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john-in-japan
30th of July 2009 (Thu), 23:22
From Today's Japan Times:
By PETER CROOKES (http://search.japantimes.co.jp/cgi-bin/JTsearch5.cgi?term1=PETER CROOKES)
Revolutionary?: Watching 1950s Hollywood movies while wearing funny glasses was once the high tide of 3-D imagery. But in recent years, the cyclical fascination with 3-D has surged again, but the problem of needing those glasses has dogged the idea. Fujifilm claims to have freed 3-D imagery from spectacles with its new FinePix Real 3D W1 camera. Rather than a movie maker, the new gadget is a compact digital camera. It is operated in the usual fashion, but after the shutter is clicked, things get interesting. The camera uses two separate lenses to take photos, with each one recording to a separate sensor. The camera's innovative new processor, dubbed the "RP (Real Photo) Processor 3D," then takes the two images and joins them to create a purportedly 3-D image.

http://www.japantimes.co.jp/images/photos2009/nc20090729pca.jpg
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Using two lenses in this manner is nothing new, but traditionally this approach has produced images of limited quality. Fujifilm claims its new processor captures an image "exactly as your eye sees it." Perhaps more importantly, Fujifilm claims that no special glasses are needed to view the images from the camera. But the 3-D marvel comes with a major catch. The 3-D images can be viewed on the camera's own 2.8-inch, 230,000 pixel LCD screen without any special aids. But printing 3-D photos is no simple task, as special plastic paper has to be used to preserve the 3-D effect, with the resulting photos expected to cost hundreds of yen each. Perhaps aware of the deal-breaking nature of these limitations, Fujifilm is also offering a separate photo frame, the FinePix REAL 3D V1, with a 7-inch screen that displays 3-D images. The device can display both 3-D still images and 3-D video. However, while it has a resolution of 800×600 pixels when displaying standard two- dimensional pictures, the quality drops to 400×600 pixels for 3-D images.
The camera can also take video, with a shooting rate of 30 frames per second at a resolution of 640×480. As a camera, the W1 is nothing outstanding, with a pedestrian 3× zoom lens that goes from 35 mm to 105 mm. The camera comes with 42 megabytes of internal memory. Considering a maximum quality 3-D still image will eat up 14 megabytes of memory, it is fortuitous that the camera also takes SD and SDHC memory cards.
The camera costs ¥60,000 and the V1 screen ¥49,800. To buy the pair together costs ¥99,800. The 3-D act opens early next month. www.fujifilm.co.jp (http://www.fujifilm.co.jp/)

michael.luczkow
1st of August 2009 (Sat), 03:53
Hundreds of yen each? Who cares? I'd pay a buck or two for a 3d print.

Paul Li
2nd of August 2009 (Sun), 22:29
EDIT: michael, you're right. I'm in China right now, and I don't know know how to spell Chinese currency which is pronounced "yen" so I assumed that's what the prices were. Should have payed more attention.

michael.luczkow
3rd of August 2009 (Mon), 04:52
What is somewhere around 10K dollars????????????? You talking about rupies or some crazy currency, because I know you don't mean US dollars.

The camera is about 650 bucks with the yen rate now.

Karl Johnston
3rd of August 2009 (Mon), 05:05
I've always wondered the minimum wage in japan...those values sound ridiculously high

john-in-japan
6th of August 2009 (Thu), 04:47
Minimum wage is approximately $7.00 an hour in Japan. Today's yen rate about 94/US$.

John

mobilebucky
9th of August 2009 (Sun), 10:35
Get me all excited, when I saw the title I thought Canon finally going to release EOS 3D :D.

michael.luczkow
21st of August 2009 (Fri), 18:26
I used this camera in the department store yesterday. The pictures were pretty cool, but the video playback gave me a headache.

Apparently they have a special digital photo frame that they are also selling, and it does play back the 3D Movies as well. I was simply watching the movies and viewing the pictures on the 3D screen that is on the back of the camera.

The 3D effect is cool, but not very good. Not what I thought it was going to be. I thought it was going to be some breakthrough, but it's simply...

Not sure what the term for it is...

You know those cards that have a plastic film on top of them with lots and lots of lines on it, like if you ran your fingernail across it it would make a zipping sound? The cards where when you move them left to right and back again they show "motion" based on 2 or 3 separate frames? It's basically a digital version of that technology.

That's it.

I might guess (with possibly horrible accuracy) that the 3D playback screen consists of some chip that affects which rows of pixels receive which frames, and a hard coated plastic lens grid of these "teeth" on top of specific rows of pixels.

Certainly not the latest and greatest 3D technology I was imagining.

backslash
24th of August 2009 (Mon), 10:13
Certainly not the latest and greatest 3D technology I was imagining.

I think they'll improve the display technology over time, and then you can view the already taken images in a better quality.
Nevertheless very tempting to enter a new dimension of photography very easily.

Addicted2Shooting
26th of August 2009 (Wed), 14:38
^^You guys just wait till canon comes out with 3D. Then you'll really start drooling.

michael.luczkow
26th of August 2009 (Wed), 17:04
^^You guys just wait till canon comes out with 3D. Then you'll really start drooling.
it's already out dude:

http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_MkRiN-pNVXI/RdGMZDPaZZI/AAAAAAAAAAc/HF66uSjt0eg/s400/canon3d.jpg

sebr
27th of August 2009 (Thu), 14:14
it's already out dude:

http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_MkRiN-pNVXI/RdGMZDPaZZI/AAAAAAAAAAc/HF66uSjt0eg/s400/canon3d.jpg


I have a 50D and a 400D. My head is spinning :lol:

njmac7777
30th of August 2009 (Sun), 16:09
i wonder how realistic the prints will look. i have some old 3d postcards that have a corduroy-like plastic layer over them. they never look very realistic. i prefer the magic-eye method of 2 prints side by side. i used to use 2 disposable cameras rubberbanded together to make 3d magic-eye images. it was fun.

michael.luczkow
30th of August 2009 (Sun), 17:10
that corduroy plastic stuff is exactly what I'm talking about, these are the same thing. Not very good looking.

3DPro
1st of September 2009 (Tue), 13:04
3D camera; Great idea and innovation! However very expensive at this time! We've devised an less expensive way by using any standard digital camera and the 3D Pro Kit with it's assisted software to turn regular images into a realistic 3D photo for under $10. Where there's a will there's a way!
You'll need the red and blue 3D glasses to see the 3D effect.

http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2487/3876208542_e710f1d617.jpg

http://deco-00.slide.com/r/1/0/dl/mWbHK5qd6z8e217SyVNOfqm9-FkWszuj/item

:cool:

anthoang
8th of March 2011 (Tue), 18:49
Any other reviews on the Fujifilm Finepix 3D? I'm thinking of getting one. the 2nd generation camera, Fujifilm Finepix W3 3D was just recently released. Does anyone here own one of these two cameras? and what is your opinion?

lonelyjew
18th of March 2011 (Fri), 19:31
http://i563.photobucket.com/albums/ss80/testaccount101/Necropost.jpg

The Framed Life
19th of March 2011 (Sat), 12:15
Just to put this thread in the ground, there's a simple enough way to make 3D images without the use of a special camera, this one was done with my 30D and some basic photoshopping that you can find a tutorial for with 30 seconds of photoshopping.

http://www.theframedlife.com/Other/Product/3D-case/1207025056_W5Jx7-L-5.jpg