Lytro's ABANDONED 40k Resolution Cinema Camera

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💥ABANDONED CAMERA SERIES EPISODES💥► bit.ly/3xn2QVm
This is a very interesting episode on a type of camera we have not covered before, Light Field Cameras. The Lytro 40K Cinema Camera is an absolutely bizarre sci-fi camera that came out in 2016 to much fanfare as many thought the world of cinematography would change forever. But what happened to Lytro and why did the camera fail?
Find out today on our ABANDONED camera series!
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=============================
0:00 The LYTRO CINEMA CAMERA
1:01 ABANDONED CAMERAS Forum and Website!
1:46 The early history of Lytro
2:52 What are Light Field Cameras?
4:29 Light Field concepts are not new, dating back to Davinci
5:04 The Lytro LightField Camera (The First Light Field Camera commercially sold)
5:37 The Lytro Illum
6:09 Lytro shifts focus to VR with the Lytro Immerge
6:44 Switching CEO's and strategy
7:04 The LYTRO CINEMA CAMERA Released at NAB 2016
8:05 The booth was almost overrun at NAB
8:29 Changing Shutter angle and Frame Rate in post
8:45 LYTRO Price Point
9:04 The Lytro Cinema Camera Sensor Size
9:34 The massive VFX Potential
10:29 This camera was BIG
11:04 We've seen this story before ...
11:24 The final days of LYTRO
12:24 Is Light Field tech still being developed?
Disclosure - Some of the links you see in the description box are affiliate links. At no extra cost to you, if you use those links to purchase an item, I will receive a small commission. Thank you for your support :)
-----
#ABANDONED #Lytro #FrameVoyager

Пікірлер: 473

  • @FrameVoyager
    @FrameVoyager Жыл бұрын

    Who here thinks they could mount this bad boy on a gimbal? ============================= 💭Join our Discord Channel💬 ► discord.gg/3aeNPU7GHu 🐦Twitter ► twitter.com/frame_voyager 📷Instagram ► instagram.com/framevoyager/ 🎵TikTok ► www.tiktok.com/@framevoyager Join our KZread channel 📺 ►kzread.info/dron/mXGDFnFh95WlZjhwmA5aeQ.htmljoin =============================

  • @RomanHaussener

    @RomanHaussener

    Жыл бұрын

    A piece of cake for my DJI OM 4. But I have to go to the gym first...😂

  • @goldcd

    @goldcd

    Жыл бұрын

    Real men strap that to a steadicam mount

  • @unn4medfeel1ng

    @unn4medfeel1ng

    Жыл бұрын

    Not sure about a gimbal, but the smallrig tripod would handle it easily

  • @FrameVoyager

    @FrameVoyager

    Жыл бұрын

    😂😂😂 💯

  • @OccultDemonCassette

    @OccultDemonCassette

    Жыл бұрын

    Did google actually buy the company? I thought that their employees just went to Google without a buyout.

  • @FalconPunchPro1
    @FalconPunchPro1 Жыл бұрын

    I worked at Lytro for a bit, during the Illum until just before the immerge. It's really interesting to see a historical documentary style thing on stuff I actually lived through. And seeing people I know personally. Good stuff :-)

  • @FrameVoyager

    @FrameVoyager

    Жыл бұрын

    Appreciate it! Been cool to hear from people who have worked for these companies and get feedback 😂 try to do the best we can with the information available for us!

  • @K0S0s

    @K0S0s

    Жыл бұрын

    Buzz Hays was my S3D prof/mentor in college. I loved hearing about the tech and seeing what yall were working on when he was at class in person.

  • @noname7271

    @noname7271

    6 ай бұрын

    Was the big-ass camera with the half meter sensor made of smaller sensor tiles? I can't expect they designed and fabbed a wafer-sized sensor for only the price of a luxury car.

  • @J0sI-I

    @J0sI-I

    4 ай бұрын

    @@noname7271You pay a luxury car to rent the camera, there was no purchase option. I imagine the sensor was indeed wafer-sized.

  • @francescodesimoni5188
    @francescodesimoni5188 Жыл бұрын

    I actually bought a Lytro Illum back in 2018 out of curiosity for the light field thing. I payed around 400 euros since the camera was already a fail and reseller were trying to sell the last stocks remained. I should say that the camera was very disappointing, at the point where the unboxing experience was the best thing about it. The image was quite bad, especially for a camera supposed to cost €1300, the dynamic range was very very limited at the point where even my mid-tear samsung phone was almost better. It used a special format of file to save the images and you needed a proprietary software on your computer in order to be able to change the focus and iris (more on that later) in post, then you could save the final result as a Jpeg or even as a 3d image. I should say that the software part worked quite well at least for me and there weren't bugs I noticed. The problem was that the changes you could made on the depht of field were quite limited and when you changed the focus the edges of the objects certain times were quite rough. All in all wasn't (at least for me) enough of a feature to justify the price and the quality drop of the image. I think that camera was a very big missed opportunity: you could see there was a lot of potential, the camera was well build, the firmware worked very well (as far first generations go) and the technology behind it was amazing. The problem, in my opinion, was that they focused too much on the light field feature and not on the actual quality of image itself. I think, and I believe is the same for every photographer, that the light field tech can be a nice added feature but nothing more than that and surely not a replacement for good image, and I this is the massive mistake Lytro company did. I'm an Italian speaker btw, so sorry in advance for grammatical errors.

  • @persquad8998

    @persquad8998

    Жыл бұрын

    Exactly, in the End the image quality is what makes or breaks a camera, just look at Arri or Blackmagic. They both focused on image quality, and both are quite successful with it, despite their competitor pumping out 12k sensors (for Arri) and generally having more features (for BM)

  • @AdrianTache

    @AdrianTache

    Жыл бұрын

    All oftheir experiments had this problem, expensive and poor quality, for A gimm8ck

  • @kunjupulla

    @kunjupulla

    Жыл бұрын

    Yup and instead of turning to VR and the cinema industry, they could have improved their colour science and other stuff. Literally, I'm quite sad that they had to shut down 😢.

  • @MildMisanthropeMaybeMassive

    @MildMisanthropeMaybeMassive

    Жыл бұрын

    I never had a Lytro camera, but I remember their app that showcased user submitted photos and liking the novelty of being able to change the focus and angles after the pictures were already taken.

  • @fab9207

    @fab9207

    Жыл бұрын

    I think the edges are bad because the edges of objects scatter light (like how the edges of shadows are blurry)

  • @graealex
    @graealex Жыл бұрын

    Let's hope this technology is coming back one day, in a smaller package. Just the ability to do green screen without a green screen is brilliant.

  • @rcarter1690

    @rcarter1690

    Жыл бұрын

    Apple have been trying to implement these features for years. First using the multiple cameras for depth information and more recently LiDAR. Removing the background for photos is already there and within the next few years as the A series chips improve this will definitely come to video on iPhones as well as the accuracy of the depth separation.

  • @graealex

    @graealex

    Жыл бұрын

    @@rcarter1690 Using a separate camera is fundamentally flawed, as the perspective is different. At least for Cinema-grade separation, you'd either need a sensor that records both brightness and ToF at the same time, or a system like lightfields. We've been working with Intel RealSense cameras for quite some time, and the separation between either the structured light cameras or the ToF means that the objects in the foreground will always obscure some part of the scene that the other cameras actually do see.

  • @kunjupulla

    @kunjupulla

    Жыл бұрын

    Like, their consumer products were compelling enough. This sure was a loss in the world of photography.

  • @birdpump

    @birdpump

    Жыл бұрын

    It's called image segmentation

  • @graealex

    @graealex

    Жыл бұрын

    @@birdpump I am aware of that. Read the subcomment.

  • @AndreiX1308L
    @AndreiX1308L Жыл бұрын

    Half a meter wide sensor??? That's insane! Nice video man, this series is really interesting and it never disappoints me!

  • @FrameVoyager

    @FrameVoyager

    Жыл бұрын

    Insane right? And appreciate it! Been fun creating and led to some cool stories. Lots more to come and spinoff series we've already started!

  • @mnomadvfx

    @mnomadvfx

    Жыл бұрын

    Not really. They used an array of lenses and sensors to achieve a greater total sensor area.

  • @cybyrd9615

    @cybyrd9615

    8 ай бұрын

    @@mnomadvfx Yea but each new sensor meant more complexity in the lense paths if they used 200 full frame sensors and they extracted more information from the beam path that would get absolutely insane. It makes sense google bought them. That was the only company that would dare to even see a possibility in handling that kind of complexity

  • @chronokoks
    @chronokoks Жыл бұрын

    Otoy made a really cool demonstration of lightfields for VR by simply spinning a DSLR camera on a rig around and that created 1 frame lightfields (not animations). There's still nothing like that out there. People who were developing lightfield tech absolutely sucked at commercializing it. Such a shame. Neural radiance fields are sort of getting there without the need to have expensive rigs and cameras.

  • @FrameVoyager

    @FrameVoyager

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeahhhh... The marketing kinda felt like it was coming from a tech college or something. Which makes sense lol. Fascinating tech, gotta wonder if it will ever be viable or even in this century lol

  • @yuxuanhuang3523

    @yuxuanhuang3523

    Жыл бұрын

    @@FrameVoyager I would like to know how they managed to capture the direction information of the light rays. Perhaps the 300G per second was necessary to collect images on multiple sensors so they could form a 3D space

  • @chronokoks

    @chronokoks

    Жыл бұрын

    @@yuxuanhuang3523 If you know the angle of the sensor to other sensors you can decide the angle of the "ray". It's actually not that complicated - lots of papers on this topic.

  • @mnomadvfx

    @mnomadvfx

    Жыл бұрын

    They weren't trying to make a camera though, they were demonstrating their new data compression system called ORBX that can also be used for light fields.

  • @GavinSeim
    @GavinSeim Жыл бұрын

    Lyto failed in many ways. The worst of which is that they did not make a product that can be realisticly sold or used my the market. They made a giant beast when the entire industry was moving to more compact systems

  • @alter-ego-

    @alter-ego-

    Жыл бұрын

    But still their vision was great. Steve jobs would have approved it! And maybe even bought it before Google did.

  • @Nick_Lavigne
    @Nick_Lavigne Жыл бұрын

    It's actually almost 21MP or almost 6k. There is a 6x6 grid of pixes under every microlens. So you take 755MP and divide it by 36. This equates to a resolution of 20.83MP or about 6k. It wasn't sold for Google. It was an error in reporting, the employees went to Google.

  • @Neojhun

    @Neojhun

    Жыл бұрын

    Nope, Google did acquire Lytro the company mostly for it's I.P. assets I guess. It happened after many staff had already moved to google.

  • @Nick_Lavigne

    @Nick_Lavigne

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Neojhun I had already written why this is not true, but keeps getting deleted due to the links. Anyways, only early reports said that. Reports that came out after clarify that they were not. You can find one on CNet as well as others so long as they are datedlate March 2018 or later. The early March reports were the erroneous ones. You will also not find the purchase in alphabet inc 2018 quarterly earnings reports, or any SEC filings. Also for what it's worth in 2018 the year of the demise of Lytro the website for lytro redirects to Raytrix in Germany, and still does. Now, it is possible Google bought some items, but they certainly didn't buy the company there would be concrete company papers.

  • @smartduck904
    @smartduck904 Жыл бұрын

    Leonardo da Vinci must have been a time traveler hahaha he knew exactly what he was talking about

  • @FrameVoyager

    @FrameVoyager

    Жыл бұрын

    Talk about being waaaayyyyy ahead of your time.

  • @Jwats96
    @Jwats96 Жыл бұрын

    It seems to me that this company is another case of the right place at the wrong time. I think if they tried again in 10-15 years they could make a better performing camera at a much smaller size and price. This technology is definitely going to be the future, it was just a little too early for something like Lytro.

  • @richardmattocks
    @richardmattocks Жыл бұрын

    Light field photography is just insane, amazing and brilliant.

  • @FrameVoyager

    @FrameVoyager

    Жыл бұрын

    Couldn't agree more! I hope they really figure out how to use it one day. Imagine the cost cutting applications for filming movies or anything? You really can fix it in post lol

  • @pablovi77

    @pablovi77

    Жыл бұрын

    And also dead.

  • @Leforge360

    @Leforge360

    Жыл бұрын

    Owning 2 lytro still cameras They are awsome (tho low res) bits of technology

  • @JCD87
    @JCD87 Жыл бұрын

    The design of the camera is almost robocopstyle and futuristic. 400GB/s videostream is absolutely mindblowing!

  • @ddnguyen278
    @ddnguyen278 Жыл бұрын

    The technology was too far ahead of its time, it will I'm sure make a comeback in the future.

  • @FrameVoyager

    @FrameVoyager

    Жыл бұрын

    Oh, at some point for sure! I think some of the concepts you'll start to see a lot in VFX work anyways. And you are kind of seeing some of this with the way they are doing virtual productions.

  • @KabiesiTV

    @KabiesiTV

    Жыл бұрын

    There's a problem when you live too much ahead of time.

  • @kishascape

    @kishascape

    Жыл бұрын

    Also light field already existed 100 years and lytro tried to pretend they did it first. Adobe did it back in 2004, raytrix has done it since 2008. Outside niche scientific applications it’s useless. Keep harping on though, it’s good know who the brain deads are for when euthanization is legalized later.

  • @springrollwang4441

    @springrollwang4441

    Жыл бұрын

    I think the tech create more problems than solve existing problem.

  • @IAmNumber4000

    @IAmNumber4000

    Жыл бұрын

    The technology may have been ahead of its time, but their color accuracy and sharpness were about 10 years behind the times.

  • @TimButt2
    @TimButt2 Жыл бұрын

    Was looking forward to this one. Such a fascinating camera conceptually. Definitely the VFX & VR uses were the most interesting conceptually. Probably way too ahead of the industry. And, 40K is ridiculous resolution. The cinema camera was literally the size of a tank turret. Although that would be a funny sight to see a tank rolling up and telling others "Oh, that's just the camera."

  • @FrameVoyager

    @FrameVoyager

    Жыл бұрын

    It really is such a fascinating camera, but it's just so impractical haha. Wish they had done something a bit more compact!

  • @zr1129

    @zr1129

    Жыл бұрын

    @@FrameVoyager Cinema cameras are already impractical. An IMAX camera is hard to lunk around and requires huge film rolls. I don't see like it's that much of a difference beyond the storage issues.

  • @brystahh3287
    @brystahh3287 Жыл бұрын

    Love this channel! You are the best and keep me up to date on everything I care about. Thanks for all your hard work and time commitment!

  • @FrameVoyager

    @FrameVoyager

    Жыл бұрын

    Appreciate it! Lots more to come!

  • @speedstyle.
    @speedstyle. Жыл бұрын

    "hard to tell exactly what Google is planning on using the technology for in future" Google used the camera tech they bought with Lytro to build Project Starline. Basically glasses-free 3D/AR conference calling, using a huge light-field display Lytro had been working on, and highly efficient networking/compression algorithms from other google projects like AV1/Duo

  • @FrameVoyager

    @FrameVoyager

    Жыл бұрын

    Interesting... 3d conference calling lol

  • @SDRIFTERAbdlmounaim
    @SDRIFTERAbdlmounaim Жыл бұрын

    KZread should take the hint by now and support 40K quality on it's videos 👀

  • @FrameVoyager

    @FrameVoyager

    Жыл бұрын

    I know!!! Right? 👀

  • @bronzehawk3646
    @bronzehawk3646 Жыл бұрын

    as a videographer and editor i think this was the most amazing and mind blowing revolution of all time for camera industry now a days this can be made much much smaller even phones can use time of light and lidar to achieve re focusing and relighting but compared to this its so muchmore than that its the actual hardware thats capturing all of those things if you combine this hardware technology and todays sensors i believe it would be flawless

  • @ErikPelyukhno
    @ErikPelyukhno Жыл бұрын

    What a loss!! As an engineer myself I was finishing school wanting to work for Lytra. What an amazing technology

  • @IAmNumber4000
    @IAmNumber4000 Жыл бұрын

    I was totally bewildered when Lytro announced this weird camera and I still am, that they ever considered it. I kind of developed a hate obsession around this company 8 years ago that I didn't even remember until this video. Their technology is incredible I'm sure, but all I can see is the images they produce, and I was really not impressed by their quality. No cinematographer would _ever_ have used this thing to shoot a movie. You _cannot_ fake the beautiful, buttery-smooth bokeh effect produced by a well-crafted cinema prime lens. The precision of sensors on cinema cameras with regard to color is more than a company like Lytro can possibly hope to compete with. Also it's totally unwieldly and impossible to fit to sliders, rigs, gibs, cranes, gimbals, steadycams, etc. A RED camera would run circles around this thing in terms of visual quality, and will fit on all of those. And for what? So you can focus in post? That's such a niche and gimmicky reason to totally sacrifice image quality. It's the classic "solution in search of a problem". Which also runs totally contrary to the needs of the industry they're trying to break into.

  • @andrewsmithphoto
    @andrewsmithphoto Жыл бұрын

    I remember when Lytros came out a few years ago. Some people thought it was an innovative idea, but they were forgotten almost immediately. I honesty didn't think they got beyond the first two consumer still cameras.

  • @FrameVoyager

    @FrameVoyager

    Жыл бұрын

    Probably because they rebranded away from consumers and more to businesses and production. Probably what killed them

  • @IAmNumber4000

    @IAmNumber4000

    Жыл бұрын

    @@FrameVoyager What killed them was their image quality was awful. Even with their supposedly amazing bus-sized cinema camera, that short film looks muddy and strange.

  • @MillisecondFalcon
    @MillisecondFalcon Жыл бұрын

    I remember thinking the first Lytro camera they released was revolutionary and wish I had bought one at the time. This technology is exactly what you'd think someone like James Cameron would be interested in and I'm actually surprised he, or someone of his pedigree, didn't invest in it. However, I would not be surprised to see this tech make a comeback in the near future.

  • @nagualdesign

    @nagualdesign

    Жыл бұрын

    Filmmakers know what they want to capture, including what they want to focus on in any given shot. Having that 'baked in' is not a problem looking for a solution.

  • @TheOpticalFreak
    @TheOpticalFreak Жыл бұрын

    Ah yes , i remember that LYTRO refocus camera, it was featured on Tested by Norman Chan! I can't believe it was already 11 years ago! 😅 Back then that technology was mind-blowing! 😃

  • @FrameVoyager

    @FrameVoyager

    Жыл бұрын

    😅😅😅 such a fascinating camera... Don't know if it will ever be practical but still cool tech for sure

  • @francescochetcuti5862
    @francescochetcuti5862 Жыл бұрын

    I am more excited to watch the new ABANDONED episode than any show out right now! You put a lot of work in your videos and it shows.

  • @FrameVoyager

    @FrameVoyager

    Жыл бұрын

    😅😅😅 appreciate it! Just happy to be able to bring these stories out! Such cool cameras

  • @gionspenzers
    @gionspenzers Жыл бұрын

    Light field camera to me just sounds like pure magic to me. Weird how I was early to watched this even though I am not subscribed yet. Subbed.

  • @FrameVoyager

    @FrameVoyager

    Жыл бұрын

    It really is! I mean I did a deep dive into conceptually how it works but it still blows my mind. And appreciate the Sub haha!

  • @nicolaslabra2225
    @nicolaslabra2225 Жыл бұрын

    Im torn, on the one had this is a totally incredible technological breakthrough, but in the other hand i shiver at the thought of taking even more "artistic" decisions in the editing room, and without the need for a focus puller, or even a DP to consult to, it makes it too easy for the artistic vision of the DP to be deviated from or ignored, i love that Arri went for the Baked in looks from the camera in the alexa 35, its bold, but it puts the control back in the hands of the filmmakers, at least in my opinion, not that planoptic cameras dont have a place in cinema, i just wouldnt like it to replace the current tech completely.

  • @FrameVoyager

    @FrameVoyager

    Жыл бұрын

    Totally get what you're saying! We are kind of at a weird crossroads at this point in the history of filmmaking. Will we keep more grounded like we always have or will everything start to become more automated? And which is better? Fascinating times

  • @Theophan123

    @Theophan123

    Жыл бұрын

    I don't foresee plenoptic cameras completely replacing conventional digital ones (heck, analog films are still around to some degree). However, there is a possibility of some aspiring directors or cinematographers experimenting with light field cameras.

  • @theothertonydutch

    @theothertonydutch

    Жыл бұрын

    @@FrameVoyager I just got a super 16 krasnogorsk, lol.

  • @Samskihero

    @Samskihero

    Жыл бұрын

    Lytro would never have taken away today's traditional Digital cameras even if it was smaller and lighter because there is so much character in Lenses and even in the Dynamic Range of your sensor, Lytro tech is amazing but the results are extremely digital, I believe the DOF is SImulated and until they simulated good looking DOF with some character I think the results always looked really really nasty, Think Fast blur on Premiere or After effects.

  • @johnorozco9332
    @johnorozco9332 Жыл бұрын

    I was on set in a shoot and I saw you uploaded a new video, I apologised to the ACs and came home to watch it as soon we did the last shot

  • @FrameVoyager

    @FrameVoyager

    Жыл бұрын

    😂😂😂 hope it was worth it! Hahaha

  • @ErikTheAndroid
    @ErikTheAndroid Жыл бұрын

    Man what a joy to see an "On The Verge" clip from when they were good, those were good times.

  • @IvanMyr1
    @IvanMyr1 Жыл бұрын

    if it actually recorded at 400GBps there literally would not be any feasible way to record data from it. even now the fastest commercially available drives top out below 10GBps, and in 2016 things were a lot slower. you would need enormous drive arrays of dozens of drives in RAID 0, which would be very very unreliable, if they used anything commercial, and even if the solution was custom with custom interfaces, would still need thousands of NAND Flash storage chips to record at that data rate for more than a few minutes. No way in hell they had anything approaching a working prototype that would deliver those results

  • @FrameVoyager

    @FrameVoyager

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeahhh, I know they had some kind of "special storage" solution for it. But who knows, no one ever really got to use the camera for real so we'll never know 😭

  • @dan2800

    @dan2800

    Жыл бұрын

    @@FrameVoyager it would need 40 drives with write speed of 10GB/s or better strapped in raid 0 and a lot of multisocket server's to handle 400GB/s also if you would take 30TB ssd's then you could fit 75s of footage on it for hour of footage you would need 48 of these arrays aka 1920 drivers with is 7680 lanes of PCIE that equals to 60 AMD EPYC CPU's and that hour of footage would be in total of 57.6PB totaly reasonable right??

  • @VoraciousPhantasma

    @VoraciousPhantasma

    2 ай бұрын

    27 PCIe Gen5 SSDs running RAID0 🤯

  • @GFMstudios
    @GFMstudios Жыл бұрын

    Thank you for making this video. I loved Lytro, as young kid I was dreaming working with a light field camera. I wonder how many hours of research you spend and then all editing and getting stock of video. What it seems weird and even a good fuel for conspiracy theories is why all such tech suddenly vanish. I’m aware they were too ahead in time for a business perspective, but now vr and so many other things would do amazing things. Imagine the 360 camera on an Helicopter for bird eye experience on sky on a vr. Just to mention one thing.

  • @IAmNumber4000

    @IAmNumber4000

    Жыл бұрын

    The reason they vanished is pretty obvious. Their image quality was awful. Focusing correctly the first time isn't hard, and there is no purpose for a camera that takes a poor-quality image.

  • @johnnyswatts
    @johnnyswatts Жыл бұрын

    Thanks for sharing this fascinating technology. This is the field in which I'm doing my PhD. Just a quick correction on how a light field camera works: they don't have multiple sensors inside them, just a regular camera sensor. The difference is in the array of tiny lenses in front of the sensor and the processing you can do with that additional information. Light field cameras are in regular use in industry but have yet to find their niche in the consumer market.

  • @kinoromantic
    @kinoromantic Жыл бұрын

    Oh man I was looking forward for these to be taking off, but I guess they were too ahead of their time. I'm sure it's the future though! Just imagine the RAW 20 bit video file size that will come out of future light field cinema cameras :D

  • @FrameVoyager

    @FrameVoyager

    Жыл бұрын

    This or it paved the way for something like it. I really have always believed filmmaking will start becoming a little more automated with the processes allowing creators more control over visuals than they do now. Will be interesting to see what comes next

  • @GudieveNing
    @GudieveNing Жыл бұрын

    Ah I was following Lytro from launch but had no idea they went into broadcast/cinema. I really hoped Panasonic, Sony or other camera manufacturer would buy them and optimise the technology. Panasonic in particular, because they have always been at the leading edge of capturing frames from video in their GH series micro 4/3rds cameras. And light field tech seemed the next logical step.

  • @FrameVoyager

    @FrameVoyager

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeahhhh, it's probably what killed Lytro as a company too. I think they tried to do too much

  • @SelinicaHarbinger
    @SelinicaHarbinger Жыл бұрын

    I remember this thing, it was for sure an interesting idea and the PR was so bad. I still dreamed of getting to try it out and I still dream of owning the one they made someday. My own white whale

  • @FrameVoyager

    @FrameVoyager

    Жыл бұрын

    It would be cool to get a miniaturized version of this someday for sure! Sad it didn't work out

  • @ajthealchemist
    @ajthealchemist Жыл бұрын

    Bro I've beeeen waiting for this!

  • @FrameVoyager

    @FrameVoyager

    Жыл бұрын

    haha gotta pace out these cool ones!

  • @jonweinraub
    @jonweinraub Жыл бұрын

    A guy I worked with got the consumer tube (is there a word for a 3D rectangle?) and the fact you can change focus points afterwards was neat. But was bummed out by the obvious need of their software making distribution of said files challenging. I had zero idea the cinema thing even happened! I do hope to see it again someday and not buried in some warehouse to whom eventually owns the IP

  • @carlospovy9669
    @carlospovy9669 Жыл бұрын

    Fabulous! Video. I always wondered what happened to them.

  • @floppytwist
    @floppytwist Жыл бұрын

    This is better than any Csi:Miama episode. You don't even habe to nerd about cameras to enjoy the format.

  • @WATCHMAKUH
    @WATCHMAKUH Жыл бұрын

    This is the the kind of fringe tech you’d find in an alternate universe.

  • @KamilSkalny
    @KamilSkalny Жыл бұрын

    After all this years I still don't know what is Squarespace and newer seen any website related to it.

  • @davecool42
    @davecool42 Жыл бұрын

    What was the output resolution? Light field works by capturing multiple versions of the same image. Would that 40k (each of the light field elements being added together) be "downsampled" to a final 4k output?

  • @FrameVoyager

    @FrameVoyager

    Жыл бұрын

    More than likely. I think it had several different functional levels.

  • @SP95
    @SP95 Жыл бұрын

    I do recall Google made something out of it and there were big demos all over the place. They might still be available on the web

  • @Ciborium
    @Ciborium Жыл бұрын

    I remember when the Lytro was released to the public. It sounded fancy-schmancy. If they had only improved on the consumer product, expanding to a professional photographer level version, they could have been relatively successful. Imagine if development had progressed enough to fit it into an iPhone?

  • @legendp2011
    @legendp2011 Жыл бұрын

    if they had made a 1080p consumer video camera for $5000 that would have been cool. especially if aimed at VFX (same size as the big original black magic ursa, but with ability to create easy chroma screens would have been interesting for smaller VF workflows).

  • @shaneintegra
    @shaneintegra Жыл бұрын

    Its rare to see working tech thats too ahead of its time. Really was amazing

  • @beaudanner
    @beaudanner Жыл бұрын

    I remember Lytro! If I were an investor I would have lost everything. I never understood why it went nowhere. To me it was like magic

  • @FrameVoyager

    @FrameVoyager

    Жыл бұрын

    I think it's so beyond it's time the infrastructure and the demand is just not there for it yet. Also the storage required 😅

  • @joelface
    @joelface Жыл бұрын

    I remember the Lytro Immerge videos that promised VR video where you could walk and look around real video footage, peering around corners and around people. To me that's still the dream for VR, rather than rendered graphics, or depthless 360 videos. But, I suspect we'll find it easier to set up an array of Kinnect-style depth cameras, rather than bothering with Lightfield cameras. But time will tell! Can't wait for more innovation on that front in VR, either way!

  • @chungdha
    @chungdha Жыл бұрын

    I feel when the new CEO took it over , the company started to die, as original CEO was more correct in making consumer products, which they should had improved over time. But the cinema camera specs sounded too much like a scam.

  • @FrameVoyager

    @FrameVoyager

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeah it was definitley a pie in the sky kind of company

  • @roryblake7311
    @roryblake7311 Жыл бұрын

    I bought 18 Illum cameras (when they were heavily discounted) for an array. Worked great ....but the computing power necessary was way too much for live action!

  • @luca__3044
    @luca__3044 Жыл бұрын

    Heared of lightfield displays used in some ar glasses so they give you an accurate representation of depth.. man this technology is truly wicked

  • @matthewjamesmartin
    @matthewjamesmartin Жыл бұрын

    This series is genius, and that trailer is something else. I doth my cap to you sir.

  • @FrameVoyager

    @FrameVoyager

    Жыл бұрын

    😅😅😅 appreciate it!

  • @novelezra
    @novelezra Жыл бұрын

    I know this isn't strictly 'camera' related but it kind of is! And since this camera was going to allow you to change the DOF in post; I need to talk about this. So in videogames, you are essentially always looking through a camera. But even though there is so much you can do with a manual DOF; it is hardly utilized ever. The only time you may see it is when you are playing a FPS and you look down the barrel of a gun. One game that bucked this trend blew my mind when it used it and even now; no game has tried to do what this game did. That game was Alien Isolation. Alien Isolation allowed you to shift your focus between your radar and the environment. Something you don't even think about is that when you do something as simple as look at your phone; that is DOF. The background is blurry but you don't even notice. However in games DOF is rarely used in these instances. But in Alien Isolation they used it to tremendous effect. It was so immersive. So why do I bring this up? Well if this camera ever became a reality; imagine what we could do with movies? VR movies could be the thing of the future. Imagine it. They film an entire scene with this camera and with eye tracking; the movie knows where you are looking and focuses on that object. You could watch a movie and focus on what the person was reading whilst your friend watched the same movie and looked at the characters expression instead. I don't think we will get this for another 20 years or so but goddamn it could be amazing.

  • @MrLehi99
    @MrLehi99 Жыл бұрын

    "Hey, did you import that video like I asked yesterday?" "Yeah, it'll be done importing next week."

  • @Goon-124
    @Goon-124 Жыл бұрын

    I ended up with one of those Lytro consumer cameras after the company folded, played around with it a bit well after the company closed. Form factor was interesting, if somewhat limiting. The ecosystem of camera/software etc was a hassle to use. I wonder if the push for a maturation of the tech and then pushing for some sort of standards in file systems or OS support on the consumer side for more acceptance/buy in

  • @Babsdoproductions
    @Babsdoproductions Жыл бұрын

    Faceshift was an inexpensive facial motion capture software my brother and I had purchased a license for in its early beta stages. It was super easy and the results, after working out some quirks, were amazingly accurate and we even had a nice relationship with the creator of it as we were pretty active testers. Out of nowhere the company ended up getting sold to Apple and the software was locked after everybody’s annual licenses went up. Apple used this tech for their silly Animoji feature and with the remaining months of our license, we made our multi-award winning web series “The Review - A Fatal Frame Fan Film” which is on our channel and all of the CG ghosts used it for their facial animations. It was such a shame as the software was so good and affordable before it got bought out and if given time I’m sure Lytro would have worked out their cinema camera which would have been amazing to use on our first feature film as I’ve been rototscoping for the past several months which has been slow, painful, but somehow fun!

  • @Emilmarch
    @Emilmarch Жыл бұрын

    Proud owner of a Lytro Illum 40, not an easy camera, not the best, and doesn't have all the whistles and bells, no more support, and a handful of fans left but I love it.

  • @chengong388
    @chengong388 Жыл бұрын

    What's really happening, is they divide up the sensor into many tiny chunks, each with a micro lens in front with a different focal length. Basically they're taking one small photo for each focus distance, and that's all there is to it, there's no 5D uber math going on, all you're doing is pick out the small slice of the photo that's the focal distance you want. Their cameras, because of this fact, still require focusing, they just don't have to be as precise because each shot is taking a matrix of smaller photos at different distance of focus. Sure they could do some 5D uber math with these information but there's no need to do that for the results they produce in practice. All they have to do really, is compose the images together for a smooth DOF effect. Kind of like the fake bokeh we have in phones today.

  • @hbp_

    @hbp_

    Жыл бұрын

    Sounds a bit like Canon's dual pixel RAW.

  • @TechnoBabble

    @TechnoBabble

    Жыл бұрын

    Exactly, all of the talk of light fields, math transformations, photon direction, etc... Was all nonsense when talking about the camera. Sure, those things are real when talking about actual light fields... But no Lytro camera was actually capturing light fields.

  • @chengong388

    @chengong388

    Жыл бұрын

    @@hbp_ yes, there are some similarities. Canon basically splits every pixel in two and there's a normal number of pixels. Where as Lytro splits every pixel into a million, and there's like 16 pixels.

  • @user-cr4sc1ht9t

    @user-cr4sc1ht9t

    Жыл бұрын

    I doubt they had the technology to build such microlens array with different focal lengths, my guess is they are just spherical "dots" like embossed plastic sheets for decorations. I'm guessing the 5D uber math is both real and not, like they might be just overlaying all the images but with different blur strengths to turn up locally unblurred images, but for the lack of words in geniuses' heads the way they explained was "preserving incident angles of photon beams" and all that

  • @NeovanGoth

    @NeovanGoth

    Жыл бұрын

    How do you think all those tiny chunks come together to a picture? You guessed it: Math.

  • @mrmosk2011
    @mrmosk2011 Жыл бұрын

    Like many things we use today, when they first invented, they were way ahead of its time. Most basic network and internet concepts were conceived in the 1960's and it took 40 years for the other technologies to make it practical to the population. I still think lightfield idea is revolutionary, we just haven't found the right application and current electronics is not powerful enough make it good enough.

  • @Profispojka
    @Profispojka Жыл бұрын

    This series is the best on the internet!

  • @FrameVoyager

    @FrameVoyager

    Жыл бұрын

    😅😅😅 appreciate it!

  • @andrewbacon3583
    @andrewbacon3583 Жыл бұрын

    Ang Lee would love this thing. I can't help but think this is the tech he's looking for in his 3D/HRF experiments.

  • @JohnSuave
    @JohnSuave Жыл бұрын

    Wait what???? This is wild man.

  • @CharlesVanNoland
    @CharlesVanNoland Жыл бұрын

    I remember the kickstarter, it was a big deal, and lightfields are invariably the future of display tech if we want to have holographic type 3D displays. I feel like Lytro never put out very much demonstration materials, it was all very hush hush with just a few promo things about their cameras but I never felt like they were doing a serious push to get their cameras out there. Lightfield displays are for sure in the future, but cameras are going to need to have an application demonstrated.

  • @TheEventGuy
    @TheEventGuy Жыл бұрын

    There's only one director I can think of, that would be mad enough, to use this tree log camera for a full movie and that person is none other, than Quentin Tarantino. Imagine a VR movie as one of his last, crazy!

  • @jupitereye4322
    @jupitereye4322 Жыл бұрын

    I don't believe for a second that they've abandoned this technology. They've maybe continued to develop it for the military or security-sensitive utility of this technology, but abandoning it for good, I don't think so.

  • @FrameVoyager

    @FrameVoyager

    Жыл бұрын

    Not the tech but definitely this camera

  • @dm.b7560
    @dm.b7560 Жыл бұрын

    This story is much deeper and it is really strange. Lytro invented a new camera that had no lenses, but just a ball radar like and could see. Then Google bought the company and created a tech which is just multiple common cameras together, and they used the same name, as if they wanted to make that new tech Lytro invented disappear, and confuse the public, no ask yourself, what could that new tech camera see? and why they rushed to cancel it?

  • @xander9460
    @xander9460 Жыл бұрын

    Imagine streaming videos at this quality ;D

  • @makatron
    @makatron Жыл бұрын

    If they released a true 6k camera with proper workflow they'd be great for steadycam work and not worrying much about pulling focus when running.

  • @FrameVoyager

    @FrameVoyager

    Жыл бұрын

    💯 they just went too big with this

  • @makatron

    @makatron

    Жыл бұрын

    @@FrameVoyager also their single camera true 3D capture was so promising.

  • @Neuer_Alias_erstellen
    @Neuer_Alias_erstellen Жыл бұрын

    that's some crazy stuff

  • @SuperNaois
    @SuperNaois2 ай бұрын

    Video: "All available for $125,000...." Me: "Woah, really that's all?" Video "...subscription price..." Me: "Oh..."

  • @xGaLoSx
    @xGaLoSx Жыл бұрын

    Can any storage medium write that much data that quick? I'd love to know what raw bandwidth was required for 750MP at 300fps.

  • @Jaker788

    @Jaker788

    Жыл бұрын

    100 gigabytes per second is what was stated in the video. Definitely a lot, you'd probably want a Dram cache and PCIe 4 SSDs in raid 0 or 10 for redundancy. I don't think that kind of ssd tech existed then, so I'm not sure how they did it.

  • @SkarthManadragon

    @SkarthManadragon

    Жыл бұрын

    it's actually a 4k 300fps camera, so 750MP is sorta accurate and sorta not. This isn't a consumer product, which are designed to be cheap or cost effective, there is more than likely a large sized raid(s) arrays to handle that data.

  • @FrameVoyager

    @FrameVoyager

    Жыл бұрын

    😂 I know, weird how the conversions work but 40k is a better title. Lol. Plus that's what almost everyone reported it was 😅

  • @Ataraxia_Atom
    @Ataraxia_Atom Жыл бұрын

    Yes!! Love this series

  • @FrameVoyager

    @FrameVoyager

    Жыл бұрын

    ♥️♥️♥️

  • @supremebeme
    @supremebeme Жыл бұрын

    yooo I remember this! I was so hyped for Lytro!

  • @jonahhekmatyar
    @jonahhekmatyar Жыл бұрын

    I hope this camera doesn't go away and it can be put to use somewhere. With how much it must have cost to develop I doubt another one like it will be developed for maybe even another decade or more.

  • @Lp-ze1tg
    @Lp-ze1tg Жыл бұрын

    I remembered this company had a very promising product/future. But it is also a risk of bringing new technology into the market. I think A.I generated image and animation will be interesting to investigate now.

  • @FrameVoyager

    @FrameVoyager

    Жыл бұрын

    Always is a risk. And trying to get into the film industry is not necessarily easy or profitable

  • @Rammter
    @Rammter Жыл бұрын

    I wrote my BA-thesis about the question if lightfield will be the future of cinema cameras. The shortcut, the option of refocusing and adjusting the motionblur or aputure in post are nice to have, but not worth the amount of data and the pricetag. The real benefit of Lightfield could be the possibility of capturing immersive videos, means the viewer is able to see not just a 3D but 4D Video. Moving your head means to see the Videocontent from another perspective so you not just get the illusion of more dimensions but you are also able to look behind different objects. The real problem is the possibilities to show lightfields as an immersive Video are quiet few. In the last years some Startups and also big companies like Samsung or LG had introduced their Prototypes. Some of them seemed quiet promising... we will see

  • @Rammter

    @Rammter

    Жыл бұрын

    I spoke to different experts (ARRI, VFX-Engineers...), they meant that the consumer market (especially smartphones) could be the turning point where lightfield will have there breakthrough. Feel free to hit me up if you have any questions Greetings from Germany

  • @TravelClast
    @TravelClast Жыл бұрын

    I can also download confetti from Envato and put it over my footage. Cool.

  • @raredreamfootage
    @raredreamfootage Жыл бұрын

    Don't sleep on this technology, it was way ahead of it's time. When semi-conductors / processors can catch up, this technology will come back.

  • @Veptis
    @Veptis Жыл бұрын

    It doesn't use multiple sensor, just one normal sensor with a lot of small lenses. Essentially capturing several low resolution pictures focused on different layers. But data alone beats physics using various level of computational imaging. Think between stacking for denoise/super resolution, to depth estimation, to nerfs Light stages are used. Which simply shoot from different angles to get frames of 3D models.

  • @80amnesia
    @80amnesia Жыл бұрын

    this camera was amazing cannot understand how it failed in the consumer market!

  • @MikeTrieu
    @MikeTrieu9 ай бұрын

    Seems like Google is using Lytro's light field capture tech for their Project Starline immersive videoconferencing system.

  • @timramich
    @timramich Жыл бұрын

    Honestly, this would be the savior for 3d video. I always thought it was stupid because IRL, things you aren't focused on are blurry. With current 3d video tech, whatever was in focus in the shot is the only thing that can ever be in focus when viewed. It's quite distracting if one wants to look at something else in the scene. It breaks it down into a gimmick.

  • @jithinjayachandranpk
    @jithinjayachandranpk Жыл бұрын

    Always imagined of creating something similar

  • @Ghakimx
    @Ghakimx Жыл бұрын

    I actually remember the pool video back in 2013. Honestly felt like the tech was revolutionary but possibly too expensive. Guess I was right, seeing what happened to the company.

  • @surferdjnj
    @surferdjnj3 күн бұрын

    Sounds like they suffered the same fate as cell phone makers. People wanted good, then they only wanted good enough, due to costs.

  • @nishinabraham
    @nishinabraham Жыл бұрын

    As a wedding photographer we need it too.

  • @SuperNicktendo
    @SuperNicktendo Жыл бұрын

    Lyrtro was so cool when it came out. Too bad I didn't have the money. But the properiety software was a deal breaker

  • @FrameVoyager

    @FrameVoyager

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeahhhh, it's cool tech for sure! Kind of makes me wonder if it's a bridge technology. Something that will inspire something similar

  • @SuperNicktendo

    @SuperNicktendo

    Жыл бұрын

    @@FrameVoyager I actually just bought one of the base cameras for $50 after watching this. Will give it a go.

  • @ZOMBIEEZ
    @ZOMBIEEZ Жыл бұрын

    That moment I realise it's also Lytro that made the lytro illum allegedly camera of the future a buggy laggy terrible quality camera which had terrible battery life and was oversized with a tiny sensor..

  • @pentiumvsamd
    @pentiumvsamd7 ай бұрын

    combine light field technology and eye tracking in a VR headset and you get the ultimate setup

  • @ChubiChan
    @ChubiChan Жыл бұрын

    We're already seeing that Technology is action, especially for Google and their Pixel series devices. I'm literally positive they bought Lytro explicitly for all the Computational Photography they could harness from the company. And now they shoehorn all of that into the Pixel series phones.

  • @Ivan-pr7ku
    @Ivan-pr7ku Жыл бұрын

    That giant Lytro cinema rig reminded me of the "Blimp" -- the old Technicolor camera with three film strips for each primary color. Big, expensive, noisy and a chore to work with the material. Lytro simply used brute force to achieve fundamental post-process gimmicks already possible with the advancement of machine learning algorithms for image processing, at much lower price and keeping your existing tool-chain setup.

  • @zorkpl
    @zorkpl Жыл бұрын

    I wanted to buy myself at one time their camera the first one that seemed cool but I wanted a camera, when the second model came out unfortunately I was already without money and with a DSLR and when I wanted to buy one for myself it was no longer in the stores :(.... As for the company itself, it seems to me lacked a person who would advertise the equipment this massive camera was lousy for shooting movies too big, but it was great for shooting theatrical performances, sporting events, field hockey, nba, soccer swimming .... their best advertisement could have been to demonstrate its capabilities before some Olympics, and I would like to tell you that such accurate close-ups of situations in replays would have given them recognition as well as a lot of cash for further development.

  • @theonlinething1039
    @theonlinething1039 Жыл бұрын

    I still own the 8gig photo version, their first and only real product. And it‘s not good, the picture qualiy is pretty low. But at that time it was worth taking a closer look, at least for me.

  • @FrameVoyager

    @FrameVoyager

    Жыл бұрын

    I've heard the same. Feels like something that really needed to be fine tuned

  • @pablovi77
    @pablovi77 Жыл бұрын

    You need to do the Viper cinema camera.

  • @FrameVoyager

    @FrameVoyager

    Жыл бұрын

    On my list!

  • @jmalmsten
    @jmalmsten Жыл бұрын

    It is an amazing piece of technology. But... When anyone looks at the cost of renting that beast, the infrastructure to move it, wrangling that data... All of of it combined... Then a decently trained and motivated filming crew looks kind of like an attractive option... How many David Fincher retakes does it take to make that lightfield machine a justifiable expense? Because, really... The ability to undo anything on set is kind of moot if you can get it right on set in the first place. Sure, the VR approach is interesting as well... But the costs... Especially now. With Unreal 5 and similar systems. Photogrammatry. Virtual production. Lytro is a true brute force approach to a problem that already has much cheaper solutions. Even if the cheaper solution is to outsource it to armies of rotoscope sweatshop workers. Can you build a train powered by nukes? Probably... But at some point you need to stop and ask yourself... Is this not a waste of resources?

  • @FrameVoyager

    @FrameVoyager

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeahhhh, very much felt like a university study into something that kinda turned into a product? Like fascinating theory on light, object, 3d, and 2d environments but just not there technology wise yet. If you could fit this into an Alexa or URSA sized camera, then we're talking, but until then it's still not practical

  • @legendp2011

    @legendp2011

    Жыл бұрын

    @@FrameVoyager a 1080p version same size as the original blackmagic ursa would have been fantastic for heavy VFX indie films where outsourcing rotoscoping is not possible

  • @davelonghi8229
    @davelonghi8229 Жыл бұрын

    I thought only I remembered this camera

  • @rampari
    @rampari Жыл бұрын

    I can't see any other comments mention this , but the technology lives on in Google, in stuff like project starline , which basically uses the lightfield tech for video calls

  • @deadpool6072
    @deadpool6072 Жыл бұрын

    40K wtf!!? That’s mind blowing.

  • @FrameVoyager

    @FrameVoyager

    Жыл бұрын

    Right? insane

  • @OrigEntertainmentOfficial
    @OrigEntertainmentOfficial3 ай бұрын

    They tried to solve problems no one was having. It's an interesting technology but if your image was out of focus, you simply just took another photo. Maybe the VR application would be useful but it's still way too early.

  • @ignatheus
    @ignatheus Жыл бұрын

    wow this is sad to see this is such a cool camera. hopefully google does something with this.

  • @FrameVoyager

    @FrameVoyager

    Жыл бұрын

    Hopefully! Though sounding like google may have only brought aboard employees and not the tech. At least I've been told from sources after the video was released. So who knows where it is now lol

  • @CarlAustinGregory
    @CarlAustinGregory Жыл бұрын

    This series is rad.

  • @FrameVoyager

    @FrameVoyager

    Жыл бұрын

    Appreciate it!

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