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Archive for the ‘News’ Category

Internet Helps Analog Photography Hold On

Tuesday, May 16th, 2006

By PETER SVENSSON, AP Business Writer

NEW YORK - With its market eviscerated by digital photography, Eastman Kodak Co. last year stopped making black-and-white photo paper.

It was a loss most photographers could live with, except for a few who dreaded the loss of Azo, a paper with unusual characteristics that Kodak had made continuously since 1898. Other papers “just are not as beautiful,” said Michael A. Smith, a photographer who prints all of his work on Azo.

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Nikonians unveils new search engine for ambitious photographers and imaging pro

Wednesday, March 22nd, 2006

NikonScopeBy NIKONIANS.ORG March 21, 2006 - Finding camera reviews and photography information on the Web is now easier for those who prefer the Nikon brand.

The Nikonians new search engine dubbed NikoScope has been quietly weathering beta-tests with the help of the 40,000-member online community, which has been gathering news, articles, reviews, and lively forum discussions for the past six years.

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Time up for camera film? Nikon focuses on digital

Thursday, January 12th, 2006

TOKYO (AFP) - Nikon, the iconic Japanese camera maker, has put another nail in the coffin of traditional photography with plans to stop selling most of its film models in favor of hot-selling digital cameras.

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New digital camera? Know how, where you can use it

Saturday, December 31st, 2005

By Andrew Kantor, USA TODAY

Digital cameras were one of the hot gifts these holidays - the first one for some people, an upgrade for others. Cell-phone cameras are everywhere too, and sites like Flickr and Buzznet - not to mention photoblogs - make it easy for anyone to share the zillions of photos they’re taking.

With all these cameras snapping around us, I started to wonder about the laws regarding using them. Where can you shoot? What can you shoot?

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Digital Photo Printing Easier, Cheaper

Monday, December 5th, 2005

By MAY WONG, AP Technology Writer

SAN JOSE, Calif. - Point. Shoot. Print. Getting a hard copy of your memories has never been easier.

Picture this: More than two-thirds of the estimated 17 billion prints from digital cameras made this year were created from the comfort of snap-happy American homes.

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Adobe expects to close Macromedia deal on Saturday

Sunday, December 4th, 2005

Martyn Williams, IDG News Service - IDG News Service

Dec. 2, 2005 - Adobe Systems Inc. expects its acquisition of Macromedia Inc. to close on Saturday, the company said Thursday.

The deal was announced in April this year but required clearance from shareholders and regulators before it could reach completion. The relevant clearances either have been received or will be received to complete the deal on Saturday, the company said.

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Ghosts of the digital future

Thursday, November 24th, 2005

By Victor Keegan, Mail & Guardian online

There are more photographs around than ever before and, thanks to the growth of digital photography and cameraphones, there may well be more photos taken this year than in the whole of history. But how many will still be there 50 years hence.

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Kodak Retains Lead in U.S. Digital Cameras

Sunday, November 13th, 2005

By BEN DOBBIN, AP Business Writer

ROCHESTER, N.Y. Nov 10, 2005 — For the fourth straight quarter, Eastman Kodak Co. retained its lead over Japanese rivals Canon Inc. and Sony Corp. in the U.S. digital-camera market.

In the July-to-September period, digital camera shipments to domestic retailers rose nearly 13 percent to 5.6 million from 5 million a year earlier, research firm IDC of Framingham, Mass., reported Thursday.

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First Digital Camera Came in ‘75

Monday, September 12th, 2005

Young Kodak engineer said it seemed “a little bit revolutionary.”

By BEN DOBBIN, The Associated Press

ROCHESTER, N.Y. — Steven Sasson knew right away in December 1975 that his 8-pound, toaster-size contraption, which captured a blackand-white image on a digital cassette tape at a resolution of .01 megapixels, “was a little bit revolutionary.”

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Forensic astronomers date famous photograph

Tuesday, August 23rd, 2005

PARIS (AFP) - US astronomers said they had pinpointed the moment and location when one of the most famous landscape pictures in photographic history was taken. “Autumn Moon, the High Sierra from Glacier Point,” taken by Ansel Adams in Yosemite National Park, is a thrilling view of the American West, featuring a waxing Moon rising over dark, ice-tinged peaks.

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