When Lytro released its namesake digital camera last spring, it wasn’t immediately clear what sort of person would want to buy it. On one hand, it was a genuine technological breakthrough: As the ...
The Lytro light field camera – which lets users adjust a photo's focus after it's been taken – has gained the manual controls photographers have been craving, with a new firmware update. This means ...
Lytro's innovative light field camera was announced back in June, and it promised the ability to adjust the focus on an image even after it was already taken. That's quite a concept and one that we're ...
Taking a photo with the Lytro camera involves putting something in the foreground and finding something interesting in the background. Point, click, repeat. It's simple, but it lacks the level of ...
When the Lytro light field camera made its way into the hands of consumers earlier this year, it did something no camera had previously done: absorb all the light rays in its field of view, making it ...
is editor-at-large and Vergecast co-host with over a decade of experience covering consumer tech. Previously, at Protocol, The Wall Street Journal, and Wired. The futuristic light-field Lytro camera ...
Today, Lytro has announced that its plenoptic consumer camera will now offer manual controls to its user. The camera, introduced this past summer, has been a controversial device for photographers: ...
New manual controls added by the development team of the Lytro camera now provide shutter speeds that can go as high as 1/250th of a second or as low as 8 seconds, and ISO can go from 80 right up to ...
First announced last year, the original batch of Lytro cameras went out earlier in 2012, but have only been available in select outlets. Today saw the Lytro not only hit shelves at Target, Best Buy, ...
The Lytro Light Field Camera throws out everything you know about traditional camera design. The oddly-shaped camera is the first to use Light Field Technology, which measures not only the intensity ...