Just when I thought the new Sony A9 III boasted an impressive burst rate of 120fps, scientists at Canada’s Institut National de la Recherche Scientifique (INRS) have designed a camera capable of ...
Generally speaking, if you want to grab sharp images of crazy fast movements such as molecular interactions or water droplets, you're going to need a super-expensive rig. Researchers have developed a ...
Four years after Sony launched its high-end, full-frame professional camera, the Sony A9 II, the company has finally come up with a successor. The new camera— the Sony A9 III—comes with several new ...
The next generation of instruments for ground-based telescopes took a leap forward with the development of a new ultra-fast camera that can take 1500 finely exposed images per second even when ...
Sony moves in on GoPro’s extreme videography niche with its latest Action Cam entry that slaves up to five cameras to a wristwatch controller. Lytro Activates Cameras’ Hidden Wi-Fi Capability, ...
High-speed photography with the camera on a fast-moving robot arm has become all the rage at red-carpet events, but this GlamBOT setup comes with a hefty price tag. To get similar visual effects on a ...
Caltech scientists have just developed a new ultrafast camera that can record footage of impulses that travel through nerve cells, as reported by SciTechDaily. The camera can also capture video of ...
Casio generally emphasizes style for its point-and-shoot cameras, but its EX-F1, which the company says can shoot 60 6-megapixel shots in one second, is a radical high-end departure. Stephen Shankland ...
It's been a heck of a year for new cameras. New mirrorless cameras, new medium format cameras, new high-speed sports cameras, plus all the phones, drones, and that $600 instant camera… we've seen a ...
Our feeble little minds can’t process the time that light takes to fill a room, but now we can see it happen in slow-motion with help from the MIT Media Lab and its trillion frames per second camera.
Don’t get slowed down by the lock screen or stuck in the wrong shooting mode when you’re trying to capture those spur-of-the-moment photos and videos. By J. D. Biersdorfer Have you ever missed ...