Inexpensive cameras that make spherical images are opening a new era in photography and changing the way people share stories.
Hufkens says the project will allow him to document how climate change is affecting leaf development in New England. The total cost? About $550, including $350 for the Ricoh Theta S camera that takes the photos.
We experience the world in 360 degrees, surrounded by sights and sounds. Until recently, there were two main options for shooting photos and video that captured that context: use a rig to position multiple cameras at different angles with overlapping fields of view or pay at least $10,000 for a special camera. The production process was just as cumbersome and generally took multiple days to complete. Once you shot your footage, you had to transfer the images to a computer; wrestle with complex, pricey software to fuse them into a seamless picture; and then convert the file into a format that other people could view easily.
ALLie Camera
It uses technology originally developed for the surveillance industry and can capture images in low light.
Journalists from the New York Times and Reuters are using $350 Samsung Gear 360 cameras to produce spherical photos and videos that document anything from hurricane damage in Haiti to a refugee camp in Gaza. One New York Times video that depicts people in Niger fleeing the militant group Boko Haram puts you in the center of a crowd receiving food from aid groups. You start by watching a man heaving sacks off a pickup truck and hearing them thud onto the ground. When you turn your head, you see the throngs that have gathered to claim the food and the makeshift carts they will use to transport it. The 360° format is so compelling that it could become a new standard for raw footage of news events—something that Twitter is trying to encourage by enabling live spherical videos in its Periscope app.
Kodak Pixpro SP360 4k
It can be mounted on a drone to produce aerial 360° videos.
Meanwhile, inexpensive 360° cameras such as Kodak’s $450 Pixpro SP360 4K are popping up on basketball backboards, football fields, and hockey nets during practice for professional and collegiate teams. Coaches say the resulting videos help players visualize the action and prepare for games in ways that conventional sideline and end-zone videos can’t.
Component innovations
These applications are feasible because of the smartphone boom and innovations in several technologies that combine images from multiple lenses and sensors. For instance, 360° cameras require more horsepower than regular cameras and generate more heat, but that is handled by the energy-efficient chips that power smartphones. Both the 360fly and the $499 ALLie camera use Qualcomm Snapdragon processors similar to those that run Samsung’s high-end handsets.
360Fly 4K
Dustproof and water-resistant, it’s often used to record extreme sports.
Most 360° cameras lack displays and viewfinders. To compensate, camera makers developed apps that you can download to your phone to compose shots and review the resulting images. The cameras connect to the apps wirelessly, and many of them allow you to upload photos and video directly from your phone to Facebook and YouTube. In turn, those sites have made it possible over the past year for people not just to post recorded 360° content but to live-stream 360° videos as well.
Because creating 360° content requires stitching together multiple images, doing it on the fly for live streaming represents an impressive technical achievement. Computer-vision algorithms have simplified the process so that it can be done on the camera itself, which in turn allows people to live-stream video with minimal delays. (It helps that most consumer-grade cameras have only two lenses and thus one stitch line. Professional versions can have six to 24 lenses.) The ALLie camera supports fast stitching and live-streaming, as do Ricoh’s upcoming Ricoh R development kit camera and Kodak’s Orbit360 4K, which will be available later this year for $500.
Ricoh Theta S
Ricoh put the image sensors on the camera’s sides instead of behind its lenses, making its thin shape possible.
In fact, John Carmack, the chief technology officer of Facebook’s Oculus VR subsidiary, has predicted that people will spend less than 50 percent of their VR time playing games. Instead, they may don VR headsets to do things like virtually attend a wedding.
Samsung Gear 360
Samsung has given these cameras to New York Times and Reuters journalists who are producing 360° news coverage.
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