Technique can capture a scene at multiple depths with one shutter click — no zoom lens needed. Powered by AutoBlogger.co

seen from Netherlands

seen from Latvia
seen from China

seen from Romania
seen from Yemen

seen from Netherlands
seen from China
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Russia
seen from United States
seen from Brazil
seen from United States
seen from India

seen from France

seen from United States

seen from Canada

seen from United States
seen from Netherlands

seen from Malaysia
Technique can capture a scene at multiple depths with one shutter click — no zoom lens needed. Powered by AutoBlogger.co
How slow can slow motion get?
How slow can slow motion get?
Hi, ever been wondering how slow can slow motion get? If you hang for a longer time on YouTube eventually you might notice the channel The Slow Mo Guys or Smarter Every Day, both of them feature „quite often“ slow motion videos, meaning videos that have many frames per second (FPS). If you then slow the frames down you will get very slow video showing detail of whatever you are filming, whether…
View On WordPress
Scientist Born in India wins $500,000 award at MIT
Scientist Born in India wins $500,000 award at MIT
Ramesh Raskar who was born in Nasik,India was recently awarded with the prestigious Lemelson-MIT award for his work on the ultra-fast imaging camera that can see around corners, low-cost eye-care solutions and a camera that enables users to read the first few pages of a book without opening the cover. “We are thrilled to honor Ramesh Raskar, whose breakthrough research is impacting how we see the…
View On WordPress
YOU GUYS THEY INVENTED A CAMERA THAT CAN CAPTURE THE SPEED OF LIGHT AND COULD POTENTIALLY TAKE PICTURES OF THINGS THAT WE CANT SEE LIKE SOMEONE ON THE OTHER SIDE OF A WALL YOU GUYSSS
Ramesh Raskar: Imaging at a trillion frames per second
‘Femto-photography’ what? You’re probably scratching your head over that just like me before I saw this video wherein Ramesh Raskar explains it as ‘a new type of imaging so fast it visualizes the world one trillion frames per second, so detailed it shows light itself in motion’
The technology this new type of imaging is so promising I can be used someday to manufacture cameras that can watch ‘around’ all angles and take a look at inside our bodies without having to use X-rays machines. Interesting? Go watch the video to learn more.
This talk was presented at an official TED conference, and was featured by our editors on the home page.
Ramesh Raskar’ın hayranlık uyandırıcı sunumu.
Computational Photography
"Computational Photography captures a machine-readable representation of our world to synthesize the essence of our visual experience.
Computational photography combines plentiful computing, digital sensors, modern optics, actuators, and smart lights to escape the limitations of traditional film cameras and enables novel imaging applications. Unbounded dynamic range, variable focus, resolution, and depth of field, hints about shape, reflectance, and lighting, and new interactive forms of photos that are partly snapshots and partly videos are just some of the new applications found in Computational Photography."
-Ramesh Raskar, Jack Tumblin-
http://web.media.mit.edu/~raskar/photo/