Posts Tagged ‘megapixels’

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Nokia 808 PureView sample images: a moveable feast in 41 megapixels

Nokia 808 PureView sample images: a moveable feast in 41 megapixels

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What exactly can Nokia’s new wunderphone do? The proof is in the pudding… er, pictures below. Enjoy. Resolution junkies can get a full-size, unadulterated version of the picture above just past the break.

Continue reading Nokia 808 PureView sample images: a moveable feast in 41 megapixels

Nokia 808 PureView sample images: a moveable feast in 41 megapixels originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 23 May 2012 17:50:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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How many megapixels on the new ipad 2 cameras?

Question by Ralf: How many megapixels on the new ipad 2 cameras?
The new ipad 2 has two cameras. How many megapixels on each? Apple does not have this information on the tech specs. Anyone know?

Best answer:

Answer by ScσττRΛSC³
@emily: It has 2 cameras so you can use FaceTime. Much like it is on the iPhone 4 & iPod touch 4G before it, you could chat with whoever & if you wish to show them something around you, use the rear camera while still holding it towards you. People who have used FaceTime on an iPhone 4 or iPod touch 4G love the feature.

Getting back to the original question, the front camera is VGA (reso of 640×480) & the rear camera at least from what I could get on it so far looks to be only a video camera with 720p resolution (1280×780).

What do you think? Answer below!

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Mountain Lion, gadget confessions, megapixels, and more from The Verge Forums

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The Verge is home to a set of discussion forums and a community whose insight, passion, and knowledge blows us away daily. Check out this small sampling of what’s happening right now:

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Olympus unveils SZ-31MR camera: 16 megapixels, 24x optical zoom

Olympus unveils SZ-31MR camera: 16 megapixels, 24x optical zoom
Japanese camera manufacturer Olympus has just introduced the successor to its SZ-30MR compact shooter. The new snapper not only sees a minimal increment on its stage name, SZ-31MR, but it also keeps the same 16-megapixel backlit sensor as its predecessor, as well as an identical 24x (25-600mm) optical zoom. Though, the newcomer does get a fresh image processor, making the jump from a TruePic III to a TruePic V, thus bringing along better low-light performance, scene enhancements and keeping high-quality shots while using the zoom feature. Amongst other traits, the device is packing a 3-inch (920,000-dot) LCD, 6400 ISO and 1080p video capture at 30fps. Olympus is also implementing a new technology dubbed iHS (Intelligent, High-Sensitivity and High-Speed), which the company claims will produce sharper and more vivid images. All this can be yours for a mere $ 399 this April when it’s released, but if you want to know more before parting with that cash, check the pic gallery below and the PR after the break.

Gallery: Olympus SZ-31MR

Continue reading Olympus unveils SZ-31MR camera: 16 megapixels, 24x optical zoom

Olympus unveils SZ-31MR camera: 16 megapixels, 24x optical zoom originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 07 Feb 2012 21:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Hasselblad’s Newest Camera Gets 200 Megapixels From A 50-Megapixel Sensor


Hasselblad is known for high megapixel counts, but this is getting a bit ridiculous. On the other hand, the engineering solution they’ve employed to create that count is really interesting. Most camera makers, including Hasselblad, increase the pixel count of their sensor by reducing the size of the photosensitive wells and pushing them closer together. This has some benefits, but also drawbacks, one of which is a sort of pixel density wall that Hasselblad has probably been running up against for a while.

But instead of making the sensor bigger or packing more into it, they created a clever hardware-software combination that might give them a real advantage over the competition.

What they’ve done is mounted the sensor on a piezoelectric motor, which moves the sensor by infinitesimal amounts and takes an exposure multiple times. This allows the single-color pixel wells to be exposed to different parts of the image, creating tiny variations which, properly processed, create more detail and sharpness. Their final output is 200 megapixels, which is almost certainly an arbitrary number they picked, a target that can be reached in a reasonable amount of exposures (six, in this case).

You can output to a CF card, but they recommend attaching a hard drive, as the final image can be around 600MB. The need for multiple exposures makes the total shot time extremely long; 20-30 seconds are required, so shots of human beings are pretty much right out.

It was actually announced a while back but technical difficulties have delayed it for a while and they’re only now selling it. At $ 45,000 to start, these aren’t really in our price range, but advances like this in sensor and imaging tech occasionally trickle down, and I think it’s interesting enough on its own.



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Cardboard Pinhole Hasselblad Is Short On Megapixels, Long On Cute


So you want your very own Hasselblad, but don’t want to spend the $ 40K? Well, this is right up your alley, though some assembly is required.

It’s a functional pinhole camera, though the dials don’t really do anything and of course you can’t use the viewer. But it will take pictures on 35mm film, and if you’re patient enough to put it together correctly and store it high enough, someone might think it’s the real thing.

Kelly Angood designed the papercraft camera, and you can get the PDF here. Want a 120 film version? She’s got that too.

[via PetaPixel]



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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 silicon rectangle 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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Leaf Aptus-II 12 snaps 80 megapixels of awesome on the back of your pro shooter

You ever wonder how CSI sleuths can keep enhancing their images all the way until they see what brand sneakers the perp is wearing? Well, they probably had a pre-release version of one of these Aptus-II 12s from Leaf. This new digital back can fill a staggering 80 million pixels with imaging data, thanks to its 53.7mm x 40.3mm-sized CCD sensor. It comes strapped with a 3.5-inch touchscreen on the back, 80 to 800 ISO range, 1.5fps capture rate, and a mind-boggling 480MB max file size per image. Should you have the imaging gear to match up to such might, you’ll want to know that the Aptus-II 12 is shipping now from Leaf Partners worldwide with a price tag just under €24,000 ($ 31,387), or you could grab the 12R version — which features a rotating sensor allowing you to shoot portrait shots without having to turn your camera sideways — for €31,995 ($ 41,850). That’s actually pretty decent value for your money, considering you’d have had to spend the same amount on the Aptus-II 10 only six months ago — and that only had a measly 56 megapixel sensor!

Leaf Aptus-II 12 snaps 80 megapixels of awesome on the back of your pro shooter originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 21 Sep 2010 01:44:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Canon EOS 60D: 18 megapixels and 1080p video flexes its articulating screen this September

Well, what do we have here? Last we heard about the Canon EOS 60D it was just a twinkle in our articulating screen of a peripheral vision. And now it’s official — my, how times have changed. Here’s what we know about the 50D successor (with definite nods to the Rebel T2i’s feature set): the 18-megapixel DSLR has a single DIGIC 4 processor and boasts 1080p H.264 video with an in-camera movie editing feature, manual audio level control, a “flexible” (read: articulating) 3-inch LCD screen, an ISO range of 100-6,400 purported to be expandable to 12,800, and support for processing RAW images from within the camera itself. Look for the little photo shooter to hit retail at the end of September for just a dollar under $1,100 body only, or $1,400 with a bundled 18-135mm f/3.5-5.6 IS zoom lens. You know the drill: pics below, press release after the break.

Gallery: Canon 60D press shots

Continue reading Canon EOS 60D: 18 megapixels and 1080p video flexes its articulating screen this September

Canon EOS 60D: 18 megapixels and 1080p video flexes its articulating screen this September originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 26 Aug 2010 00:10:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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