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Simply select the Camera feature in the app, and it'll prompt you to swipe the Lytro's menu drawer until you see the WiFi logo as shown in the picture above. Tap it, follow the on-screen ...
In our review of the Lytro camera, which lets you take a picture and then change the focus later, we concluded that while it was impressive, it was missing a lot of features that users would want.
Lytro is the first camera that captures all the light in a scene in such a way that you can focus later — after you've taken the picture. This creates what the company calls "living pictures ...
The Lytro camera changes that by allowing you to snap photos in the moment, and then pick the perfect focus later. The Lytro uses a technology that captures the entire field of light in any given ...
Lytro scrapped all that and built the self-titled Lytro camera, a digital camera that neither looks nor operates like any camera you’ve ever seen: it measures megarays instead of megapixels ...
Previously, at Protocol, The Wall Street Journal, and Wired. Ten minutes into using the Lytro Illum, I’m throwing out everything I’ve ever learned about photography. Taking great photos with ...
To publish a “review” of the Lytro as it is today is, in a way, very premature. But it’s also only fair. The product is shipping and, to an extent, complete. But given the number of features ...
Lytro’s light field camera created a lot of excitement when it debuted a year ago. The technology it employs allows the user to put different parts of the image in focus after a shot has been taken.
Lytro is trending after the camera maker began accepting preorders for its new, much-hyped light-field cameras. The new device captures 11 million light rays, and, unlike a traditional camera ...
Some photographers are calling it "revolutionary." Lytro, a start-up company in Mountain View, Calif., with about 45 employees, expects to release the camera onto the market sometime this year.
All the Lytro buzz is about its new camera, which misses the bigger picture. Lytro is tapping into new science which may well revolutionize the economics of building cameras and lenses. Share on ...
Lytro, the company behind the light-field camera system by the same name, has launched an iPhone and iPod touch application. The app connects to the Lytro Camera via a WiFi connection to allow ...