Future of photography: Ren Ng at TEDxSanJoseCA 2012

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  • čas přidán 20. 05. 2012
  • Before starting Lytro in 2006, Ren had been extensively studying light field science and computational science. His seminal Ph.D. research on light field technology earned the field's top honor, the ACM Doctoral Dissertation Award for best thesis in computer science and engineering, as well as Stanford University's Arthur Samuel Award for Best Ph.D. Dissertation. The entrepreneurial spark came when Ren purchased his first DSLR camera and saw the potential to apply light field technology to capture pictures in addition to image generation. He decided to apply and extend his theoretical work by making light field cameras available to consumers.
    In the spirit of ideas worth spreading, TEDx is a program of local, self organized events that bring people together to share a TED-like experience. At a TEDx event, TEDTalks video and live speakers combine to spark deep discussion and connection in a small group. These local, self-organized events are branded TEDx, Where x = independently organized TED event. The TED Conference provides general guidance for the TEDx program, but individual TEDx events are self-organized.
  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 61

  • @jkanclark
    @jkanclark Před 4 lety +2

    To me, much of what makes photography fun and interesting is dealing with the trade-offs and limitations encountered while shooting; including wanting but not having much depth of field, or even wanting no depth of field (bokeh) but not being able to obtain it. What do you do in such situations? With digital you can crank the ISO up or down, but with film you have to grab a different camera with a slower or faster speed film, or maybe you might even have to wait until the light changes. Technology like this, while impressive in its own right, takes away part of the challenge of shooting, and that's not necessarily a good thing for someone like me.

  • @visamap
    @visamap Před 2 lety

    Thank u all very much

  • @Holobrine
    @Holobrine Před 6 lety

    I want stop motion with dynamic refocusing. As the video plays, it focuses on whatever you click. Throw in some motion tracking, and it could automatically change the focus to follow an object.

  • @xdir
    @xdir Před 11 lety

    Quite impressive, cant wait for the full motion video cameras that use this technology. I wonder if they have tried using 2 Lytro cameras to take a stereo shot then merge the pictures for even more depth in 3d ie mimicking human sight but in a single image.

  • @AluminumBird
    @AluminumBird Před 7 lety

    Very interesting. It's exciting to realize people are still working on the next big step on photography technology.
    Here's what I would personally love to see happen next:
    1) A finished display medium - the actual photograph - that *directly* uses the vector information. The first interactive-focus photos shown are super cool for sure; at the same time, you can make the same thing with any old camera and a tripod. You could even automate it with an on-camera app. Prompted by your 3d type demonstration, I'm imagining a new kind of photograph that both has that wide aperture, Chuck Close, ultra-present look AND the DOF of a landscape photo. Is there a way to combine that 3D tech with eye tracking, so that the viewer literally focuses regions of the photograph with eye movement? I guess the photograph would be VR headset?
    2) Put the camera in the hands of serious, advanced photographers. Apropos of the subject of depth, there is a whole universe of variation within the idea of *what you can do* with any camera. Some photographers *do* more, and at first it can be hard to jump onto the merry-go-round of understanding. Putting the tech in the hands of serious, advanced lifers - i.e. wall photographers with careers - would give you a better idea of what the tech can *do* - plus obvs it would go further in promoting the consumer product.
    3) Some varied panel of experts to help you with artist relations. E.g. a fine arts person, a reportage person, a fashion person, etc... The famous Philip-Lorca DiCorcia quote comes to mind. Ask any BFA which quote I'm thinking of and they will instantly know, and then proceed to explain to you what I'm trying to articulate in a CZcams comment. Also ask any advanced photographer or critic about the history of stereographs - very interesting and informative to what you are doing.
    Also someone in the comments mentioned the need for an open camera. Very much YES. The code doesn't have to be open source - it's the control of the camera that needs to be open and accessible externally. That could be as simple as making all interface elements assignable to literally anything variable within the camera system, plus a single flexible bridge to the outside world, e.g. Bluetooth. People currently doing projects with ugly Rasperry Pi hacks would buy your camera just for that, and discover the new stuff afterward. I don't grok why camera companies don't do this. Doesn't seem like it would suck resources too bad to simply include an unsupported, hidden interface page for assigning controls and turning on a wireless bridge - there for hackers who want it and hidden for the rest. Don't mention it in the main manuals, and don't publish any documentation on it on the main product page. Void the warranty if the hidden page is accessed.
    My first take on this presentation is that you've brought something into the world that has great potential for visual art. I hope you will keep developing it and bring it into wide usage. Good luck!

  • @Barcrest
    @Barcrest Před 12 lety

    I would be interested to see a movie filmed this way, much more than traditional 3D filming as you have some control over the camera position which would add a new dimension when watching films back making them more immersive. I wonder how much of a step it would be to combine several of these to film a scene and allow you as the viewer to actively move around the scene, this is really exciting.

  • @georgiannaritter2591
    @georgiannaritter2591 Před 11 lety

    A new tack on photos ..love the idea of fixing focus. Are they coming to Canada?

  • @arctichare8185
    @arctichare8185 Před 7 lety

    Wild!

  • @johnkraemer5505
    @johnkraemer5505 Před 6 lety

    Interesting!

  • @jjk9999
    @jjk9999 Před 10 lety

    It would revolutionize macro photography. In macro photography, the depth of focus is so tight because the subject is so close to the lens. To fix this the macro photographer takes many images, each at a slightly different focus, then combines them in post in what's known as Focus Stacking. I believe (but don't quote me) some macro photographers can as many as 100 images to do this.
    A usable lightfield macro camera would only have to take one photograph. Software would then combine all the focused elements from the lightfield and produce one in focus image. The time saved would be immesurable.

  • @SKrevitt
    @SKrevitt Před 10 lety

    You sure sold me, Mr. Ng! I'd buy one.

  • @TechyBen
    @TechyBen Před 10 lety

    Multiple focus images can be helpful for artistic values. Though can be off putting. Quick fact, they experimented with wide focus cameras in old black and white films, but found the "everything is in focus" images to be "weird" to the audience. So this device is a go between, and as it simulates our natural visions ability to change the focal point, actually provides an additional benefit in an image.

  • @HenryStradford
    @HenryStradford Před 10 lety +3

    Future of photography: Ren Ng at TEDxSanJoseCA 2012

  • @stephenmason5682
    @stephenmason5682 Před 6 lety

    The plate wasn't optically sensitive? It was light sensitive?

  • @MichaelGuy
    @MichaelGuy Před 4 lety

    Well that is 30 minutes I will never get back.

  • @BartDooper
    @BartDooper Před 6 lety

    This camera technology is also applicable for the 3D movie industry. Now the 3D cinema footage is limited by the depth of field because the size of the 2 lenses are limited by the pitch of the humans eyes. Now they can make a camera lens size much bigger and limited by other thingies :)

  • @MarttiSuomivuori
    @MarttiSuomivuori Před 7 lety

    Where is it now?

  • @SpamOfCan
    @SpamOfCan Před 12 lety

    Especially for people like me, who cannot fully experience the "3D" of today, because of a focus problem in my right eye.

  • @orangeatmosphere
    @orangeatmosphere Před 9 lety +4

    Anyone thought of the photograph scene in blade runner?

    • @AluminumBird
      @AluminumBird Před 7 lety

      Totally.
      Enhance 15 to 23 (sips whiskey)

  • @smsd777
    @smsd777 Před 9 lety +14

    Is this an add or a talk?

  • @feduva1
    @feduva1 Před 11 lety

    Is that the guy from Harald and Kuma?

  • @SaintFlibble
    @SaintFlibble Před 12 lety

    Normally I would agree, and the first time I heard about this camera I thought "well just focus correctly the first time". The extrapolation of a 3d image at the end of the video, however, is mind blowing. "3d" as they sell us in the theaters is simply stereoscopic - as I am sure you realize - but this is real, honest-to-goodness 3d. Useful today? meh - we'll see, but talk about future potential and the presentation's title is justifiable.

  • @romainphotogrphy7883
    @romainphotogrphy7883 Před 6 lety +1

    Where is the creative side off it? Is not photography about the instant composition instead of post production? It is not the point of practicing photography to the point of mastering the tools to get what we want like any other artistic activities? This seams to me the perfect tool for digital images nothing to do with photography

  • @krampacsolo
    @krampacsolo Před 12 lety

    I guess that's exactly what they said at Kodak when that guy came up with his silly newfangled thing... what was that? digital camera?

  • @RobertXPhotography
    @RobertXPhotography Před 11 lety

    Thought this was TED. Sounds more like a press conference or infomercial.

  • @ZeroG84
    @ZeroG84 Před 12 lety

    Any hope of getting this in to a DSLR body and with a hotshoe to trigger flash? If not, then I guess it's just a "instagram iPhone camera"-trickery, not a real tool for the pro-photographers.

  • @AndyPayne42
    @AndyPayne42 Před 10 lety

    Wonder if this is what fly does.....

  • @trivediparsa
    @trivediparsa Před 5 lety

    Bad that such a good concept of lytro got shelved due to competition

  • @TechyBen
    @TechyBen Před 10 lety

    It might be possible, but it will be expensive for a while. :P

  • @1976ClassicCelica
    @1976ClassicCelica Před 11 lety

    Nice toy but what would impress me is if it could take a picture from the light of a subject in 360 degrees and create a 3D image from that. I don't think that would be impossible just need the right technology. Look up 1 trillionth frames per second on TED.

  • @michaelcobb9503
    @michaelcobb9503 Před 5 lety

    lmao was hoping this would be ren hang and that there was a typo

  • @fredericgolden8162
    @fredericgolden8162 Před 11 lety

    Great talk - but he's gotta work on the pronunciation of foto pioneer Daguerre.

  • @ZeroG84
    @ZeroG84 Před 11 lety

    With out a 1:1 viewfinder, ability to use a lens of choise, triggering flashes, syncing the shutter with anything that resembles a flash. There's just no way THIS PRODUCT is going to make it in the real world. The processing and the fileformat are intreaging. Who hasn't taken an out of focus shot at a wedding etc. I guess you can shoot a wedding with an iPhone nowdays, but come on. That's not a TOOL either. Just novelty + convenience.

  • @homopunk84
    @homopunk84 Před 10 lety +12

    The future of photography is an open source camera. A camera that can be re coded... hacked. exploited and exerimented with by the ARTIST. not engineers that THINK they know what photographers want. We all want different things. So give us a blank canvas not a canvas with guidelines. we hate guidelines.

    • @LeeYang07133
      @LeeYang07133 Před 8 lety +2

      If you know what you want, go get it... go make it.

    • @Holobrine
      @Holobrine Před 6 lety +1

      Hey, if you want to mess with the raw data from the Lytro camera, go right ahead.

    • @Raevenswood
      @Raevenswood Před 6 lety +1

      We already have this with canon and Magic Lantern firmware :)

    • @adamsapple7193
      @adamsapple7193 Před 6 lety

      Come on art boy let's see you engineer what you say! Oh yeah, you can't engineer anything.

  • @deluksic
    @deluksic Před 11 lety

    OMG Great idea. Patent it! Be like apple! :D

  • @agathahannelore6914
    @agathahannelore6914 Před 11 lety

    Greetings! Have you had any luck with photo sfxart tricks (just google it)? My cooworker Phil made some amazing photos with their video tutorials.

  • @KremerJohnson
    @KremerJohnson Před 10 lety +8

    or you could just learn how to focus a camera...

  • @septnimittaganon
    @septnimittaganon Před 12 lety

    this is a promo video and got nothing to do with "Future of Photography"

  • @SuitBlazer
    @SuitBlazer Před 11 lety

    ? really not a tool? to change the focus even after the photo has been snapped? I'm going to assume you're a pro but then I can't be certain..

  • @BION5555
    @BION5555 Před 2 lety

    Hello from 2022. Would be better if this guy invented a covid vaccine that works) Nobody needs a new way of photography today) And history of Lytro proves that fact.

  • @moviewatcher1024
    @moviewatcher1024 Před 10 lety +5

    This guy is arrogant indeed. He think he has a great camera that will transform photography when nobody has asked for it. Nobody wants it as a consumer product. There may be applications in medical or security screening. It is a bad idea for general photography. This guy is clearly a non-photographer, I do not care how he claims otherwise.

    • @CirrusResults
      @CirrusResults Před 9 lety +5

      Nobody asked for a touchscreen smartphone either. In fact, I would guess that nobody asked for the original silver iodide camera. People blindly content and even complacent with the status quo will never push forward boundaries. This guy has the technical ability and will to pioneer technological breakthroughs and, sooner or later, even the myopic ones will eventually follow.

    • @moviewatcher1024
      @moviewatcher1024 Před 9 lety

      just wait and see how many Illum they will sell (or not sell) before they start their fire sale...as they did on their mark 1 camera... just wait and see

    • @moviewatcher1024
      @moviewatcher1024 Před 9 lety

      The idea has been around for decades. It is a bad idea for photography.

    • @adamsapple7193
      @adamsapple7193 Před 6 lety

      You're arrogant! He is not

  • @andrewrussell2845
    @andrewrussell2845 Před 6 lety

    Well, this all turned out to be an overpriced lie. Kinda explains why Lytro has been such an abysmal failure. Apart from that, interesting talk.

  • @slimnics
    @slimnics Před 5 lety

    This is not the future of photography

  • @guillermomartinez6006
    @guillermomartinez6006 Před 6 lety

    Nobody wants this

  • @guillermomartinez6006
    @guillermomartinez6006 Před 6 lety

    Nobody wants this