I received an email earlier today pointing me to TWICE.COM who were carrying
an article on a new digital camera from Sony. This camera, based on the
2.1 megapixel FD-95 will write to mini sized CD-R's (156MB @ $4 a piece),
at the time I copied the news release from TWICE.COM but didn't publish
it until I'd verified it. Imaging-Resource are now running this news article
and saying that they are under NDA until tomorrow about this product.
Interestingly going back to TWICE.COM the article has been pulled.. curiouser
and curiouser...
UPDATE: 10:00 GMT Imaging-Resource have pulled their coverage of the
MVC-CD1000.. what a farce.
NEW YORK -- Sony will take the floppy diskette-based Mavica digital
camera to the next technological level this summer when it ships a camera
that uses a CD-R drive to store images
The Mavica MVC-CD1000 is scheduled to ship in early August with a $1,299
suggested retail price. The new camera is basically a Mavica FD-95 with
the floppy diskette drive removed and replaced with a scaled-down CD-R
drive. The 2.1-megapixel cameras drive handles 3.5-inch CDs capable
of holding 156MB of data, compared to a floppys 1.44MB capacity.
"The resolution on these cameras has increased so much that the
floppy was just maxed out," said Jay Sato, Sonys VP of digital
cameras and services.
Cost was the primary reason Sony chose to develop the CD-R drive instead
of using flash memory, Sato said. Although the CD-R is a write-only
drive, Sony believes the cost per disc, about $4, is low enough that
consumers will not miss the rewritable nature of the floppy.
Each CD-R disc can hold about 160 2.1-megapixel images, and the media
can be displayed with any PC CD-ROM drive.
Sato said Sony has solved the battery life problem that in the past
has stopped other vendors from installing optical storage drives in
digital cameras. The new Mavica can take about 1,100 shots on one charge,
with each shot being burned onto the CD in about three seconds. The
camera does have onboard flash memory, but it serves as a buffer.
The camera can take low-resolution video clips and has several camcorder
features, including image stabilization. The camera can be operated
in full automatic or manual mode.
Sony also will start shipping an updated version of the 505V this month
with a suggested retail price of $899. The new model features 3.3-megapixel
resolution that can be boosted to 3.7 megapixels when image interpolation
software is used.