▲ | hypertexthero 3 days ago | |
Anyone reading at Kodak, please consider making a camera that has: 1. 35mm-equivalent basic plastic lens, 6 megapixel sensor with big pixels, autofocus, center-weighted metering. 2. No screen to see photos. Only a tiny LCD for basic settings like remaining pictures and remaining battery power. 3. Pictures saved to replaceable built-in SD card, downloadable to computers via USB-C to USB-C connector. 4. Long battery life (one whole day of shooting). Powered by rechargeable AA batteries. 5. Splash proof. 6. Photo sensor that adds grain to blown highlights and lost shadows. 7. Less than $100. 8. Bonus: Open source firmware. Basically a competitor to the Camp Snap, but better. Thank you! | ||
▲ | rekabis 3 days ago | parent | next [-] | |
I’m not understanding the use case, here. Aren’t there plenty of no-name disposable Chinese cameras like this? For me, it’s capabilities beyond a cellphone camera, in a package not much bigger. One of the biggest frustrations is taking a photo of something and the phone’s limited optical resolution makes that item nothing more than a tiny spec in a large 48 megapixel image. Yes, even the iPhone 15 Pro Max’s 5× zoom is horrifically inadequate for a good 40% of the photos and videos I take. That’s why I rock a Nikon Coolpix A1000 - it does 4K video, has a 35× optical zoom, and all sorts of other goodies in a package that can collapse down into a block that’s not much thicker than a paperback book, and even smaller (H&W) than my iPhone. It’s small enough to fit into my satchel as an EDC for use at a moment’s notice, and not something that requires special dispensation every time I want to drag it along. Consumers want flexibility in a portable package. There is no way I’d be able to drop another type of superzoom like the Nikon P1000 into my satchel, despite the much more attractive 125× optical zoom. It’s just too chonky as a whip-it-out-in-a-heartbeat EDC. | ||
▲ | sammyteee 3 days ago | parent | prev [-] | |
This ^ |