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To: Ausdauer who wrote (2938)5/8/1998 4:17:00 AM
From: Tumbleweed  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 60323
 
DIGITAL 'FILM' FOR ORDINARY CAMERAS COMING SOON

Comments on the following anyone?

FWIW, my thoughts are that it has a few major failings* compared with digital cameras, but there could be some initial publicity and hype that might hurt SNDK. [ *no real time viewing = no reuse of 'bad pictures' & too expensive to buy more than one = cant carry several around like CF or film]

DIGITAL 'FILM' FOR ORDINARY CAMERAS COMING SOON
An innovative electronic film, which enables conventional cameras to
take digital pictures, could breath new life into two of the stock
market's least favorite companies. Irvine Sensors Corp, a Californian
specialist in compact micro circuitry has teamed up with Vision Group
Plc, a tiny Scottish company specializing in CMOS imaging chips, to
produce a tiny digital imaging unit. Shaped like a 35mm film and
containing flash memory and a small battery, the 'Electronic Film
System' sits behind the lens of any conventional camera, mimicking a
chemical film, but enabling up to 30 digital pictures to be snapped
and stored. Priced at less than $1,000, but potentially as low as
$500, the unit is said to be ready for release this summer. And it
will arrive bundled with digital image manipulation software and
cabling to connect it to a PC or Mac. Imagek, the division of Irvine
Sensors responsible for marketing the new product, has released only
cursory information on the product so far, but initial interest from
photographers has been staggering says Bruce Toddy, Imagek's vice
president of marketing. Because the tiny device will fit into all
popular SLR camera bodies, it protects photographers' existing
investments in expensive cameras and lenses. And in the projected
$1,000 price range, current digital cameras have nothing but novelty
to offer the serious camera user. The Imagek EFS will incorporate a
1.3 million pixel CMOS vision sensor, the highest pixel density
currently available in the low power CMOS format, and well above the
resolution of most high street digital cameras. Additionally, the EFS
allows denser arrays to be added quickly without changing the body of
the device, speeding time to market as technology improves.
Initially, Irvine worked with the older CCD vision chips still
commonly used in most digital cameras, but the limited battery space
available inside a unit the size of a 35mm film case prompted a
change to low power CMOS devices as soon as the technology became
available. Irvine would not admit to an exclusive deal for its chips
with CMOS specialist Vision Group, but the two are collaborating
closely on the project, and Vision claims to be the market leader in
this 'camera on a chip' niche. Each frame currently requires around
4Mb of memory to store, restricting the EFS to 30 frames before
transferring the pictures to a PC. But as flash memory improves, this
figure will reach a more acceptable size. The other major drawback is
the lack of real time viewing and editing functions, which make
digital cameras so appealing. But from its initial feedback, quietly
gathered at photography shows, Irvine is confident of the products
appeal to existing camera owners. And the company is in dire need of
a best seller. Shares in Irvine Sensors have been depressed for
months. The company has been loss making for several years, prompting
one Californian newspaper to call it a longtime Wall Street doormat.
And Vision Group, which trades on the London Stock Exchange, is at a
fraction of its former highs, having failed (so far) to capitalize on
its technological lead.