After two weeks with the Lytro camera, I still can't decide if it's a highly refined proof-of-concept or an uneven look at the future of photography. It's simultaneously addictive and frustrating.
The startup hopes light-field cameras, such as its $400 model, due in early 2012, will revolutionize photography by letting people focus photos after they're taken. Stephen Shankland worked at CNET ...
“Lytro is compelling, fun, and amazing, and while you might question whether the first go is worth the price, you wouldn’t regret the purchase.” “Why you can trust Digital Trends – We have a 20-year ...
The sudden, but not completely unexpected demise of Lytro at the end of March and the acquisition of many of its employees (but apparently not its IP) by Google has focused new attention on “light ...
A report from TechCrunch claims that Google is going to buy the camera company Lytro for “around 40 million dollars.” Lytro is best known for creating an innovative “Light field camera,” but the ...
When Lytro released its namesake digital camera last spring, it wasn’t immediately clear what sort of person would want to buy it. On one hand, it was a genuine technological breakthrough: As the ...
The first batch of Lytro cameras has shipped, and the people who get excited about these types of things are calling it unlike any digital camera we've seen before. But different isn't always good.
If you had to give an award for the year’s most breakthrough piece of consumer tech, there’s a good chance it would go to Lytro, a camera company which recently unveiled its first product. Unlike ...
There have been a few threads about the inner 'how does this work' of the Lytro camera, but now they appear to be available to buy. The major downside being that to manipulate the 'living images' (the ...
A digital camera from Lytro, Inc. that enabled the picture to be focused after it was taken. Rather than recording light as single amounts, the camera's microlens captured the entire light field, ...