‘Shoot now, focus later’

Agence France-Presse

This is AI generated summarization, which may have errors. For context, always refer to the full article.

The radical camera will soon be available in some countries around the world

SMALL BUT AMAZINGLY TERRIBLE: the Lytro camera. Image from the Lytro Facebook page

SAN FRANCISCO, USA – A radical camera that lets users adjust the focus after taking pictures will be available in October at shops in Australia, Canada, Singapore, Hong Kong and the United States.

The move announced on Tuesday marked an expansion for the Lytro, that began shipping in March but has been available only by order on the Internet.

“Since introducing the Lytro camera just 6 months ago, nearly 400,000 light field pictures have been shared on Lytro.com,” said Lytro chief executive Charles Chi.

“We are excited to take this picture revolution one step further by making Lytro available to more photographers in the US and around the world.”

The Lytro is the creation of Ren Ng, who started work on the digital camera while studying for a doctorate in computer science at Stanford University in California.

The telescope-shaped camera uses what is known as “light field technology” to allow the focal point of a digital image to be changed after the picture is taken, a feature that Lytro calls “shoot now, focus later.”

Clicking on a Lytro picture displayed on a computer screen allows a viewer to shift the focus from a subject in the foreground, for example, to a subject in the background.

The Lytro can do this because it uses powerful sensors to capture significantly more light than a conventional camera.

Lytro executive chairman Ng, who was born in Malaysia and raised in Australia, describes the images as “living pictures” because of the ability to manipulate them.

When Lytro pictures are shared online, the “light field engine” travels with each image so anyone can change focal points as desired.

The 16GB model of the camera, which is about the same size as a stick of butter and can fit easily in a pocket, costs US$499 and can hold 750 pictures. An 8GB version costs US$399 and can capture 350 images.

Lytro said that expanding availability of the cameras come as demand increases for the technology around the world.

“Australians are asking for the Lytro camera and we’re excited to bring it to them,” said Dan Miall of Blonde Robot, with is distributing the cameras in that country.

“There has been a lot of excitement to be a part of this next phase in photography and start producing light field pictures in Australia.” – Agence France-Presse

Add a comment

Sort by

There are no comments yet. Add your comment to start the conversation.

Summarize this article with AI

How does this make you feel?

Loading
Download the Rappler App!