Tuesday, November 22, 2005

Wired News: Say Sayonara to Blurry Pics

Wired News: Say Sayonara to Blurry Pics

A prototype camera made by a Stanford University graduate student could herald the end of fuzzy, poorly lit photos.

A computer science Ph.D. student at Stanford University has outfitted a 16-megapixel camera with a bevy of micro lenses that allows users to take photos and later refocus them on a computer using software he wrote.

The student, Ren Ng, ran out of patience with taking pictures the traditional way -- adjusting the distance between the camera lens and sensor or film before snapping each shot. So he created something that far surpasses Photoshop. A photograph can be modified after the fact even if nothing is in focus, he said.

"We just think it'll lead to better cameras that make it easier to take pictures that are in focus and look good," said Ng's adviser, Stanford computer science professor Pat Hanrahan.

Ng calls his creation the "light field camera" because of its ability to capture the quantity of light moving in all directions in an open space. It stems from early-20th-century work on integral photography, which experimented with using lens arrays in front of film, and an early-1990s plenoptic camera
developed at MIT and used for range finding. By building upon these ideas, Ng hopes to improve commercial cameras' focusing abilities.

Traditionally, light rays filter through a camera's lens and converge at one point on film or a digital sensor, then the camera summarizes incoming light without capturing much information about where it came from. Ng's camera pits about 90,000 micro lenses between the main lens and sensor. The mini lenses measure all the rays of incoming light and their directions of origin. The software later adds up the rays, according to how the picture is being refocused.

The technology could help snap-happy amateurs and professional photographers, as well as aid security cameras in capturing sharper information.

http://www.wired.com/news/technology/0,1282,69594,00.html?tw=rss.TEK

Sunday, November 20, 2005

Outdoor Music Festivals Cash Cows

The Japan Times Online

Outdoor music festivals where concertgoers can pamper themselves with hot springs and barbecues are growing in popularity as resort areas learn how to reap the economic windfall.

"At night, you can enjoy seeing a starlit sky and feel relaxed in nature," said Miho Imamura, a cafe manager from Tokyo who came to Asagiri Jam, an October music festival held in Fujinomiya, Shizuoka Prefecture. The show allowed her to camp out while catching her favorite groups on stage.

The music at the festivals is mostly pop or rock 'n' roll. Outdoor music festivals started in Europe and North America in the mid-20th century and started getting popular in Japan in the late 1990s.

http://www.japantimes.com/cgi-bin/getarticle.pl5?nn20051119f2.htm


Monday, November 14, 2005

Shirakawa-go



This past weekend I went with my friend Mika to Shirakawa-go, a World Heritage site meant to commemorate the mountain lifestyle of Japanese farmers in Gifu Prefecture around the turn of the century.

I met Mika back in July at a party in Nagoya, and we started seeing each other when I returned from the Philippines.

This weekend was our first and possibly last weekend outing because Mika is moving to Seattle later this month. She's taken a job with CICD to work with and assist Japanese residents in the Seattle area.

Anyway, we drove up to Gifu Saturday morning and spent the day walking around Shirakawa Village checking out all the gassho-style farmhouses and taking in the colorful mountain scenery.

That night we stayed in a minshuku, had an incredible Japanese feast, and took a relaxing onsen.

Sunday morning we drove over to Takayama and walked in and out of the tourist shops snacking on ALL the local delicacies. Dango, Gohei-mochi, Hida-beef koroke, Hida-beef sushi, Hoba-miso, giant sembei, Takayama Ji-zake. You name it.

I took quite a few picture over the course of the weekend, so I put them together in a photo album using my dotmac account.

To view my photo album please click here: Shirakawa-go Photos.

Tuesday, November 08, 2005

Monday, November 07, 2005

My New 'Old' Toy

Since I started using iTunes about a year ago, all I've listened to is mp3 formatted music. If I buy a CD, I immediately encode it, put it on my iPod, and put the disc on the shelf never to be noticed again.

Due to this massive evolution in my listening habits, I decided I need to have some kind of balance.

I bought this second hand record player while shopping for a replacement center speaker which I blew at a home party about a month ago.

With the cold starting to creep in through my paper doors and tatami mats, I've been curling up under the kotatsu table; only getting up to flip the record and drop the needle.

It's gonna be an interesting winter.

Film file-sharer sent to prison

BBC NEWS | Technology | Film file-sharer sent to prison

A Hong Kong man has been jailed for three months for film piracy after he shared movie files over the internet.

The authorities say he is the first person in the world to be prosecuted for passing on files using a popular file-sharing program called BitTorrent.

It makes the sharing of material easy by breaking a file up into fragments and then distributing them.

The film industry says it hopes the sentence handed down to Chan Nai-ming will prove a deterrent to others.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/technology/4413540.stm