Friday, November 16, 2012

Lytro Adds Perspective Shift and Filters - TIME

Lytro

When people talk about Lytro, the unique point-and-shoot camera based on light-field technology, the easiest way to explain what it does is to say that it lets you refocus a snapshot after you’ve taken it. Which it does. But by capturing all the light rays within a scene, Lytro is collecting an enormous amount of information which garden-variety cameras don’t record. And this data can be used in ways that go beyond the refocusing trick.

Today, Lytro is announcing two new features: perspective shift and what the company calls “living filters.” They’re both enabled through updates to its PC/Mac software and viewers for the web and Facebook which will be released on December 4; the camera itself hasn’t changed. The company gave me a sneak peek this week.

With perspective shift, you can grab ahold of a Lytro photo with your mouse pointer or finger and wiggle it around â€" and people or objects at different depths move on separate planes, creating a nifty effect that sort of feels 2-7/8th-dimensional. (On an iPad, you can also trigger the effect by wobbling the tablet itself back and forth.)

As usual with Lytro, it’s easier to show than tell. Here are a few photos â€" provided by Lytro â€" whose perspectives you can fiddle with: