{"id":6604,"date":"2012-01-16T08:13:58","date_gmt":"2012-01-16T16:13:58","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/nearfuturelaboratory.com\/?p=6604"},"modified":"2017-08-18T17:58:25","modified_gmt":"2017-08-18T17:58:25","slug":"ceci-nest-pas-une-camera","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/blog.nearfuturelaboratory.com\/2012\/01\/16\/ceci-nest-pas-une-camera\/","title":{"rendered":"Ceci n'est pas une cam\u00e9ra"},"content":{"rendered":"

Yesterday while leaving the LA Photo exhibition in Santa Monica \u2014 a kind of catch-all retail event of photography through the commercial curatorial world of private galleries \u2014 I happened across a small scrum of people with anodized extruded rectangles holding them close to bush leaves, flowers and tiny bits of dirt on the ground. Lytro was in town somehow \u2014 or stalking about doing a bit of half-assed DIY guerrilla marketing.<\/p>\n

There. I’m a Lytro hater. And maybe I’m getting old and cranky and beginning to catch myself thinkign \u2014 “I just don’t understand what kids are up to these days..” That’s a sign of something, I suppose. Oftentimes I can riddle it through and understand, even if I wouldn’t do the “whatever it is” myself.<\/p>\n

Nevertheless, I don’t understand what Lytro<\/a>‘s doing. Let me try and riddle it through.<\/p>\n

For those of you, unlike me, who don’t scour the networks for any sign or hint of an evolution in photography and image making generally, you may not know about Lytro’s weirdly optimistic talk about “light field imaging” techniques that is meant to revolutionize photography.<\/p>\n

Well, this is it. Effectively, a proper bit of patent gold that allows one to capture a light field (their stoopid way of basically saying “image” or “photograph”) and derive the path of every light ray in such a way that you can focus *after you’ve captured your light field. What that means practically is that you never have to worry about focus ever again, and you can recompose the focus point forever afterwards. So \u2014 all that lovely, soft, bokeh (nez depth of field) that has come to mean “professional” photography because you previously could only get nice, lovely, soft depth of field with an expensive, “fast” lens and a big sensor? Well \u2014 now you can walk around with an anodized extruded rectangular tube and get it as well. It’ll cost you a bit less than that fast lens would’ve, and you get all the advantages of touching a little postage stamp sized screen to control the camera, and you can run your finger along a side of the rectangle to access zoom controls, and \u2014 best of all \u2014 you can shove the extruded rectangle at your friends and capture *their light field.<\/p>\n


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