Skype Translator will let you chat in real-time with people in other languages later this year

Tonight at Code Conference, Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella brought his Skype team onto the stage to prove that his company’s got the next big thing. Taglined “the pre-beta of magic,” the service, called Skype Translator, turns your real-time conversation into a Star Trek-like universal communicator. You can speak to someone who speaks a different language; the service adds the other person’s translations for you in subtitle format at the bottom of the screen. It’s not an immediate translation: You’ll need to wait until the other person is done speaking before the service starts whirring away. We’ve seen similar demonstrations in the past, but the key point here is that the beta service is due out by the end of the year, and will be on all devices that run Skype. The company isn’t committing to specific language support yet, but it likely will be a matter of which ones Skype is able to do the best at launch.
Filed under: Cellphones, Mobile, Microsoft
Watch Dogs Companion Android App Released
As of Tuesday May 27 2014 12:01am the highly anticipated game Watch Dogs released and along with it the free Watch Dogs companion Android app. Unlike the other companion apps for video games this one you do not need to own the game to experience it. You do however need to log in to play online.
The companion app is mainly played online with other players. You can set up races and challenges as well as take down players while they are in game. Yes that means you can mess up someones play session if of course they allow it. To play online with other players you will need either one of the three choices all of which are free. Either a free Xbox live or PlayStation network account, to play against consoles or a Ubisoft Uplay account for PC players.
With the release of this app I hope this sparks a new way of interacting with other players via console or PC. This I feel will set the bar on how companion apps should be from now on and can not wait to see how this inspires others.
[Download] Get your LG G3 wallpapers here in all their Quad HD Glory
The LG G3 is finally official, after weeks and weeks of leaks and speculation. It is every bit as good as we expected, from the 5.5-inch Quad HD display to the wonderfully simplistic design. Of course, all eyes are on the Quad HD screen, who’s 2K resolution is the newest craze in the mobile industry. But what use is a beautiful screen without beautiful wallpapers? Luckily, we have these LG G3 wallpapers to gawk at and wonder why our devices don’t already have 2K displays. Check them out:
That’s all 10 of them, with a nice choice of abstract beauty and just beauty; be sure to click through to see them all at the highest resolution. Hell, some of these can be used as desktop wallpapers. While the reviews are still streaming through, it looks like the LG G3 has become the definitive flagship of 2014 so far with hardware prowess and plenty of subtle abilities like battery saving and learning abilities that have only been seen in infancy on other Android devices.
What do you think about the LG G3? Do you like the wallpapers available to it? Let us know your thoughts in the comments below.
Source: XDA
What’s on your HDTV this week: Watch Dogs, The Life Aquatic, Wil Wheaton, Mario Kart

With Memorial Day come and gone and the temperatures rising, it’s time to get ready for our summer TV schedule. The NBA and NHL are almost ready to enter the championship rounds of the playoffs, and most of the winter TV shows are out of the way. That means we have a few new entrants this week to take their place, including The Wil Wheaton Project, Crossbones and Undateable. HBO’s Silicon Valley is also wrapping up with a season finale, but don’t worry it will be back. For now, it will be replaced by AMC’s new series Halt and Catch Fire, which focuses on a group trying to reverse engineer IBM’s PC in the 80s. Movie and game fans have a lot of good options, lead by Watch Dogs, Mario Kart 8, and Wes Anderson’s The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou on Blu-ray from Criterion. Still, Game of Thrones watchers are probably focused entirely on Sunday night’s episode, and with good reason, while soccer fans can tune in to all of the 30 for 30: Soccer Stories flicks on Netflix, and catch up on the US National team (suddenly without Landon Donovan) with ESPN’s documentary series update on Thursday. Check after the break for a list of what’s new this week plus a few trailers, and drop in the comments if you see any highlights that we’ve missed.
Watch Dogs

After Grand Theft Auto V, the next big open world game is here, and it’s Watch Dogs. Instead of focusing on crime and mayhem however, this one is more about technology and mayhem, with gameplay centered on hacking the environment around you to gain an advantage. Available on both current and yesteryear gaming systems (and PC), Joystiq has a full review if you need an extra push.
Crossbones

Apparently this year’s TV season is all about Pirates. After Michael Bay’s Black Sails showed off its interesting take on Blackbeard for Starz, NBC has its own with the new show Crossbones. John Malkovitch will play the legendary swashbuckler, but we wonder if network TV can handle this environment.
(May 30th, 10PM, NBC)
Mario Kart 8

The Wii U needs to dive deep into Nintendo’s back-catalog of content to compete with the new systems, and it’s finally ready to with Mario Kart 8. The series’ jump to HD also brings tracks that run in every direction (gravity is not an issue here) and enhanced online play. Shells and banana peels have returned, as well as the usual cast of characters, so blow the dust off of that system and charge up the GamePad before this one is released on Friday.
(May 30th, $59.99 on Amazon)
The Wil Wheaton Project

Wil Wheaton has stuck around since his days on Star Trek, and tonight he launches his own show on Syfy. He’ll be hosting a weekly roundup of things he likes from TV and the internet and he describes it as a sort of “Talk Soup for geeks“. This approach has worked well for Aisha Tyler, Joel McHale and others over the years, and it will be interesting to see if The Wil Wheaton Project catches on in this niche.
(May 27th, 10PM, Syfy)
Blu-ray, Streaming movies & Games
- The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou (Criterion)
- Sleepaway Camp
- Doctor Who: An Adventure in Space and Time
- Death Spa
- Gambit
- Watch_Dogs (PS3, PS4, Xbox 360, Xbox One. PC)
- Ace Combat Infinity (PS3)
- Mario Kart 8 (Wii U)
- Worms Battlegrounds (PS4, Xbox One)
Tuesday
- America’s Got Talent (season premiere), NBC, 8PM
- Coming Back with Wes Moore (season finale), PBS, 8PM
- Rangers/Canadiens Game 5, NBC Sports Network, 8PM
- Riot, Fox, 8PM
- Spurs/Thunder Game 4, TNT, 8PM
- I Wanna Marry “Harry”, Fox, 9PM
- Heroes of Cosplay (season finale), Syfy, 9PM
- Deadliest Catch, Discovery, 9PM
- The World Wars, History, 9PM
- Growing Up Fisher, NBC, 9:30PM
- The Wil Wheaton Project (series premiere), Syfy, 10PM
- Comic View, BET, 10PM
- Freakshow, AMC, 10 & 10:30PM
- Fargo, FX, 10PM
- Awkward, MTV, 10PM
- The Listener, ION, 10, 11 & 11:59PM
- Wild Things with Dominic Monaghan, BBC America, 10PM
- Tosh.0 (spring finale), Comedy Central, 10PM
- The Night Shift (series premiere), NBC, 10PM
- Inside Amy Schumer, Comedy Central, 10:30PM
- Faking It, MTV, 10:30PM
- Small Town Security, AMC, 11PM
Wednesday
- World Music Awards, NBC, 8PM
- Rogue (season premiere), DirecTV 101, 8PM
- Kings/Blackhawks NHL WCF Game 5, NBC Sports Network, 8PM
- Melissa & Joey, ABC Family, 8PM
- So You Think You Can Dance, Fox, 8PM
- Baby Daddy, ABC Family, 8:30PM
- Heat/Pacers NBA ECF Game 5, ESPN, 8:30PM
- One Night Only: An All-Star Comedy Tribute to Don Rickles, Spike TV, 9PM
- Rake (season premiere), DirecTV 101, 9PM
- Nova, PBS, 9PM
- Dual Survival, Discovery, 9PM
- The 100, CW, 9PM
- NBC News: Inside the Mind of Edward Snowden, NBC, 10PM
- The World Wars (season finale), History, 10PM
- Motive, ABC, 10PM
- Catfish, MTV, 10PM
- The Ultimate Fighter, Fox Sports 1, 10PM
- Deal With It, TBS, 10:30PM
Thursday
- Inside US Soccer’s March to Brazil, ESPN, 8PM
- Hollywood Game Night, NBC, 8PM
- NHL ECF: Canadiens/Rangers Game 6 (if necessary), NBC Sports Network, 8PM
- The Sixties (series premiere), CNN, 9PM
- Undateable (series premiere), NBC, 9 & 9:30PM
- Gang Related, Fox, 9PM
- Anger Management, FX, 9:30PM
- Last Comic Standing, NBC, 10PM
- Maron, IFC, 10PM
- Real World/Road Rules Challenge, MTV, 10PM
- Black Box, ABC, 10PM
- Comedy Bang! Bang!, IFC, 10:30PM
- Loiter Squad, Cartoon Network, 11:59PM
Friday
- Derek (season premiere), Netflix, 12:01AM
- WWE SmackDown, Syfy, 8PM
- NBA ECF: Heat/Pacers Game 6 (if necessary), ESPN, 8:30PM
- NHL WCF: Blackhawks/Kings Game 6 (if necessary), NBC Sports Network, 9PM
- Crossbones (series premiere), NBC, 10PM
- Continuum, Syfy, 10PM
Saturday
- 2014 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony, HBO, 8PM
- NHL ECF: Rangers/Canadiens Game 7 (if necessary), NBC Sports Network, 8PM
- NBA WCF: Spurs/Thunder Game 6 (if necessary), TNT, 8:30PM
- Orphan Black, BBC America, 9PM
- Da Vinci’s Demons (season finale), Starz, 9PM
- The Secret Sex Life of a Single Mom, Lifetime, 9PM
- Sing Your Face Off (series premiere), ABC, 9PM
- In the Flesh, BBC America, 10PM
Sunday
- NASCAR Sprint Cup Series @ Dover, Fox, 12:30PM
- Enlisted, Fox, 7PM
- Pirates/Dodgers, ESPN, 8PM
- NBA ECF: Heat/Pacers Game 7 (if necessary), ESPN, 8:30PM
- Anthony Bourdain: Parts Unknown, CNN, 9PM
- Cosmos, Fox, 9PM
- Game of Thrones, HBO, 9PM
- Catching Hell (series premiere), Weather Channel, 9PM
- Believe, NBC, 9PM
- Nurse Jackie, Showtime, 9PM
- The Normal Heart, HBO, 9PM
- Turn, AMC, 9PM
- Californication, Showtime, 9:30PM
- Halt and Catch Fire (series premiere), AMC, 10PM
- Silicon Valley (season finale), HBO, 10PM
- Crisis, NBC, 10PM
- Penny Dreadful, Showtime, 10PM
- Veep, HBO, 10:30PM
- Robot Chicken, Cartoon Network, 11:30PM
- Last Week Tonight with John Oliver, HBO, 11PM
Filed under: Home Entertainment, HD
Google cuts off Chrome extensions that don’t come from the Web Store
A while back Google said that it would stop letting Windows users install Chrome extensions that didn’t come directly from the Web Store. The company ended up delaying the plan, but there is no more fighting it. Today users of the stable channel of Chrome on Windows will no longer be able to install extensions from outside the Web Store. That won’t impact too many users thankfully, but it could make it difficult for those that like to run experimental add-ons. If you’ve already sideloaded extensions from outside of the Chrome Web Store, those will be disabled starting today; if you want to re-enable them, you’ll have to make the switch to the dev channel of the browser. The idea is to protect users from malicious extensions that haven’t made it through Google’s screening process. Of course, OS X and Linux users can continue to use all the unapproved extensions they want. Apparently only Windows users need to be protected (perhaps from themselves).
Filed under: Internet, Software, Google
Source: Google
LG G3 Will Have Lasers, Knock Codes, And A Big Beautiful Screen
The LG G3 event took off in London today and for the first time in a long time I was actually excited to watch it. As we all know LG has been leaking details about the LG G3 (for about 3 weeks now) and they still managed to surprise me with their new flagship device. Let me tell you why.
DISPLAY:
I am a sucker for a pretty screen and boy does the LG G3 have a pretty face. The LG G3 is using LG’s Quad Core HD IPS display which gives you a resolution of 2560×1440 along with 538 ppi. The display measures 5.5 inches and takes up 76% of the front face. That’s right 76%. That means less bezel and more screen for you to drool over. The age of QHD is coming and I think LG maybe winning.
LASERS:
Ok not real lasers that will allow you to destroy every iPhone in sight but a Laser that will allow you to Autofocus almost instantly. The LG G3 has been upgraded with Laser Autofocus which allows for faster automatic focusing on your subject. To give you a specific number, the Laser Autofocus focuses in 0.276 milliseconds. To put that in perspective for you, the human eye takes an average of 0.300-0.400 milliseconds to blink, that basically means the Laser Auto focus is pretty damn fast.
Knock Codes:
If you have or have read up on the LG G2 then you know of the knock knock feature. You double tap on the screen and it automatically turns on, simple and useful. This time around LG decided to build on that feature by making it a lock screen, thats right, now you can knock to unlock. The feature will allow you to create your own unique knock code (series of taps) that will unlock your device and take you straight to your homescreen. According to LG this Knock Code lock method will give you more than 80,000 possible combinations.
Aside from the hardware I mentioned above LG the G3 will also have a beefy Quad-Core 2.5 GHz Qualcomm Snapdragon processor, 2GB of RAM (Sucks right?), 2.1 Megapixel front facing camera, 13 Megapixel rear camera, 3000 mAh battery and Micro SD card support. The LG G3 will also launch with Android 4.4 KitKat. So what do you think? Will you be going after the LG G3 this year? Let me know in the comments below.
Finally: Google Chromecast is available in Australia for $49 AUD
It looks like somebody was definitely a bit trigger happy at retailer Dick Smith. A few weeks ago, we were given our first indication that the Google Chromecast media streaming device would be made available in Australia after a listing was made on Dick Smith’s website citing availability on the 28th of May. And sure enough, Google has today officially announced that the Google Chromecast is available in Australia.
The Chromecast is slowly being made available around the world now, first making its presence in the Asia Pacific known in Korea, and now Australia. While Australia isn’t quite the hotbed of media streaming that other parts of the world are, media providers like Quickflix, Foxtel and even the ABC have promised that Chromecast capabilities are coming to their apps soon. Unfortunately, there has not yet been word from Telstra about any content being made available for Chromecast or even any bundle deals despite rumours that they were in discussions directly with Google.
If you’re hoping to pick up a Chromecast, you can hop over to the Google Chromecast site here which lists all the available retailers, or you can purchase it on Google Play itself.
Source: Google via Ninemsn, Dick Smith
Inside LG’s G3: How vacuums, focus groups and competitive pressure shaped a smartphone

Nine months ago, deep in a heavily guarded lab in Seoul, South Korea, LG’s mobile design team set out to create a phone to rival Samsung’s flagships. It was no light responsibility: According to IDC, Samsung dominated smartphone sales in 2013 with 31.3 percent of the market compared to LG’s 4.8 percent. Yet, in the amount of time it takes a newborn baby to blossom from conception to her first appearance in this world, LG cranked out a compelling piece of circuitry. The G3, announced today, comes with the highest-res display on the market, a 5.5-inch body that feels smaller than it really is, a fresh metallic finish and a never-before-seen imaging component invented by a robotic vacuum company.
LG is struggling. It may not have the same image problem HTC does, but it’s clearly coming into this project as an underdog. Sales of the G2, its prior flagship, sputtered against expectations despite a new design direction and market-topping components. The company wasn’t able to climb out of the Galaxy S4′s shadow, so it turned its focus to beating Samsung. The G3 uses a larger, higher-resolution screen than its rival without making the phone feel unwieldy. It features a larger battery and it boasts a faster autofocus (thanks to its new laser sensor), all while fixing sore spots users had with the G2.
LG is struggling. It may not have the same image problem HTC does, but it’s clearly coming into this project as an underdog.
After walking through what seemed to be a typical, sterile, cubicle-laden office building, we entered a white-walled, nondescript meeting room in LG’s design headquarters in Seoul. On a table, amongst an endless series of office chairs and whiteboards, sat a plethora of G3 mockups. Next to them sat several different variations on back button arrangements and at least two dozen back covers in nearly every color you can imagine. The full lineup was obviously transplanted here from some secret lab in another part of the building. Although none of the mockups functioned — the front of each one was just a blank plastic face — they were made to mimic the proper weight and feel of a real phone. Despite repeated requests, we weren’t allowed to take pictures of the mockups because, understandably, any of them could be used for a future device.

These design candidates were just a few of the 300 models LG considered, and ultimately rejected, for the final G3 design. Each version had a different texture, color or material. Some were glossy, others ridged and still others built with materials we couldn’t quite put a finger on. The back buttons were arranged in ways we’d never seen before; one version even replaced the buttons with a circular apparatus of undisclosed purpose. Not only were we staring directly at LG’s past, but we were also likely gazing into its future.
The G3 isn’t the first phone to feature a Quad HD display, but it’s the first from a major manufacturer. Some argue that such high resolution on a small screen doesn’t make enough of a difference; naturally, LG believes it does. The company touted blind tests that show people prefer screens with 500 pixels per inch (ppi) over 400 (the G3 sits at 538 ppi), and they found that small text and nighttime scenes were definitely clearer on the higher-res display. There will always be demand for more than what we already have, and LG is anxious to beat the competition in any way possible.
Not only were we staring directly at LG’s past, but we were also likely gazing into its future.
LG is confident that if the display doesn’t get you interested in the G3, the phone’s new laser sensor will — and the feature almost didn’t even make it into the final product. A first in the digital camera industry, the new feature was actually developed by Roboking, the makers of LG’s robotic vacuums. Originally, it was intended to measure the distance between the vacuum and obstacles that it may have to maneuver around. Roboking dropped it for a number of reasons, but it told the mobile team about it over a coffee break and the rest is now history: Imaging specialists went to work adding the vacuum’s laser beams to the G3, which helped the camera snag an even faster focus lock than its closest competitors (both the One M8 and Galaxy S5 boast 300ms focus times, whereas the G3 claims 276ms). Fortunately for our eyes and sanity, this sensor doesn’t double as a laser pointer.
To our surprise, nearly half of the prototypes didn’t even feature a spot for the sensor because the team had to prepare for the possibility that it might not be ready in time. The feature was confirmed for the G3 two months ago, just before the final deadline. There was just enough time for Chul Bae Lee, VP of mobile design, and his team to tweak the design to make sure everything fit properly, which involved a few changes to the device’s shape. “Any small treatment could affect the shape of the phone,” Lee said. “Before, the shape was slightly different; the arc was a bit more flattened.”

To our amazement, one of the mockups was aluminum. Wait: LG actually considered a metal phone? Like Samsung, LG has historically opted to use polycarbonate plastic for most smartphones. Alas, aluminum was vetoed at some point in the process, in favor of a metallic hairbrush finish that looks and feels like the real deal, but doesn’t attract fingerprints or scratches. It’s warmer, lighter and offers an anti-scratch coating. It’s also much less slippery, a pain point that frustrated us with the HTC One M8. There’s less risk of attenuation issues (as we saw with the iPhone 4 a few years ago), and wireless inductive charging is much more effective on a plastic surface, since it tends to heat up metal surfaces too easily. As it turns out, there are plenty of reasons why so many manufacturers avoid the material.
But why not use the same self-healing finish found on the curvaceous G Flex? While its ability to fend off dings and cuts isn’t perfect, it was a groundbreaking feature that helped it stand out from the crowd. It’s also a few steps ahead of anything LG’s competitors have come out with. According to Lee, “We couldn’t find a way to adapt self-healing without making it glossy.”
Users’ aversion to glossy plastic was just one of the lessons LG took to heart from the G2.
Users’ aversion to glossy plastic was just one of the lessons LG took to heart from the G2. As good as the phone was, it had its share of flaws, and user feedback was critical. The G3 is designed to be more comfortable, simpler (tagline: “Technology, simplified”) and easier to hold. To bolster the support of power users, the rear cover and battery are now removable and a microSD slot sits underneath for expandable storage. And as Dr. Ram-Chan Woo, head of mobile product planning, is quick to point out, “The [G2] back cover is more plasticky and a fingerprint magnet.” Indeed, if you liked the G2, the G3 should look incredibly tempting right now.
Lee added that only half of G2 users liked the back button setup. It’s an acquired taste that grew on us after a while, but it has to grab the attention of buyers from day one. His team changed the shape of the buttons to circles and added more separation between them and the camera in an attempt to make it more difficult to smudge the lens. The designers also added a pointy power key in the center, the highest peak on the phone’s chassis, because too many users lose their grip on big phones. The new style, Lee said, stabilizes your thumb to offer a secure grip, despite the device’s 5.5-inch frame. This, in addition to the thin sides and arched back cover, also makes the G3 feel smaller than it really is.

The G2′s 3,000mAh battery was among the best for flagship smartphones of a similar size (that is, not a “phablet”), so LG chose not to make compromises on its successor by shrinking its size. This was a challenge, thanks to the device’s floating arc design; the arched back is the reason why this 5.5-inch phone doesn’t feel like a behemoth, but there was too much curvature for LG to fit a standard battery of that size. The solution: an “arc battery.” Upon closer inspection, the battery seemed just as flat as any other battery on the market. Not so, according to Woo: “It looks flat, but it isn’t. Since the back cover is slightly arched, the battery is also arched in order to fit the cover.”
Trendy colors aside, LG can and has brought some innovative solutions to the table.
But if the battery stays exactly the same size, won’t the higher-res Quad HD panel suck up a lot more power? Not if the company’s marketing claims speak the truth: The display utilizes something called dynamic frame rate control, which tells the display to stop refreshing if you’re on the same screen for long periods of time. If the content on the screen stays the same, the frame rate drops to 30 fps, which should be a huge aid to battery efficiency.
The G3 will come in five colors. White and “titanium” are the obvious go-tos for phone manufacturers. “About 80 percent of actual sales are white and black, so you have to offer [those colors],” Lee said. While we always prefer a choice of colors, it doesn’t always equate to success, so the design team chose shades that reflect current trends: Gold, violet and red will also be offered. All of LG’s biggest competitors have gold-colored flagships now, and red is starting to surface on more devices. Violet was an unusual choice, but Lee insisted: “Purple seems to be quite the fashion these days.”
Trendy colors aside, LG can and has brought some innovative solutions to the table. The back buttons, laser sensor and metallic finish are primary examples of that, but it’s had a difficult time selling the message that its flagships can hold their own against Samsung, HTC and other competitors. The G3 is a step in the right direction, but it’s not going to matter if it can’t beat Samsung at its own game: Marketing and mindshare.
Mat Smith contributed to this post.
Filed under: Cellphones, Wireless, Mobile, LG
Nintendo wants its cut of ‘Let’s Play’ gaming videos
Remember when Nintendo started wrapping ads around ‘Let’s Play’ commentary videos last year and pocketed the revenue? It’s happening again, albeit in a more organized way. Nintendo just announced that it’s creating a YouTube affiliate program for content creators that use officially licensed images and video. Creators who sign up for the program (and receive permission to use copyrighted material) will be eligible to receive “a portion” of the advertising profit.
It’s not too surprising, but it is a little odd. Microsoft’s game content usage rules specifically ask that users don’t seek payment (via advertising or otherwise) for projects made using gameplay footage, but the company typically doesn’t try to claim revenue made by those who do apply ads to their video. More to the point, both Sony and Microsoft allow gamers to stream gameplay directly from their consoles without agreeing to any revenue-sharing initiatives. Nintendo’s taking a much stronger stance on YouTube creators than the rest of the industry.
The program could be a response to the negative reaction its copyright claims got last year, but it might have something to do with Mario Kart 8. The upcoming racer allows users to upload gameplay videos directly to YouTube, which are automatically flagged as Nintendo owned in the service’s Content ID system. It’s not clear, however, if these videos will be eligible for revenue-sharing. Nintendo promises to release more details at a later date. Either way, Nintendo’s stance is clear: if you’re making videos of its games, your video’s ad revenue should be at its discretion.
[Image credit: rapapu/Flickr]
【YouTube映像に関するお知らせ】任天堂は以前より、不適切なものを除いて、YouTube上の任天堂の著作物を含む映像を正式に許諾しています。許諾した映像には広告がつくことがあり、その広告収益は従来のポリシー同様、Googleと任天堂で分配されます。(1/2)
– 任天堂株式会社 (@Nintendo) May 27, 2014
【YouTube映像に関するお知らせ】その上で、より積極的な任天堂著作物の利用を希望される方に向けて、広告収益の一部を受け取れるアフィリエイトプログラムを準備しています。アフィリエイトプログラムの詳細については、後日続報いたします。ご理解の程、よろしくお願いいたします。(2/2)
– 任天堂株式会社 (@Nintendo) May 27, 2014
Filed under: Gaming, Internet, Nintendo
Via: Joystiq
Source: Twitter (1), (2)
‘Lomo Instant’ takes your standard Polaroid to the next level
Back in the good old days, you could take a photo of Fido with your Polaroid, and after a few shakes be ready to tape it to your dorm room wall. Now Lomo is looking to bring that same old-school experience into the next decade with the Instant – a self-developing film camera with a vintage feel. It has support for several different lenses, color filters and can even create images with multiple exposures of your furry friend. The company already has a pretty sizable line of toy and DIY cameras that push the envelope (like this one made out of a paint can). The Instant follows in that tradition, building off an old favorite, the Fuji Instax. The camera uses its easy-to-find credit card-sized film, but has five aperture settings, including f/8, the largest available on any instant camera. It also has three different shooting modes for tons of flexibility.

You get a wide-angle lens in the box for the ultimate selfies, and the camera supports optional Fisheye and Portrait lenses as well. Unfortunately, buying it is a little less “instant” for now. Lomo has a working prototype of the camera, but the finished product isn’t a reality yet. The company posted a Kickstarter today looking for $100,000 for a production run, a goal it’s already blown past with 30 days still left to go. Photo enthusiasts will still have to wait until November to score one of the first Instants off the assembly line. The camera is just $70 for those who invest now, or will be priced at $120 when it hits Lomo’s virtual store shelves next year.
Filed under: Cameras
Source: Kickstarter, Lomography




















