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Posts Tagged ‘Exit’

Lytro CEO confirms exit from consumer photography business, focus on VR

05 Apr

In a recent blog post, Lytro CEO Jason Rosenthal has confirmed that the company is headed out of the consumer imaging business to focus instead on developing a light field virtual reality platform. Rosenthal admits that it was too risky to compete in an established consumer space (that was in decline, no less, thanks to smartphones), and determined the value-add of light field technology to VR would have greater impact. Hence, Lytro has scrapped product development in the consumer camera space.

Says Rosenthal, ‘The cold hard fact was that we were competing in an established industry where the product requirements had been firmly cemented in the minds of consumers by much larger more established companies.’ He also mentions the rise of smartphones and consumer satisfaction with image quality from them.

And ‘while consumer Light Field cameras offered a number of true technological breakthroughs such as interactive 3D pictures, radical lens specs, and the ability to focus a picture after the fact,’ the reality was that there was much more investment Lytro would’ve had to make to its cameras competitive with modern cameras in image quality. Meanwhile, VR companies and Hollywood studios were increasingly asking for light field technology in cinematic and next-gen content. ‘We had just raised $ 50MM in new capital. We didn’t have the resources to both continue building consumer products and invest in VR.’

Accordingly, in November of last year, Lytro announced Immerge, a 360° light field video capture device, just after announcing plans for layoffs as the company shifted direction toward video and VR. The pro-grade Immerge was a confirmation of this change in focus. It’s currently only a concept camera, capable of recording live action VR in what Lytro claims as ‘six degrees of freedom’ that, if we understand correctly, should allow for multiple perspectives from multiple angles of view, as well as focus and depth-of-field control after-the-fact. This is a clear benefit for VR capture, which aims to capture as much scene content as possible for the viewer to explore in a virtual environment. 

The decision to shift the company’s focus was not taken lightly. Rosenthal details the anxiety he felt before shifting the company vision, but now says ‘My middle of the night panic attacks are gone. I wake with a burning desire to go to work because I am so excited by what we are building and its potential to help shape VR.’

Have a read of Rosenthal’s full blog post here. It’s quite insightful in laying out some of the considerations Lytro has faced as a company. Some of us here are certainly disappointed that Lytro appears to be completely exiting the consumer camera space, as light field technology had a lot of potential in revolutionizing autofocus, in decoupling depth-of-field and light gathering ability, bringing depth-based image editing to the table, and in radical lens design previously thought impossible, thanks to the ability of light field data to perform certain corrections – even image stabilization – after-the-fact as opposed to optically. That said, we certainly understand the change in direction and are very excited to see what Lytro brings to VR and video.

We’ll be following closely. Let us know your thoughts in the comments below.

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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GoPro to discontinue three cameras and exit entry-level market

06 Feb

This week, GoPro announced it will discontinue three of its six available action cameras and abandon the entry-level market. This follows the company’s preliminary fourth quarter results revealed last month. GoPro had stated at the time that poor holiday sales would likely result in low quarterly revenue, and that it would layoff 7% of its workforce as a result.

In a conference call this week, GoPro’s founder and CEO Nick Woodman said the company’s recent misfortunes aren’t due to increased competition. ‘Growth slowed in the second half of the year,’ said Woodman, ‘and we recognize the need to develop software solutions that make it easier for our customers to offload, access and edit their GoPro content.’

GoPro is banking on the improved software reversing its sales numbers, but it isn’t clear what other plans may be in place. Woodman said the company will be ‘delivering this new experience in 2016, period.’ In the meantime, though, GoPro anticipates its first quarter sales will be below analysts’ $ 300 million expectation, falling between $ 160 and $ 180 million.

GoPro will stop selling its HERO+ LCD, HERO+ and HERO entry-level cameras in April, making the $ 200 HERO4 Session its least expensive model.

Via: Financial Times

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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No Exit: Bricked Train Door Blocks German Subway Commuters

01 May

[ By WebUrbanist in Art & Installation & Sound. ]

brick blocked train car

Presumed a prank at first by online skeptics, authorities have since confirmed that these precisely-stacked cinder blocks were indeed carefully assembled and bonded together to fully block the door of an S-Bahn train in Hamburg.

brick blocked train line

Placed inside the actual sliding doors, the bricks proved a surprise when the aperture slide open to reveal the blockage. Passengers who managed to board before the intervention was reported were forced to exit at an upcoming station while an investigation was performed and the problem ultimately fixed.

bricked train interior view

While some may be amused and no one was trapped inside the car, blocked by blocks, the impacts were significant for those faced with cleaning up after this vandalism. The train was routed to a depot and the wall carefully broken down piece by piece, the story ending 12 hours and an estimated 10,000 dollars later.

bricked subway car line

With no sign of the perpetrators, the biggest clue is the professionalism with which the wall was assembled, apparently by a team of people with construction expertise. With no one claiming credit, overtly or anonymously, one is left to wonder whether some reference to the Berlin Wall was intended or if this was an attempt at some other kind of art or message.

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[ By WebUrbanist in Art & Installation & Sound. ]

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Posted in Creativity

 

No Exit: Dementia Village Dwellers Live in Alternate Reality

19 Feb

[ By WebUrbanist in Architecture & Public & Institutional. ]

dimentia second story view

It sounds like the dystopian plot of Dark City or The Truman Show, with free-seeming residents unaware they are actually inhabitants of a closed community they cannot leave and  in which they are under constant surveillance … but that is only one side of the story.

dimensia overall site planning

dimentia public outdoor space

A total of 150 Alzheimer’s sufferers live in Hogewey, this gated community unlike any other. Located in the Netherlands, it boasts open copious walking paths and green spaces, a grocery shop, hair salon and dozens of stores and clubs.

dimentia village resident grocery

The friendly grocers and stylists are, however, all employees of the facility (caregivers, doctors and nurses). If someone approaches the single exit to the outside world they are politely, gently but firmly told to perhaps try another door as this one is closed.

dimentia interior focused plan

dimentiaville ramps parks paths

If this sounds like a terrible situation, consider this: patients can roam much more freely than in many elder car facilities. Patients here require fewer medications, eat better and live longer. Still, it raises philosophical questions that are difficult to answer about the relative value of knowledge and happiness, for instance.

village exterior facade view

themed patient room interiors

Dormitory-style rooms are situated around the exterior of the campus, allowing views out, but building exits all face inward. Each residence structure has a “lifestyle theme” associated with it, designed to make people feel it home, surrounded by appropriate religious symbols for some, music and art for others.

dimentia city architecture model

CNN’s Dr. Gupta traveled to Weesp, the village in which the facility is set, and interviewed caregivers in this extensive twenty-three-minute segment on its purpose and workings. Some people question the ethics of the inherent deception, but if the residents feel at home, it is hard to say what a better alternative might be than this seemingly-ordinary everyday reality.

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[ By WebUrbanist in Architecture & Public & Institutional. ]

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Kodak to exit consumer photography, while tech giants gang-up to buy patents

25 Aug

PhotoPrinter.png

Kodak has announced it will sell two of its business divisions, ending its role as a consumer-facing photographic company. The Personalized Imaging business includes print kiosks and consumer film, while the Document Imaging business includes scanners and commercial document management. Both businesses will be sold as going concerns. Meanwhile the Wall Street Journal has reported that many of the world’s biggest technology companies, including Samsung, Apple and Google, have formed a consortium to bid for Kodak’s digital imaging patents, significantly lowering the price the amount the sale is likely to raise.

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Jeep Wrangler (JK) crawling the exit! – Carnage Canyon (HD)

03 Aug

This insane Jeep (JK) Wrangler Unlimited build by TnT Customs is simply incredible! It would go anywhere the driver told it too and made short work of the crazy Carnage Canyon Trail. Specs include D60 F/R, 43″ TSL, 5.7 swap, etc. I WANT ONE!
Video Rating: 4 / 5

 
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Posted in Nikon Videos

 

Quo Vadis – Amiga Anaglyph 3D Scene demo (Exit 1990)

25 Aug

Amiga Scene demo Quo Vadis by Exit 1990. This demo required Anaglyph 3D glasses (Red/Blue) to view. One of the first demos to use anaglyph 3d on Amiga. 1st place at Theatre and Network 1990.
Video Rating: 5 / 5

 
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Posted in 3D Videos

 

Durarara!! – Exit 1 / First Words

16 May

Durarara!! DVD is available for pre-order!! www.durararausa.com Mikado Ryugamine, a young man longing for something unusual to happen in his life, moves to Ikebukuro at the invitation of his childhood friend Masaomi Kida. Arriving in Tokyo for the first time, he begins his new life living alone as a high school student, awed and mesmerized by the new world around him.