Faible | Moyenne | Bon | Excellent | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Taille de l'écran | 1,46 in Meilleur: Sony Cyber-shot DSC-W710 Taille de l'écran: 6,7 in | |||
Pixels efficaces | 11 Mpx Meilleur: Hasselblad H6D-100c Pixels efficaces: 100 Mpx |
Type de capteur | CCD |
---|---|
Pixels efficaces | 11.0 Mpx |
Taille de l'écran | 1.46 in |
---|---|
LCD articulé | Non |
Technologie d'écran | LCD |
Écran tactile | Oui |
Vue en direct | Oui |
Viseur | Aucun |
Poids | 214.0 g |
---|---|
Largeur | 41.0 mm |
la taille | 41.0 mm |
Profondeur | 112.0 mm |
Technologie de la batterie | Lithium-Ion |
---|
GPS | Non |
---|
Zoom optique | 8.0 x |
---|---|
Ouverture maximale | 2 |
Fil de filtre | Non |
Optique pliée | Oui |
Type de corps | Compact |
---|---|
Couleur du produit |
|
Types de stockage | Interne |
---|
Version USB | 2.0 |
---|---|
NFC | Non |
Lytro Light Field Camera
There was a lot of excitement when the New York Times wrote about a small company promising to make focus errors a thing of the past. A camera that allowed you to focus after you take the picture. Its subject was Lytro, a startup promising to make its technology available in a consumer product on the market within a year. And, sure enough, here is the Lytro Light Field Camera.
You've never seen a camera like this before
It's not like other cameras