LightField Picture of the Week: Blue Eye
This week we’d like you to take a closer look – much closer: A mesmerizingly blue eye of an anonymous beholder looked right into the very lense of the Lytro at asterisk, San Francisco....
Light Field and Computational Imaging News
This week we’d like you to take a closer look – much closer: A mesmerizingly blue eye of an anonymous beholder looked right into the very lense of the Lytro at asterisk, San Francisco....
As we reported earlier, the Lytro LightField camera already contains a wireless chip that is capable of and . However, Lytro has neither activated the camera’s hidden wireless feature, nor expressed any concrete plans...
Up until recently, microlense arrays were usually constructed as homogeneous arrays, meaning that every microlense within the array was identical to the others. That means that every microlense results – more or less –...
This week’s POTW was taken by Lytro user aleks: It shows a famous optical illusion created by Aude Oliva, an associate professor of cognitive science at MIT. http://pictures.lytro.com/aleks/pictures/137156 When the hybrid picture titled “Marilyn...
There is no doubt that the new possibilities of LightField photography (including software refocus, and 3D extrapolation) will come in handy in light microscopy. One question we’ve been asking us ever since Lytro introduced...
It took me a little longer than expected, but I finally completed the Test Report: Ordering a Lytro LightField camera from Europe. The article now also contains information on customs fees and the total...
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