ComputerUser.com

Digital Imaging without Computers Dallas TX

If you can hook up a camcorder to watch video clips on your television or connect a digicam and watch still photographs on a TV, why can't you watch images that were made using traditional film cameras too? Now you can. The secret is an unlikely blending of technologies from video, digital imaging, and consumer electronics to make the capture, collection, and sharing of digital photographs even more universal.

Allison Davis Photography
972.754.8037
Dallas / Ft.Worth Area, TX
K & S Photography
972.672.8949
Dallas / Ft.Worth Area, TX
Phase 3 Photography
9972.408.6908
Dallas / Ft.Worth Area, TX
Turner Danny Photographer
(214)559-0259
4239 Holland Avenue Apt C
Dallas, TX
Amy Robinson Photography
(214)999-0088
4332 Avondale Avenue
Dallas, TX
Apple Creek Photography
214.315.7671
Dallas / Ft.Worth Area, TX
Nine Photography
817.488.3984
Dallas / Ft.Worth Area, TX
GM Photography
214.773.4379
Dallas / Ft.Worth Area, TX
Ater Photography
(214)948-1000
P.O. Box 190706
Dallas, TX
Morrell Robert Photography
(214)528-5448
4343 Maple Avenue Suite 102
Dallas, TX
Data Provided by:
 
Provided By:

Digital Imaging without Computers

Posted by : Joe Farace

If you can hook up a camcorder to watch video clips on your television or connect a digicam and watch still photographs on a TV, why can't you watch images that were made using traditional film cameras too? Now you can. The secret is an unlikely blending of technologies from video, digital imaging, and consumer electronics to make the capture, collection, and sharing of digital photographs even more universal.

In 1990, Eastman Kodak announced the basics of its new PhotoCD system, but it wasn't until the summer of 1992 that most computer users were able to actually use the company's digitizing service. Kodak's original vision for this product was one of happy consumers gathered around the family TV, viewing snapshots of their trip to Yellowstone on one of its then-new PhotoCD players. But this Cleaver family dream never materialized.

Recently, Microsoft entered this same market with similar aspirations for its TV Photo Viewer, which allows consumers to watch their vacation pictures via a video floppy disk drive. Even though this is a wonderful product, it seems to have had as much success--so far, anyway--as Kodak's original PhotoCD concept. Not a company to be easily deterred, Kodak is now staking its claim to pictures on TV using a technology blending its PictureCD product and the DVD format.

Launched in 1998, Kodak PictureCD places digital photos on a CD-ROM that consumers can order when they have their film processed by a camer...

Click here to read the rest of this article from Computer User