July 2003 news archive
Thursday, 31 July 2003
Ritz
Camera has announced that it will soon begin selling a $10.99 'Single-Use'
digital camera. This two megapixel (CMOS) fixed focal length camera with
no LCD carries the 'Dakota Digital' name and is made by 'Pure Digital
Technologies' of San Francisco. Each camera allows for 25 images to be
taken (although you can apparently delete), the camera must then be returned
to Ritz Camera or Wolf Camera where you can produce digital prints and
a Photo CD (although the exact cost of this service isn't declared). I
feel the majority of users will still be much better off spending a few
hundred dollars on a recent known brand three megapixel digital camera.
UPDATE: User review online. (19:20 GMT)Tuesday, 29 July 2003
Extensis
has today announced the availability of a the 'Pro Photo Raw Image Filter'
for Portfolio 6. This new filter is available for free to registered owners
of Portfolio. This plugin is powered by Bibble Lab's raw processing, a
name which will be very familiar to many dpreview visitors. "Portfolio
is the fastest way for photographers and creative professionals to share,
organize, retrieve and distribute the digital files they create and use
every day. It takes the grunt work out of organizing files and removes
the chaos for creative workgroups and enterprises alike by providing instant
visual access to digital photos, scans, other media files." (17:15 GMT)
Fujifilm
has today announced the FinePix S5000 Zoom, a ten times zoom compact 'SLR-like'
digital camera with a three megapixel SuperCCD HR (the fourth generation
SuperCCD sensor). Although not as sophisticated as the S7000 also announced
today the S5000 does still have a fairly considerable range of features
including full manual exposure control, continuous shooting (and auto
focus) and CCD-RAW. Suggested list price is $499. We
had a brief hands-on with the FinePix S5000 and have posted a detailed
six page preview of this interesting and affordable digital camera. UPDATE:
Samples online. (22:00 GMT)
Fujifilm
has today announced the FinePix S7000 Zoom, a successor to the popular
S602 Zoom digital camera. The S7000 has the same six times optical zoom
lens but a new six megapixel SuperCCD HR sensor (which produces a huge
twelve megapixel image). Primary improvements over the S602 Zoom are a
doubling of resolution, the addition of the CCD-RAW file format, new 'Color
modes', an xD slot instead of SmartMedia (the S7000 still retains a CF
slot), USB 2.0 and improved resolution EVF and LCD. Suggested list price
is $799. Full specifications plus a side-by-side
comparison with the S602 Zoom inside. (22:00 GMT)
Fujifilm
has today announced the FinePix A205S Zoom, a three times zoom compact
entry level digital camera with a two megapixel CCD. Adrian Clarke, Fujifilm's
Director of Consumer Products, commented, "This camera is the embodiment
of 'keep it simple'. It's not intended to set the world alight with obscure
technologies or features - instead it will enthuse people with its total
accessibility." (22:00 GMT)Monday, 28 July 2003
Not
for your average consumer but today Sony has announced a new Instant Digital
Passport / ID / Event printing system which utilizes Bluetooth to transmit
the image from the camera straight to the printer wirelessly. The UPX-C200
system includes a four megapixel digital still camera (with a very big
flash!) and a 4 x 6 inch dye-sub printer which has numerous layouts including
full-bleed portrait and two 2 x 2 inch passport photos. The camera can
be configured to use one of up to three printers, allowing each to be
configured with different paper and layout. The system has a suggested
list price of $1,495. (13:05 GMT)Sunday, 27 July 2003
According
to our analysis of CIPA (Camera & Imaging Products Association) data,
camera shipments by CIPA members (the majority of digital camera manufacturers)
are up 93% for the period January to May 2003 compared to the same period
last year. This is a 45% increase by value. In contrast film camera shipments
are down 20%, interchangeable lenses down 11%. The biggest single leap
was to Europe which took an amazing 4.5 million units (up 149%). Total
shipments of digital cameras from January to May 2003 had a value of $3.43
billion, film cameras and lenses totaled $703 million. CIPA was established
on July 1 2002 and has taken over from JCIA which was dissolved in June
2002. (00:00 GMT)Thursday, 24 July 2003
Sony
has today reported a drop in its Q2 net profits to 1.1 billion YEN ($9.4
million), down 98% compared to Q2 2002. Sony attributes this drop to restructuring
of its consumer electronics division (digital cameras, camcorders, mobile
phones, PC's) which will take three years and cost a total of 1 trillion
YEN ($8.4 billion). Other factors included the now poorly selling PlayStation2
and Trinitron TV's as well as competition from South Korea and China.
Total sales were down 6.9% to 1.6 trillion YEN ($13.5 billion). On the
upside however Sony still maintains its full year earnings estimate of
a net profit of 50 billion YEN ($431 million). Original story from the
BBC Business & CCN Business websites. (08:55 GMT)
Casio
has today announced the four megapixel three times optical zoom QV-R40.
Casio's big claim about this camera is a one second startup time and a
shutter release lag of 0.01 seconds. The camera has an aluminium alloy
body, has a 1.6" LCD monitor, stores images on internal flash memory
or SD/MMC card and is powered by two AA batteries. (08:20 GMT)Wednesday, 23 July 2003
Kodak
today issued its Q2 2003 earnings statement, in that the company states
that overall sales declined by 6% and that earnings were down to $112
million in Q2 2003 compared to $284 million in Q2 2002. Sales for Q2 2003
totalled $3.3 billion, virtually unchanged compared to the same quarter
last year. "Kodak expects to reduce employment by a range of 4,500
to 6,000, beginning later this year." This on top of the 7,000 jobs
lost last year. Chairman and CEO Daniel A. Carp said "We are evolving
from a historical film company into one that is aggressively pursuing
the vast potential of digital imaging across all of our operations. We
are extending the Kodak brand into the digital age so that we become known
as the world's leading imaging company, building on our proud heritage
as the world's leading picture company" (13:40 GMT)
Fujifilm's
FinePix.com website is running a Flash teaser about a new FinePix 'S'
model which will be announced on 29th July 2003. The only thing we can
gather from this teaser is that the camera will have a relatively big
zoom (this from the zooming action of the photos used) and that it will
have the SuperCCD IV HR sensor (3 megapixel effective, 6 megapixel image
size). Interestingly the filename of the Flash teaser is 'S5000.swf'. (09:20 GMT)Tuesday, 22 July 2003
Iomega
has today announced that it has developed a new 1.5 GB 'Digital Capture
Technology' (DCT) platform. DCT is aimed at OEM manufacturers and consists
of a cartridge about the size of a half-dollar coin and weighs just 9
g (0.3 oz). DCT platform partners include Fujifilm, Citizen Watch and
Texas Instruments. Existing portable storage solutions in todays
consumer electronics products are too expensive, too slow, too fragile,
or too power hungry for the coming generation of mobile devices,
said Werner Heid, president and CEO, Iomega Corporation. (18:10 GMT)
Nikon has today made official the camera leaked all over the net in the
last week. The D2H is a four megapixel digital SLR which can shoot continuously
at eight frames per second. Its buffer is large enough for 40 JPEG or
25 NEF (RAW) frames shot at this rate. The sensor used in the D2H is Nikon's
first in-house designed sensor and based on a totally new 'JFET LBCAST'
technology which appears to be similar to CMOS but capable of outputting
data at a far higher speed. The D2H supports an optional accessory, the
WT-1 which provides direct wireless transmission of images from the camera
by WiFi (802.11b), images are sent using the FTP protocol. The D2H has
numerous other new features and improvements such as; 11-area Multi-CAM
2000 AF module, 80 ms viewfinder blackout, ambient WB sensor, new Lithium-Ion
battery, 2.5" 211,000 pixel LCD monitor, orientation sensor, more
viewfinder information and support for the advanced i-TTL flash lighting
system. We have a detailed five page preview article
available. (05:05 GMT)
Along
with the introduction of the new D2H Digital SLR Nikon is also introducing
two 'complementary' DX format lenses. The Nikkor AF-S DX 17-55 mm F2.8
G provides an equivalent field of view of 25.5 to 82.5 mm on a DX format
digital SLR (D2H, D1 series, D100), having handled this lens I can say
that it is slightly smaller and lighter than the Nikkor AF-S 28 - 70 mm
F2.8 lens. The other amazing lens is the new AF DX 10.5 mm F2.8 G fisheye,
on a DX format digital SLR this lens provides an equivalent field of view
of 15.75 mm. (05:05 GMT)
Nikon
has today announced the new SB-800 Speedlight. This new flash unit is
designed to complement the D2H digital SLR and incorporates many new features
associated with Nikon's i-TTL 'Creative Lighting System' including Flash
Value Lock, Auto FP High-Speed Sync and Flash Colour Information Communication.
The SB-800 also facilitates advanced wireless lighting, "Up to 3
SB-800 units can now communicate monitor pre-flash data with the Master
unit for fully automatic multiple flash exposures, removing the need for
flash meters or manual calculations. The D2H Digital SLR 1005-pixel Matrix
metering sensor is utilized to calculate exposures, and transmit each
Slave output changes back to each Slave unit." (05:05 GMT)
Nikon
has today announced the Nikkor AF-S VR 200 - 400 mm F4 G IF-ED, a new
super telephoto zoom lens with vibration reduction and a silent wave motor.
This new lens combines many interesting features, it is internally zoom
and focusing, it has vibration reduction (essential and expected for modern
long telephoot lenses) and a high speed silent wave motor. The lens also
has a 'Memory Set' button which can instantly recall a memorized focus
position. Another interesting addition to this lens is an environmental
rubber seal around the F mount bayonet. On a 'DX format' digital SLR this
lens would have a field of view equivalent to a 300 to 600 mm zoom lens. (05:05 GMT)Sunday, 20 July 2003
Dave
over at Imaging-Resource has today posted his review of the Pentax Optio
550 and the cool looking if not absolutely convincing Contax TVS Digital.
Dave says "...a Zeiss lens that's unusually sharp from corner to
corner, and that also seems to have significantly less flare than I'm
accustomed to seeing in digicam lenses. Image quality is good, if not
knock-your-socks-off impressive." (22:00 GMT)Friday, 18 July 2003
According
to an article in the Japanese Nikkei, Nikon has developed a new image
sensor based on a new 'LBCAST' technology (which appears to be similar
to CMOS but faster). This new sensor design allows data to be read twice
as fast as standard sensors. The new sensor is destined for digital SLR's,
to quote the article "An SLR camera with the LBCAST sensor will be
capable of consecutive shooting at the best level for CMOS cameras made
by other companies, or 8 shots per second, which is also more than twice
that of ordinary compact digital cameras with CCD (charge-coupled device)
sensors." As far as I know this is the first in-house developed sensor
from Nikon. (08:20 GMT)
TIPA
(Technical Image Press Assocation) has announced the results of its awards
for 2003 to 2004. TIPA is made up of numerous photography publications
(print media) from all around Europe. Awards of interest to digital photographers
are the Best Design to the Nikon Coolpix SQ, the Best Digital Consumer
Camera to the Olympus Mju 400 Digital, the Best Digital Prosumer Camera
to the Sony DSC-V1, the Best Digital SLR System Camera to the Canon EOS-1Ds
and the Best Innovative Technology to the Olympus 4/3 Digital System. (23:15 GMT)Thursday, 17 July 2003
ACD
Systems has today released FotoSlate 3.0. FotoSlate is a comprehensive
photo printing application designed to make it easier to print your photos.
Photos can be printed as full page images or with a variety of templates
such as cards, calendars and contact sheets. FotoSlate also features color
management including EXIF 2.2 and ICC color profile support. FotoSlate
three includes new features such as 'Paper Saver' for printing as many
photos on one page as possible, EXIF 2.2 and ICC support, image resampling
filters and more. ACD FotoSlate 3.0 is priced at $39.99, you can download
a free trial version from the ACD Systems website.. (14:00 GMT)
Fairly
significant news as this is a first for any Sony digital camera, a user
installable firmware upgrade. Sony has today posted firmware 2.0 for the
DSC-V1, it doesn't claim to make any image quality or performance related
changes to the camera but simply adds language choices for German, Spanish,
Italian and Portuguese to the existing English and French. Installation
is carried out by simply copying the firmware update file (.ASH) onto
a Memory Stick and inserting it into the camera. At long last we may begin
to see Sony post user installable fixes for camera issues! (13:10 GMT)
Both
Japan Today and Japan Times websites have a story from Kyodo News about
a prototype Fujifilm digital camera that has integrated Wi-Fi. The prototype
was displayed at the Wireless Japan 2003 exhibition for information technology
business. It has a three megapixel sensor and a Wi-Fi LAN card with a
transmission capacity of 11 megabits per second (802.11b). Fujifilm said
plans for the camera, including price and when it will go on sale, have
yet to be determined. (09:45 GMT)
Minolta
has today announced the new DiMAGE X20 digital camera. According to Minolta
the X20 is "the world's smallest and lightest 2-megapixel digital
camera with a 3x optical zoom". The camera is clearly based on the
'folded optics' lens design first seen in the DiMAGE X, that is a 3x optical
zoom mechanism which is 'laid' inside the camera body and views the world
through a mirrored prism. This entry level camera is powered by two AA
batteries and stores images on SD card. The X20 also has a 'self-portrait
mirror' on the front of the camera to help you take those all important
pictures of yourself! (23:10 GMT)Wednesday, 16 July 2003
Sony
Corporation (Japan) has today announced that it will be implementing a
new four color filter array pattern on a 'consumer CCD' (we can only assume
this is the new ICX456 eight megapixel CCD sensor). Instead of the 'traditional'
three color RGB bayer pattern the new color filter array has a RGBE layout
where 'E' is a light blue color which Sony are referring to as 'Emerald'
(although it looks more like Cyan to me). Their claim is that this pattern
is "closer to the natural sight perception of the human eye".
In addition Sony has developed a new image processor to complement the
"4 color filter CCD". (23:10 GMT)Friday, 11 July 2003
Vosonic
has announced the DigiViewer DV-320, a new 6 in 1 Digital Multimedia Viewer
for TV. The DiGi VIEWER DV-320 supports the playing of MPEG videos, Jpeg
image files, and listen to MP3s and Windows Media files from memory cards
including SmartMedia, Secure Digital/MultiMediaCard, Memory Stick (and
MS Pro), CompactFlash Type I & II, and IBM Microdrives. The RRP is
£69.90 (20:50 GMT)
Four
days ago the New York Times ran an article about Olympus's new E System
and specificaly the E-1 digital SLR. In it they stated that the camera
would cost 'less than 100,000 yen ($847.17)'. This of course caused a
huge stir on our forums (as well as a flood of emails to us asking for
clarification) with half of the people believing it, and half not. Today
Olympus Tokyo has issued a statement clarifiying that the MSRP for the
E-1 body as $2,199. (21:10 GMT)Tuesday, 8 July 2003
While
we wouldn't normally post links to individual lens reviews we did feel
it appropriate to bring this review of Nikon's first DX lens to our readers
attention. The DX lens is designed specifically for Nikon digital SLR's,
with a smaller imaging circle than standard Nikkor 35 mm lenses the lens
itself can be made smaller and lighter. This concept is not unlike that
intended by Olympus in their 4/3 standard. Bjørn Rørslett
(Nærfoto) has posted an extensive review of the AFS 12-24 mm f/4
G ED IF DX Nikkor lens, the first and certainly most detailed you could
expect. (14:05 GMT)Tuesday, 1 July 2003
Just
posted! As part of our trio of 'five megapixel, four times zoom' reviews
posted today we bring you an in-depth review of the Sony DSC-V1. The V1
could be seen as a development of the DSC-S75/S85 design, although this
camera is much more compact and advanced. Sporting a full hot shoe and
four times optical zoom lens the DSC-V1 is the smallest of the three cameras
reviewed but its no less capable. To see how the DSC-V1 did in our tests
and how it compared to the rest come in and read our review in full. (17:10 GMT)
Just
posted! As part of our trio of 'five megapixel, four times zoom' reviews
posted today we bring you an in-depth review of the Nikon Coolpix 5400.
The 5400 is the sucessor to Nikon's popular and innovative Coolpix 5000.
The 5400 expands the zoom range to four times but maintains the 28 mm
wide angle which was so popular among Coolpix 5000 owners. To see how
the 5400 did in our tests and how it compared to the rest come in and
read our review in full. (17:10 GMT)
Just
posted! As part of our trio of 'five megapixel, four times zoom' reviews
posted today we bring you an in-depth review of the Canon PowerShot G5.
The G5 is essentially an upgraded G3, with all the same features and controls
the G5 brings an 30% increase in pixel count and a black body. To see
how the G5 did in our tests and how it compared to the rest come in and
read our review in full. (17:10 GMT)
Olympus
UK has today confirmed that the body only list price of the E-1 digital
SLR (including 17.5% VAT) will be £1699.99. This means that at least
initially the E-1 will be approximately £200 more than a Nikon D100
and £450 more than a Canon EOS-10D. Assuming the E-1's street price
drops once the immediate rush is over we could see it matching the D100
at £1499 (inc. VAT). In my opinion this price is simply too high
for a new SLR system. We still don't have official pricing for lenses
or accessories. (10:25 GMT)Top news stories
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Cameras receiving the most clicks in the last five days.
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| Canon EOS 7D | |
| Olympus PEN E-P2 | |
| Leica X1 | |
| Panasonic Lumix DMC-GF1 | |
| Canon EOS 500D | |
| Nikon D5000 | |
| Nikon D90 | |
| Canon EOS-1D Mark IV | |
| Canon EOS 5D Mark II | |
| Olympus PEN E-P1 | |
- Canon EOS-1D Mark IV
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- Pentax Optio M85
- Pentax Optio E85
- Pentax K-x
- Leica M9
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