorry saga, we guess it’s the fact that the whistleblower who lost his job after exposing the scandal, former CEO Michael Woodford, eventually saw some restitution.

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Source: Bloomberg

Carl Zeiss no more: classic nomenclature gets short

This week the team at ZEISS have announced that they’ll no longer be branding their lens family with the name of their founder. Though we’re not sure how Carl will look upon this decision himself, we’ll light a flash bulb in this two-word brand’s memory for sure. Carl Zeiss AG and ZEISS will move forward with the one dominant word from here on in – and a history of the brand has been recounted by the company as well, splits and reformation and all.

Screenshot_6

What we’ve got here are a couple of images of some lovely ZEISS lenses that are becoming ZEISS-ised in name. You’ll find the technology behind these amalgamations of plastic, metal, and glass to be the same – it’s just the power of the name that’s being updated. And it’s certainly not the first time this sort of thing has happened with the company.

As spoken of by ZEISS this week in a bit of a celebratory gesture for the update, the brand as well as the logo has made some major change-ups over the years.

The big news here is that the lenses made by the company – microsopes, eyeglass lenses, measuring machines, binoculars, and of course camera lenses – will all be working with ZEISS where they’d otherwise be including the name Carl.

“Throughout the company, the label ZEISS can be found on products in most markets and product areas. The lenses have for the most part been the exception here for historical reasons. The decision to also label all lenses “ZEISS” with immediate effect provides an opportunity to retell the history of the brand name.”

You’ll know the name Carl Zeiss if you’re a smartphone fan from such recent gems as the Nokia PureView brand lineup and the Nokia 808 PureView, the first and most stand-out entry from the pack. You’ll also see the Carl Zeiss two-name brand on the Nokia Lumia 720, the larger (yet smaller) Nokia Lumia 925, and essentially every Lumia in-between.

nokia_808_pureview_lenses_sg_3-580x400

Masses of Sony cameras work with the Carl Zeiss brand – and have been making a transition for some time, as well. The camera you’re seeing here is the Sony CyberShot RX100 II, working with both the Carl Zeiss name on its lens and the blue/white ZEISS banner logo below.

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You’ll find oddities in the history of this brand as well – the Carl Zeiss Cinemizer Plus video headset works with the Carl Zeiss brand on its lens (and a “Works with iPhone” logo on its box).

The grid of logos you’re seeing here comes from ZEISS in order – the original trademark of the company now known as ZEISS being the Carl Zeiss Jena label. This is what ZEISS calls its first “lens-shaped label” as well, this circular shape appearing throughout the brand’s history.

logo_overview

After a variety of separations including those in the Carl Zeiss Oberkochen and VEB Carl Zeiss Jens split saw such oddities as the OPTON “West Germany” differentiator. Carl Zeiss East and West were reunited in 1991 and in and around 1993-1994 the logo you’ll see today – blue with white lettering and a lens curve at the bottomn – were made real.

The first set of lenses that’ll be released with the ZEISS name are the ZEISS Touit lenses. According to ZEISS, some of these lenses were made with the old logo, the rest with the new.

“For production-technical reasons, some Touit lenses were produced and placed on the market with the label “Carl Zeiss.” Perhaps these will one day become coveted collector items. Both versions are original lenses and do not differ from each other in any other respect.” – ZEISS

Time to pick a few up? Certainly a situation in which odd bits and pieces collectors will want to jump on the ebay wagon – or head to their local lens shop. Hop to it!

Touit_Carl_Zeiss_ZEISS-622x622


Carl Zeiss no more: classic nomenclature gets short is written by Chris Burns & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2013, SlashGear. All right reserved.

Yahoo acquires video sharing startup Qwiki

Yahoo acquires video sharing startup Qwiki

If you thought Marissa Mayer was done snatching up companies and was ready to turn her focus internally, you were wrong. Clearly the CEO sees no reason why the company can’t handle both simultaneously. So, while the forgotten brands are shuttered and the merely struggling ones given fresh coats of paint, new products are joining the Yahoo family. The latest addition is bouncing baby iOS app called Qwiki: a standout from TechCrunch Disrupt 2010, at which Mayer was a judge. The startup combines Vine-like social video sharing with Zoe-esque filters, photo transitions and soundtracks to create “stories.” After you’ve collected and edit your material, you can post your Qwiki (apparently the creators have a slightly sophomoric sense of humor) for others to see. Obviously the purchase is meant to keep Yahoo competitive with Facebook and Twitter, which have their own respective video sharing platforms. If you mosey on past the break you’ll find a pleasant little celebratory video from the latest startup to sell out.

Update: Unfortunately it appears that Qwiki’s servers are a little overwhelmed right now. We’ll add the video back when the service comes back online.

Update 2: And, the story of Qwiki and Yahoo is back online for your viewing pleasure.

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Source: Yahoo

Bullet Time goes home-made with a ceiling fan and a rocket

The term “bullet time” has been loosely applied to camera-based projects that take on what’s been made most famous back in the original Matrix movie and spread wide with film, television, and even advertisement spots before and since. What we’re seeing this week as a Hack-a-day project that takes the concept and makes it a do-it-yourself project. All you need to DIY is a fan, a dimmer switch, a GoPro camera, and some fireworks!

Screenshot_2

Of course the fireworks are optional, but what better way to demonstrate an oddity like this than with a controlled bit of demolition? The first video you’re seeing here shows how the fan and the GoPro camera were made friendly with a control switch. The dimmer here allows the fan to move at a speed that can keep the camera in business with its ability to capture video at high speed.

While this certainly isn’t the first time we’ve encountered this camera taking on an extreme mission, it’s certainly one of the strangest places we’ve seen it mounted. GoPro is a brand that prides itself on being able to roll through extreme conditions and capture video from the oddest of angles – but we’d bet its intended use-case list never included a ceiling fan.

Next you’ll see the camera on the fan with the dimmer capturing a lovely 4th of July preparation in firework form. Have a peek and see what you make of it.

And remember – as it is with all DIY projects, especially when they have “hack” in the title, use caution if you decide to make it a reality for yourself. This isn’t the work of amateurs, no matter how rudimentary it looks. You don’t want a GoPro flying at your head at break-neck speed, no matter how awesome the resulting video would be!


Bullet Time goes home-made with a ceiling fan and a rocket is written by Chris Burns & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2013, SlashGear. All right reserved.