Ricoh Speeds Up AF With Old-School Tech

Ricoh’s new CX5 compact is virtually identical to the CX4 it replaces. There is one new feature, though, that alone makes the camera worth mentioning: “hybrid” autofocus.

First, the things that have stayed the same. The CX5 keeps the 10MP backlit sensor, the 28-300mm (35mm equivalent) sensor, the 3-inch, 920,000-dot screen and of course the same slim body.

Hybrid AF works by adding in a distance sensor to the AF mix. This assists the contrast-detection AF found in all compacts and — according to Ricoh — shrinks the minimum focus time down to 0.2 sec, whether you’re shooting zoomed out, or all the way in to 300mm. That’s pretty fast.

Back when film compacts first gained AF, they all worked this way, as there was no sensor with which to detect contrast. An infra-red beam was shot out at the subject and its return time was measured to determine distance. Think sonar, only with light. This, as you can imagine, was less than completely accurate – it could be fooled by including the sun in the frame, or by shooting through glass. It could, however, focus in the dark.

The CX5 has another “feature”: Super-resolution. This is software-based image processing that claims to enable “amazing photographs with high resolution” but which is little more than smart sharpening. Seeing as you can only shoot JPEG and not RAW files, this may actually prove useful.

Price and availability are yet to be announced, but as a guide, the street-price of the CX4 is around $300.

Ricoh CX5 press release [DP Review]

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Panasonic unleashes Lumix ZS10, ZS8, FX78, and TS3 point-and-shoot cameras

Thought Panasonic was done unleashing Lumix point-and-shoots for a bit? Us too, but apparently the compact cam fun isn’t over yet. Yep, in addition to the eight it released earlier this month at CES, the company has four new ones for your eyes only tonight. Naturally, we’ve got all the important details and few glossy shots below. Oh, and if that’s not enough for ya, you can always hit the break for the full press releases.

  • Up first are two new powerful shooters joining the ZS family: the DMC-ZS10 and DMC-ZS8. Like the previous ZS cams, the 14.1 megapixel ZS10 has a 24mm ultra-wide-angle and 16x optical zoom Leica lens, records 1080p video, and sports a three-inch touch LCD. The specs certainly impress, but Panny’s also hoping you take its 3D Photo mode seriously — the setting can produce a “realistic 3D photo” by taking 20 consecutive shots and overlaying the best two. Naturally, the images can be viewed on any of the Viera 3DTVs. The ZS8 sports most of the same specs, but cuts it down to just 720p recording. No word on the pricing on these two, but they should be hitting shelves in March.
  • Like its FX75 brother, the DMC-FX78 is all about Full HD. Packing a Leica 24mm wide-angle lens, the 12.1 megapixel FX78 can record full 1920 x 1080-resolution video in AVCHD. But beyond the recording specs, Panasonic has improved its 3.5-inch Smart Touchscreen, which basically allows you to control all the cam’s functions — autofocus, zooming, playback, etc. — with, well you know, just a touch. Like the ZS cams, the FX includes the 3D Photo mode. As you may have guessed, no pricing yet on this bad boy, but it will come in black, gold, and white in March.
  • Last but not least is the rugged TS3. Like the DMC-TS1, the 12.1 megapixel shooter is completely waterproof, not to mention shockproof, freezeproof, and dustproof. Yep, it’s as proofed as they come, and throw in the fact that it packs a compass, altimeter, and barometer and you pretty much can swap this thing out for a ton of other gear. As an actual camera, the TS3 doesn’t sound too shabby either — it can record 1080p video, packs a 3D mode, and boasts a 28mm wide-angle Leica lens. Nope, no pricing, but it’ll join the others in March.

Continue reading Panasonic unleashes Lumix ZS10, ZS8, FX78, and TS3 point-and-shoot cameras

Panasonic unleashes Lumix ZS10, ZS8, FX78, and TS3 point-and-shoot cameras originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 25 Jan 2011 00:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Instagram-Like Camera App Uses Game Center for Achievements

100 Cameras in 1 is like Foursquare crossed with Instagram. The iPhone app offers a range of effects for dirtying-up your images, and you can share the results via Facebook, Twitter or Flickr. So far, that describes 100 other iPhone photo apps. The gimmick of 100 Cameras in 1 is that you can earn achievements and badges via the iOS Game Center.

The app, by photographer Trey Ratcliff, actually look pretty good even without the Game Center integration. Add a photo and choose from 100 effects, much like Instagram or Hipstamatic. The effects can be adjusted with a slider, and you can actually stack various filters one after the other, each time getting another 100 options to flip through.

But the sharing part may be what makes this a hit. Or it could be, if it were actually more social. As it is you earn awards for using the various filters and features of the app. These clock up on your Game Center score-table, where you can battle friends, but surely it could be more interesting, with badges for taking a lot of shots in the same spot (using GPS) over a period of time, say, or mastery of night photography.

Still, 100 Cameras in 1 is yet another example of what happens when your camera also includes processing software and an internet connection. And I wouldn’t be at all surprised if Instagram, the current big daddy of iPhone photo-sharing app, got some kind of achievement feature.

100 Cameras in 1 [Stuck in Customs]

100 Cameras in 1 [iTunes]

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Phase One straps 80 megapixels to your camera, USB 3.0 for ginormous image transfers

We’re still trying to wrap our brains around the idea that a 80 megapixel camera sensor exists at all, but there’s already a second light-devouring digital back on the way — the Phase One IQ180, which technically hails from the very same company as the Leaf Aptus-II 12. That doesn’t mean the company simply rebranded its subsidiary’s giant CCD, as this unit’s got an extra half-stop of dynamic range, captures a tenth of a second quicker at full resolution, and supplements the standard FireWire 800 connector with USB 3.0. There’s also a 3.2-inch, 1.15 megapixel touchscreen with a pseudo-Live View for easy framing and 1GB of RAM to buffer the gigantic images you’ll be pumping out. Improvements don’t come cheap, though, as you’ll drop $43,990 in April at launch. If you can settle for a slightly lower resolution, though, there’s no need to sell your Lexus quite yet — the summer months will bring lesser models with 60.5 megapixels and 40 megapixels respectively.

Phase One straps 80 megapixels to your camera, USB 3.0 for ginormous image transfers originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 24 Jan 2011 02:22:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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iOS 4.3 beta suggests iPad 2 has one megapixel rear camera

“The iPad 2 has a camera.” We know, it feels all but certain at this point (even when it’s far from official), but perhaps we can expand on that quoted assertion further. Like everyone else who can laugh at Objective-C jokes, 9 to 5 Mac has been digging through the latest iOS SDK and found some data referring to K94, which it claims is the codename for the next-generation iPad. (For reference, the original iPad was K48.) Anyway, within that code lies a string reference to “Back Facing 1MP Photo.” Going further, the front-facing camera is reportedly VGA — same as the iPhone, same as the iPod touch. It’s unclear if the also-found “K95” files also included the the same data, or what exactly that codename might be, but if you’re the betting sort, feel free to say, “the iPad 2’s megapixel mullet is 0.3 up front, 1 in the back.” It’s still a gamble until Apple unveils it with a puff of virtual smoke on a presentation slide.

iOS 4.3 beta suggests iPad 2 has one megapixel rear camera originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 21 Jan 2011 13:03:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Tiny DSLR-Style Camera is Smaller Than its Charger

If you’re looking for a camera that it small enough to fit in a nostril but which still lets you swap out the lenses like an SLR? Or perhaps you’re in the market for a toy that can shoot photos at 1600 x 1200 pixels (almost 2MP) and take video so bad, and with such a prominent rolling shutter effect that it would make a Navy Seal seasick? Then you’re in luck!

The CHOBi CAM ONE is such a piece of junk. Barely big enough to fit in the SD-cards on to which it records, the CAM ONE shoots its 30fps 640 × 480 video in every movie pirate’s favorite format: XVID, in an AVI wrapper.

Lens “changing” is done by slipping a converter onto the front of the main lens, and you can choose from a 0/5x wide-angle, a 2x teleconverter (both $30) and a fisheye ($60). The charger that it ships with is amusingly twice the size of the camera, and the basic kit will cost you ¥9,800, or around $120.

This camera is pure novelty with one possible saving feature. It is keychain-small, and therefore likely to be with you always.

CHOBi CAM ONE product page [JTT via PetaPixel]

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Nikon rumor mill spins tales of manual superzooms this February and EVIL in April

Remember that patent for a manual-and-electronically-zooming Nikon lens? The rumor mill thinks it knows where it belongs: in Nikon’s unannounced CoolPix P500, an update to the company’s already-ludicrously-lengthy P100 that adds a 36x optical magnifying glass and bumps the backside-illuminated sensor to a full 12 megapixels of resolution. That camera will reportedly bow in February, but April is when Nikon will allegedly bring out the big guns — the EVIL, market-molding monster of a mirrorless camera it’s been teasing since last summer. Hit up our source links for all the scuttlebutt you need.

Nikon rumor mill spins tales of manual superzooms this February and EVIL in April originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 21 Jan 2011 02:44:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Superheadz create forest with Harinezumi cameras

Superheadz have produced a special installation using its Digital Harinezumi cameras and content created by over thirty international artists, including filmmaker Patrice Leconte, actress and singer Charlotte Gainsbourg, Harmony Korine and more.

Harinezumi no Mori was first shown in Tokyo and abroad last year and this updated version is on exhibition at Shower Room Factory in Shibuya from tomorrow.

This is how Superheadz describe the concept:

In a world where remixes and loops, samplings and downloads, Google, Amazon, and Youtube became our necessity, people have stopped watching television, and going to record shops and book stores. However, to experience Harinezumi no Mori, you just have to get out; and come experience the moment.

superheadz-harinezumi-no-mori-tokyo

The thirty-minute installation is viewable several times a day and each showing is supposed to be different.

We wanted to create something that you can witness only here – something inconvenient, over the top, painful, not portable, anti-mobile, anti-internet. The result was Harinezumi no Mori.

The “forest” (mori) is composed of multiple Digital Harinezumi films, collected from around the world, broken down and reconstructed. Showing on two hundred monitors the installation is promised to be a “spiritual musical”, the footage becoming “like uncontrollable creatures in the woods”.

FaceTime, PhotoBooth and Camera Icons ‘Confirm’ Dual-Camera iPad 2

A screenshot inside the latest iOS 4.3 beta from Apple gives further evidence that there will be both front and rear-facing cameras in the iPad 2. The shot, which is used to preview desktop backgrounds in the Settings app, shows icons for the FaceTime, Camera and PhotoBooth apps. PhotoBooth is currently an OS X-only App for taking and applying filters to photos of yourself.

The image is exactly the same as the current one except for the addition of these new icons, and the movement of the icon for the settings app to the last position in the list. Further, MacRumors has also found evidence of PhotoBooth filters within the beta, including “Thermal Camera, Mirror, X-Ray, Kaleidoscope, Light Tunnel, Squeeze, Twirl and Stretch.”

This would seem to be the clincher for expectations of a dual-camera-equipped iPad 2. It also means that I have just lost all incentive to buy an iPhone 4, now that the next iPad will do everything the iPhone can do, only without the pesky phone-calls.

FaceTime, Camera and PhotoBooth Icons Confirm Camera in iPad 2 [MacRumors]

Picture: MacRumors

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Samsung rolls out five new ST series point-and-shoot cameras

Samsung just introduced a slew of new cameras at CES earlier this month, but it’s now already back with another batch, which consists of five low to mid-range point-and-shoots in its ST series. Those begin with the $100 ST30 model, and move on up to the ST65, ST90 and touchscreen-equipped ST95, before topping out with the $230 ST6500 (pictured above), which packs a 16 megapixel sensor, a 5x optical zoom, 720p video recording, and the same touchscreen interface as the ST95. As for the rest of the lot, you can expect to get between 10 and 16 megapixels, either a 3x or 5x optical zoom, and 720p video recording on all but the ST30. Head on past the break for the press releases with the complete specs, and look for all five cameras to be available in February or March.

Continue reading Samsung rolls out five new ST series point-and-shoot cameras

Samsung rolls out five new ST series point-and-shoot cameras originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 19 Jan 2011 16:17:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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