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Stanford Researchers Developing 3D Camera With 12,616 Lenses

Written by Eric from http://www.photographybay.com/ on March 24th, 2008 | 0 Comments

The camera you own has one main lens and produces a flat, two-dimensional photograph, whether you hold it in your hand or view it on your computer screen. On the other hand, a camera with two lenses (or two cameras placed apart from each other) can take more interesting 3-D photos.
But what if your digital [...]





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  • Neal Andrews: Video is no gimmick. The inevitable death of print journalism means that photograohers will be combining still images with...
  • Alex R: I thought it’d throw a few of mine in for good measure. I mainly use a Gorillapod when I’m out and about in the city...
  • Doug Woodward: Thanks for the review. Very helpful — though I still can’t decide which camera is best for me — primary...
  • Ibrahim: Great post Chris! that’s really something we photographers need to consider… although i totally agree with you, but...
  • George: How much is going to cost the new 1D Mark IV? also people who had the Mark 3, how good really was this camera for wildlife...
  • Richard Eng: I agree with Paul 100%. In March of this year, I chose the 40D over the 50D, precisely because going to 15 mp on a APS-C...
  • Richard Eng: The BG-E2N is the ugliest piece of accessory I’ve seen from Canon. I know, I know, you’re not supposed to care...
  • John: Thanks for this: pretty much have been doing it this way with great results. The zoom in zoom out for focus though is a new tip i...