Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2006/06/20

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Subject: [Leica] The slow one now wil later be fast....
From: mcyclwritr at comcast.net (mcyclwritr@comcast.net)
Date: Tue Jun 20 08:11:13 2006

And we thought Leica management was dragging its heels on developing the 
digital M. They're just helping us stay in the game with film bodies.   

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Digital camera blocking technology created


ATLANTA, June 19 (UPI) -- Georgia Institute of Technology scientists say 
they've created a prototype device that can block digital video cameras from 
working in a specific area.

The scientists say the prototype -- which could be used to stymie unwanted 
use of video or still cameras -- uses off-the-shelf equipment to scan for, 
find and neutralize digital cameras. The system works by looking for the 
reflectivity and shape of the image-producing sensors used in digital 
cameras.

Associate GIT Professor Gregory Abowd, who led the study, says the 
camera-neutralizing technology shows commercial promise in two principal 
fields -- protecting areas against espionage photography and stopping video 
copying.

Researchers explain a digital camera's image sensor -- called a CCD -- sends 
light back directly to its origin rather than scattering it, making it 
relatively easy to detect and identify video cameras.

Once a scanning laser and photo-detector located a video camera, the system 
would flash a thin beam of visible white light directly at the CCD, 
overwhelming the target camera with light and rendering recorded video 
unusable.

A paper on the technology, which is still under development, was presented 
during the Ubicomp conference in Tokyo last September.