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Mark Peters : 2005-05-17 15:45:00
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Kodak innovations for improved digital photos : People assume that digital image capture is exactly like capturing images on film. In reality, the magic that makes digital images look as good as they do was made possible by Kodak researchers early on when they solved some unique problems. Their solutions involved complex mathematical algorithms - instructions coded into your digital camera's processor - that Kodak researchers pioneered before today's easy-to-use digital cameras. Kodak researchers John F. Hamilton, Jr. and James E. Adams, Jr. recently earned the 2005 Distinguished Inventor of the Year Award from the Rochester Intellectual Property Law Association.
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Dennis Hissink : 2005-01-06 21:50:29
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Texas Instruments Incorporated (TI) announced its latest digital media processing technology is incorporated in the first-of-its-kind Kodak EasyShare One zoom digital camera. As the first camera to utilize Kodak’s newest Color Science image processor, based on TI’s semiconductor technology running Kodak’s algorithms, the EasyShare One camera features storage of up to 1,500 pictures, in-camera editing, WiFi e-mailing and sharing, and picture printing without using a computer. The camera also features television-quality video with audio at 30 frames-per-second. "TI's powerful digital media processor provides a programmable platform that allows Kodak to customize its products."
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