3D Cameras Coming to Ultrabook and Laptops Says Intel – Display Central.
It’s a single lens camera – with a depth sensor – used to capture 3D imagery and depth data for use in myriad applications.
3D Cameras Coming to Ultrabook and Laptops Says Intel – Display Central.
It’s a single lens camera – with a depth sensor – used to capture 3D imagery and depth data for use in myriad applications.
Seems similar to the Loreo products: This stylish, Icelandic adaptor turns your SLR into a 3D camera (Wired UK).
This is from the Amazon wiki on “stereoscopy”:
via Stereoscopy – Shopping-enabled Wikipedia Page on Amazon.
For those new to 3D, the interaxial distance is the spacing between the center of the left camera lens and the right camera lens. The interaxial is a critical component to creating good 3D depth effects. Too large, and the viewers eyes will hurt. Too small, the depth effect will be minimal. The key is to select the right lens spacing for the “depth box” in front of the camera. Objects within the depth box will have appropriate parallax and good depth effects.
Most consumer and semi-pro 3D cameras have relatively narrow lens spacing – they are perhaps best for shooting 3D photos or video of kids in the backyard or at the park. Beyond a few tens of feet (or meters) the depth effect vanishes and those parts of the image appear flat.
They all build great cameras but only a couple excel at marketing – Readers story: “Marketing advice to Olympus, from a hobby photographer” by Mark Ryan Sallee | 43 Rumors.
The writer of the linked story remarks that “micro 4/3ds” as a brand is unfortunate. “Micro” implies small while 4/3ds is a fraction and most people have minds that go numb at the first mention of numbers – especially fractions!
Canon and Nikon do a good job selling the sizzle, rather than the steak. Canon largely markets a life style – people using Canon gear live exciting lives of travel and fashion.
The writer goes on to the multiple and confusing brands often used by a single camera maker. I find the market segmentation has gone to extremes – from all camera companies. Check out their lower end product lines and they often have dozens of different cameras that cause consumer confusion.
I have been looking at 3D video cameras and find oddities there too. Such as 3D video cameras that shoot only 1080i interlaced images and not progressive images, yet my inexpensive camcorder shoots 1080p! And then the use of storage formats like MVC that were not originally supported (and often still not) in common video editing software. What were they thinking?