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The Kodak Professional Digital Camera System or DCS, later unofficially named DCS 100, was the first commercially available digital single-lens reflex (DSLR) camera. It was a customized camera back bearing the digital image sensor, mounted on a Nikon F3 body and released by Kodak in May 1991; the company had previously shown the camera at ...
This marked the first time a digital cinema camera was tested alongside leading stills cameras. [14] For economical reasons Scarlet-W and Dragon-X cameras have the same 6K Dragon sensor used in the original DSMC generation, [15] but only 5K image area of it is utilized in Scarlet-W. [16] Red Raven has a "hard" 4.5K sensor. [15]
A Kodak DCS 420, a 1.2-megapixel digital SLR based on a Nikon F90 body. The Kodak Digital Camera System is a series of digital single-lens reflex cameras and digital camera backs that were released by Kodak in the 1990s and 2000s, and discontinued in 2005. [1] They are all based on existing 35mm film SLRs from Nikon, Canon and Sigma.
Coolpix compact digital cameras, Nikon 1 series MILCs, and D-series DSLRs: OM System: Japan: C-, D-, FE-series, Tough and Stylus compact digital cameras; E-series DSLRs based on the Four Thirds System; and two series of mirrorless interchangeable-lens cameras based on the Micro Four Thirds System, the PEN digital series and OM-D series(Former ...
The 2024 NFL season is coming down to the wire and that can only mean one thing: playoff football is just round the corner.
The camera uses a 1/2.7" CMOS sensor, which is shared with other consumer high definition cameras manufactured by Canon, such as the HV10, HR10 and HG10. The replacement for the HV20, the HV30, was released in March 2008, soon followed by the HV40.
After being the subject of cultural debates throughout her rookie season, Caitlin Clark admitted to feeling "privilege" as a White woman.
TikTok users are trying to help out a confused husband who is bewildered by one of his wife’s “weird” garments that has “no head hole.”