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A Thousand Nerds is a place for ideas and knowledge sharing from the people of Kodak about technology. We love what we do, and we want to share our expertise about digital imaging's technologies and its power to influence our world. We invite you to join our conversation with stories and experiences of your own.

To add your voice to ours, please visit the User Guide.

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Top 5 Posts

Thoughts from Display Week 2009 Father's Day Gift Ideas


Announcements


April 22, 2009

New Features on Kodak Gallery

Mark Cook
Kodak Gallery Product Management and Marketing


We are very happy to announce that we are going to be providing the ability to download your original, high resolution images for free from Kodak Gallery.  This is a big deal as customers really want to be able to get their pictures if something happens to their original.  The image you get is exactly what you put into your account and you can download as often as you want. To find this feature simply go to my photos and view an individual photo (screen shot above). You will see a download image link. A pop up will ask you where you want to save the image and off you go!

Also, we now have new everyday prints shipping pricing. You get free shipping on all print purchases of $4.99 or more!


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October 6, 2009

Kodak's Steve Sasson receives innovation award from The Economist

Jennifer Cisney
Chief Blogger


Much like Intel considers Ajay Bhatt a rockstar, we have our own rockstar here at Kodak. Steve Sasson, a Kodak research scientist who invented the first digital camera back in 1975, is our rockstar.

We aren't the only ones who know it. The Economist is honoring Steve with an "Innovation Award" in ceremonies in London on October 29. The Economist's Innovation Awards are considered the "Oscars of Innocation".

"Steven has refocused the face of consumer photography by pioneering the first digital camera at Kodak in 1975," said a citation from The Economist, also noting, "Kodak has continually driven innovation at the highest standard in both print and digital photography, as well as within other imaging products."

Steve is receiving the award in the category of Consumer Products and Services. Some other winners of the award in the same category are YouTube founders Steve Chen and Chad Hurley, video game pioneer Shigeru Miyamoto of Nintendo, and the Apple iPod team. Wow!

Congratulations Steve! Rock on!



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October 5, 2009

One, Two, Three, Four, Five

Michael DeLuca
Marketing Geek

It wasn't too long ago that Kodak announced our latest CCD image sensor targeted to applied imaging markets - the 8-megapixel KODAK KAI-08050 Image Sensor.  This device joined three other KODAK CCD Image Sensors (1-megapixel, 2-megapixel, and 1080p format) in a family of products based on the KODAK TRUESENSE 5.5 micron Interline Transfer CCD Platform - Kodak's eighth generation of Interline Transfer CCD technology.  With four products already a part of this high-performance family, there seemed only one obvious, logical next step to take.

Come out with a fifth.


Make no mistake, the KODAK KAI-04050 Image Sensor fits right in with the rest of the family.  Same new pixel, same improvements in image quality, same increase in frame rate (now at 32 frames per second for this 4-megapixel device).  It even shares the same Region of Interest (ROI) mode available in the 8-megapixel KAI-08050 that allows the center portion of the sensor to be read out at even higher speeds.  But the real news here - other than announcement of the new sensor itself - is how having an integrated portfolio of image sensors allows camera manufacturers to bring new products to their customers more quickly. 


It's been less than 24 months since we announced the first product in this family, and now we have five - all with the same pin-out connections and electrical configurations, and each responding the same way to light.  That makes it easy for camera manufacturers to extend their camera line as each new sensor comes out, because now they can support a full portfolio of cameras using a single camera design.  Essentially, they can just take a single electronics board and plug in any of these five sensors to build a camera - meaning fewer parts in inventory, faster time to market, and better control of costs.

But the real benefit is to customers, because they can start using this new sensor technology - with improvements in frame rate and image quality, and available in the resolution and optical format they need - more quickly.  Customers don't need to wait for manufacturers to design a new camera every time a sensor is announced, since that work was done once for the whole family.  So as Kodak's sensor family has expanded, manufacturers have been able to quickly extend their camera families as well, giving customers the freedom to choose from a full portfolio of products to get the best match for their imaging application.

So with sensor resolutions ranging from 1- to 8-megapixels, now we've got Five Sensors in our Family.  And, no - there's not one of them I'd swap.

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