We’ve already seen cameras that allow you to pretend you reside in a radioactive apocalypse shoot HDR video, combining overexposed and underexposed images into one surreal composite. But to this point, that sort of dystopian trippiness have been relegated to experiments and rigs using two lenses. But here we now have AMP, a conveyable-enough five-pound camera that splits the sunshine into three sensors, giving it quite a number 17.5 stops to “reveal reality” in our drab, incomplete lives. The one-lens camera shoots 1080p video at 24fps or 30fps, records raw, uncompressed data to an SSD, and works with Nikon F-Mount-compatible lenses. To present you some perspective at the amount of sheer storage required, AMP promises a 256GB SSD can hold 30-plus minutes of footage, with 24fps video consuming less space than the 30 fps variety. It will become available later this summer for some unknown sum, but not as a mass-produced product. Rather, it’ll turn out within the hands of a select few prosumers who add themselves to a waiting list. Assuming you will not be probably the most chosen, you may get your fill of reality in a couple of demo videos after the break.
TiVo releases Q4 results, announces transcoder and IP set-top box at the way
Samsung demos new 32nm quad-core Exynos prior to MWC



