48:02
AIA - Camera and Image Sensor Technology Fundamentals - Part One
Part of the AIA Certified Vision Professional-Basic program, Steve Kinney, Director of Tec...
published: 15 Jun 2013
author: AIAVisionOnline
AIA - Camera and Image Sensor Technology Fundamentals - Part One
AIA - Camera and Image Sensor Technology Fundamentals - Part One
Part of the AIA Certified Vision Professional-Basic program, Steve Kinney, Director of Technical Pre-Sales and Support at JAI, Inc., teaches the fundamentals...- published: 15 Jun 2013
- views: 1698
- author: AIAVisionOnline
27:40
EEVblog #380 - Sony CCD Sensor Teardown
Teardown of a Sony CCD sensor in the 1985 vintage Video 8 CCD-V8AF Camcorder. And a look i...
published: 06 Nov 2012
author: EEVblog
EEVblog #380 - Sony CCD Sensor Teardown
EEVblog #380 - Sony CCD Sensor Teardown
Teardown of a Sony CCD sensor in the 1985 vintage Video 8 CCD-V8AF Camcorder. And a look inside the small CRT Viewfinder Part 1: http://www.youtube.com/watch...- published: 06 Nov 2012
- views: 34763
- author: EEVblog
3:42
SmartFSI(R) CMOS Image Sensor - [Panasonic]
posted on http://ch.panasonic.net on: Mar, 21, 2013 SmartFSI(R) CMOS image sensor can prod...
published: 21 Mar 2013
author: ChannelPanasonic
SmartFSI(R) CMOS Image Sensor - [Panasonic]
SmartFSI(R) CMOS Image Sensor - [Panasonic]
posted on http://ch.panasonic.net on: Mar, 21, 2013 SmartFSI(R) CMOS image sensor can produce more excellent picture quality, higher sensitivity, higher reso...- published: 21 Mar 2013
- views: 2206
- author: ChannelPanasonic
8:36
Image Sensors - CCD and CMOS Overview 2
Image Sensors - Introduction to Frontside and Backside Illumination....
published: 25 Mar 2012
author: ambientelectrons
Image Sensors - CCD and CMOS Overview 2
Image Sensors - CCD and CMOS Overview 2
Image Sensors - Introduction to Frontside and Backside Illumination.- published: 25 Mar 2012
- views: 4277
- author: ambientelectrons
1:45
Alarmcom_ The Breakthrough Image Sensor (Hollywoodwireless security)
Alarmcom_ The Breakthrough Image Sensor you can see who's coming inside your home or offic...
published: 04 May 2013
author: Hollywood Mobile
Alarmcom_ The Breakthrough Image Sensor (Hollywoodwireless security)
Alarmcom_ The Breakthrough Image Sensor (Hollywoodwireless security)
Alarmcom_ The Breakthrough Image Sensor you can see who's coming inside your home or office with the alarm.com app.- published: 04 May 2013
- views: 44
- author: Hollywood Mobile
2:43
Samsung CMOS Image sensor
Advanced imaging technology for high-end consumer and commercial products! Discover why Sa...
published: 24 Nov 2012
author: System LSI Samsung
Samsung CMOS Image sensor
Samsung CMOS Image sensor
Advanced imaging technology for high-end consumer and commercial products! Discover why Samsung CMOS image sensor (CIS) solutions are the choice of leading m...- published: 24 Nov 2012
- views: 2153
- author: System LSI Samsung
3:32
How to Select the Right Image Sensor For Your Application
http://www.futureelectronics.com/en/Search.aspx?dsNav=Ntk:PlainTextSearch%7cImage+Sensor%7...
published: 07 Feb 2013
author: FutureElec
How to Select the Right Image Sensor For Your Application
How to Select the Right Image Sensor For Your Application
http://www.futureelectronics.com/en/Search.aspx?dsNav=Ntk:PlainTextSearch%7cImage+Sensor%7c3%7c,Ny:True,Nea:True,N:4324 During this video, we'll explain what...- published: 07 Feb 2013
- views: 5899
- author: FutureElec
1:00
Xperia™ Z Exmor RS™ for mobile, the worlds first image sensor with HDR video for smartphones
...
published: 30 Jul 2013
Xperia™ Z Exmor RS™ for mobile, the worlds first image sensor with HDR video for smartphones
Xperia™ Z Exmor RS™ for mobile, the worlds first image sensor with HDR video for smartphones
- published: 30 Jul 2013
- views: 2
0:32
First worldwide image sensor on plastic
Plastic Logic and ISORG co-develop the World's first imaging sensor on plastic. The sensor...
published: 12 Nov 2013
First worldwide image sensor on plastic
First worldwide image sensor on plastic
Plastic Logic and ISORG co-develop the World's first imaging sensor on plastic. The sensor combines Plastic Logic's organic thin-film transistor (OTFT) backplane with ISORG's organic photodetectors (OPD). http://www.plasticlogic.com http://www.isorg.fr/ OPD/OTFT 96X96 Pixels 375 UM Pitch 10 FPS- published: 12 Nov 2013
- views: 255
1:36
Alarm.com Image Sensor: Visual Verification
The motion sensor has evolved! Alarm.com's Image Sensor is a state of the art motion senso...
published: 18 Dec 2013
Alarm.com Image Sensor: Visual Verification
Alarm.com Image Sensor: Visual Verification
The motion sensor has evolved! Alarm.com's Image Sensor is a state of the art motion sensor that snaps a picture when motion is detected and sends it to you via text or email. Completely wireless, you can put the Image Sensor anywhere in your home to get new visibility into what's happening when you're away.- published: 18 Dec 2013
- views: 99
0:28
Changing the Battery - Image Sensor
See how to replace the two 'AA' batteries for your Image Sensor....
published: 26 Nov 2013
Changing the Battery - Image Sensor
Changing the Battery - Image Sensor
See how to replace the two 'AA' batteries for your Image Sensor.- published: 26 Nov 2013
- views: 5
19:21
Microchips that make pictures: Nano‐technology and image sensors
This is a recording of a session presenting during STARS 2013 at the University of Dayton....
published: 23 Oct 2013
Microchips that make pictures: Nano‐technology and image sensors
Microchips that make pictures: Nano‐technology and image sensors
This is a recording of a session presenting during STARS 2013 at the University of Dayton. For more information, visit http://www.udayton.edu/research/STARS/. -- Andrew Sarangan, Ph.D.,P.E., Professor & Associate Director of the Electro-Optics Graduate Program showcases UD's nanofabrication capability and will discuss two image sensing technology his team is currently pursuing, which build on our capability to make components at the nanoscale. The first is infrared image sensors. We are advancing the state‐of‐the‐art infrared image sensors by exploiting certain nanoscale effects and thin film processes of narrow bandgap semiconductors. The goal is to improve the manufacturability of these cameras and bring down their cost. The second technology is polarization imaging. We are using visible image sensors, which are cheap and abundant, and adding polarization capability to these sensors. This is done by making metallic nanowires oriented along different directions on each pixel of the image sensor. The entire process, from start to finish, is conducted in our labs at the University of Dayton campus.- published: 23 Oct 2013
- views: 204
4:51
Digital cameras - the importance of image sensors
The GadgetGuy runs you over the types and sizes of image sensors, and their impact on the ...
published: 06 Sep 2009
author: GadgetGuyTV
Digital cameras - the importance of image sensors
Digital cameras - the importance of image sensors
The GadgetGuy runs you over the types and sizes of image sensors, and their impact on the types of photos you can take. How they work, and the pros and cons ...- published: 06 Sep 2009
- views: 1409
- author: GadgetGuyTV
1:56
Jared Polin cleans his D3's image sensor
See how to clean your image sensor www.jaredpolin.com....
published: 24 Dec 2008
author: JaredPolin
Jared Polin cleans his D3's image sensor
Jared Polin cleans his D3's image sensor
See how to clean your image sensor www.jaredpolin.com.- published: 24 Dec 2008
- views: 42100
- author: JaredPolin
Vimeo results:
20:10
Paris Vol. 5
Entry from July 27, 2009 "We are jet-lagged and exhausted. The alarm blared at 4:30 am. Wi...
published: 19 Sep 2010
author: The Seventh Movement
Paris Vol. 5
Entry from July 27, 2009 "We are jet-lagged and exhausted. The alarm blared at 4:30 am. Without opening my eyes I hit the snooze. "Just five more minutes" I told myself… "Lets go dude" a groggy voice commanded from the background. I didn't move. Out of nowhere, a pillow slammed down on my head, the mattress is lifted out from under me, and I hit the hardwood floor just missing my camera bag. "Ugh not again" I thought, but I knew he was right, we needed to hustle across the city and get our cameras rolling before sunrise. "
We were in Paris with only a week to shoot. Armed with top of the line cameras, fresh batteries, memory card wallets, and our favorite glass. The game-plan was to shoot as much as possible and to motivate each other when we were exhausted from staring down the viewfinder. Time-lapses were just an afterthought. Seen a couple. Heard a bit on what it takes to get one done. But when we stepped off the plane in Paris, we had never seen the sky as beautiful as it was. Some twenty two hours later, we slept...at least tried to...
We had never shot a time-lapse before, we had never put one together. We were just two guys who came to Paris to photograph. To make beautiful images. And we did. And we didn't stop. It became a battle against our batteries. " Why take one when you can take one-thousand" we'd laugh. Sometimes staying at a spot all day. Biking or walking from place to place. Mispronouncing words we didn't know. Two more packs of Camel's gone. We shot and shot and uploaded wherever we were. Even ran through the terabyte we brought with us and had to buy another one at Rue Montgalet ( nightmare ). Fell asleep on the Alexander III bridge while the clicks of our camera shutters became an urban lullaby.
Wandering around the streets of Paris armed with $20,000 in gear, we took Paris head on.
Its a scary feeling when you burn through a 32 gigabyte card before the day is done. You don't see what you're shooting. You compose the first frame and let your subject do the rest. We would wait for that perfect set of clouds or that perfect flare or trail from a plane. And all the while we didn't know what the final product would look like. We were shooting blind. But we wouldn't have had it any other way. The unknown kept us moving. Kept us thinking about what could happen when we return. Kept us thinking about what all these different pieces might say in the end.
Changing glass as much as we did, we didn't factor in the amount of sensor dust that would build up. We could never just shoot something once, from one angle, without doing brackets and panoramic builds. It became an obsession. And our shutters paid the price. Back home, it took weeks to get organized. Then it took months working between all these side projects, our main gig at BorrowLenses.com, and the Paris project. Just beginning to think about what we would do with all the clips became overwhelming. There wasn't an obvious flow. There didn't seem to be a complete overall puzzle that could even be constructed with the pieces we had. And the pieces were in pieces.
We started building each clip in After Effects. Render. Smoke. Chill. Re-Render. Smoke. Chill. We built around 150 clips out of the time-lapses we shot in Paris. They were flickery, noisy, grainy, bandy but they were ours. And we spent more time trying to fix them than we ever imagined. They were the first of the series. And from a single Clint Mansell song from "The Wrestler" sparked a vision for the Volumes. And once we put the first ones on Vimeo, we knew we had something going. We built the second one with a Tycho song. The third from Flying Lotus. The fourth from Pelican City. And after the fourth volume was built, we saw all these comments about the sensor dust. And THAT ate away at us.
So we started from scratch; as if we had just hoped off the plane from Paris. Reorganize, re-edit, recolor, re-render. Days and days of work. Going through entire albums trying to find that one song that would go perfectly with all the clips strung together. But we didn't know how they would all hold together. There was no obvious order again. And we didn't think we could fill the twenty volume quota that we had promised to our fans. So we settled on doing a Director's Cut. A montage of all of the clips: Paris Volume 5.
Enter Pigeon Point. We had been shooting a new series called the California Coastline. And we went to Pigeon Point down in Santa Cruz with our friend Matt. At first it didn't seem like a prime spot for time-lapses. But Matt didn't tell us the most amazing thing about Pigeon Point. They installed a new temporary 6-beam setup while the main lighthouse wasn't operational. We shot through the night, edited the next day, and posted on Monday. While we were editing, Mogwai popped into the playlist. To be honest we never sat down and listened to Mogwai with our work but it turned out that Friend of the Night fit that piece like a glove. And so we chose 2 Rights Make
5:30
RED EPIC DRAGON - IT'S THE REAL DEAL !
The Red Dragon sensor has 3 F STOPS more than before. 1 in the hight lights which rolls o...
published: 04 Aug 2013
author: Mark Toia
RED EPIC DRAGON - IT'S THE REAL DEAL !
The Red Dragon sensor has 3 F STOPS more than before. 1 in the hight lights which rolls over wonderfully !, 2 solid extra stops in the darks…. maybe 3 once the colour science has been perfected.
But there is still noise, but nothing like before. I ran some 250d 2k film rushes next some of my 4000asa stuff, And silly as it sounds, it looks like film grain, not noise. Don't ask me how, as I wouldn't have a clue. But it looks great !
Red Dragon now has the best highlight fall off I have ever seen from any digital camera. Beating film! Big call I know, but after shooting film and pushing it around in telecine chains for more than a decade, I can categorically say that this new sensor has a better range than film ever had.
Single still frames compared to a top of the line professional 35mm Digital stills cameras, I'm going to say that the EPIC matches, if not betters most. Don't ask me how they do it, but every single frame from the DRAGON is 109meg !! @16bit when saved as a tiff from RCX. and at 100 Frames per second, I tell you this… someone has sold there soul to the devil.
If you are a pro photographer, you are mad if you don't have this camera in your tool box. You quite literally will never miss a single shot.
Is Dragon better than 65mm Film…. (with good lenses) YES. No shit…
The images out of the Dragon are so smooth now… so so smooth, like low asa large format film.
The Dragon is more stable than my current MX EPIC's.
The SONY F65 I rate as having the best sensor in the market for a production cine camera. Yes.. it's better than the EPIC- MX. (I'm not going to harp on about the size of it or the price comparisons).
Even Jim knows that Sony have done very well with the F65 sensor and that was obviously pissing him off, because his new Dragon sensor has just given the the F65 notice.
All the F65 SONY purists out there will dispute this. But I have Sony files here with me, and I'm looking at both side by side… and Dragons grain (noise) structure is cleaner and it has more range.
Dragon is now the King. (AND… I'm not going to harp on about the size of it or the price comparisons). or did I ..ha !
The single one sentence i can say that can sum up everything is this..
It's the first camera ever that I have used that captures exactly what I see with my own eye.
Never have I seen this before. !
11:27
Percebeiros (Sea Bites) 1920x1080
http://www.enpiedeguerra.tv/percebeiros/
(12 min) Corto documental dirigido por David Ber...
published: 03 Dec 2011
author: enpiedeguerra
Percebeiros (Sea Bites) 1920x1080
http://www.enpiedeguerra.tv/percebeiros/
(12 min) Corto documental dirigido por David Beriain sobre la historia de Serxio Ces, percebeiro de Cedeira, Galicia.
Preseleccionado para los Premios Goya 2012.
Sinopsis:
Ruge el viento. El mar golpea los acantilados. Dos metros de roca, ésa es la franja de agua y oxígeno en la que crece el percebe. Dos metros donde el mar se ensaña, donde bate con fuerza milenaria. Una frontera de olas y espuma en la que Serxo y sus compañeros luchan por un bocado de mar.
Una frontera de valor y miedo. De temeridad y sentido común. Dos metros sin margen de error. Ahí vive el percebe. Ahí vive Serxo.
Percebeiros es la batalla contra el mar de unos guerreros que no se consideran héroes.
___
CREDITS
DAVID BERIAIN Director
David Beriain is a Spanish war correspondent that has covered conflicts in Iraq, Afghanistan, Congo, Colombia and Kashmir, among others. He is currently in charge of coordinating the fea- ture section at Medina Media, a production com- pany based out of Spain.
Beriain is one of the few reporters in the world that has managed to infiltrate the FARC guerrilla camps in Colombia. His work there made him a finalist for the Bayeux-Calvados, the most pres- tigious international award for war correspon- dents. He has interviewed the Taliban command- ers who killed Spanish soldiers, met with the twelve-year-old hitmen that Colombian druglords exploit as child soldiers, and even accompanied the American Army on some of their most danger- ous military operations in Iraq and Afghanistan. His latest TV documentary took him to Eastern Congo, where he covered the conflict between the Congolese Army and the rebels who fight, kill and rape in order to gain the control of the Coltan and Cassiterite mines.
During his time at Sea Bites, Beriain was in charge of producing the story and coordinating all the members in the team. He was the one who convinced everyone to get on board and as a true leader, he turned a group of people who did not know each other into a real team.
(+34) 609 72 71 61 beriain.david@gmail.com enpiedeguerra.tv/


FERNANDO UREÑA Script Writer
Fernando Ureña is a Spanish editor and script writer. For the past three years, he has worked as a script analyst for Cuatro’s national fiction shows. He has also supervised the scripts for several other Spanish networks such as Canal+, Digital+, TVE or Audiovisual Sport. He is currently writing the scripts for various Spanish movies, a work he combines with his editorial tasks at some of Spain’s most prestigious publishing compa- nies.
Ureña gave birth to the idea of Sea Bites.
He conceived the story and was David Beriain’s second hand in the team. They wrote the script together and Ureña followed the entire process of video-editing, post-production and sonorization.
(+34) 655 01 89 80 fmumary@gmail.com
SERGIO CARO Director of photography
Sergio Caro is a Spanish photographer and cam- eraman. He is specialized in international con- flicts and illegal immigration in Europe. His 2005 photographs of Sub-Saharan immigrants being hauled away by bus to be abandoned in the desert won him the Visa D’Or at the International Photo- journalists Awards in Perpignan, one of the most prestigious ceremonies in the world. His photo- graphs have been published in renowned media such as Newsweek, Le Figaro or the Financial Times. As a television cameraman, he has cov- ered Iraq, Afghanistan and Congo together with David Beriain.
Together with Ernesto Villalba, he created Once Upon a Time, a multimedia company that por- trays unique characters from a very artistic point of view.
In Sea Bites, Caro’s ten years of experience al- lowed him to hang himself from the rocks just as the barnacle fishermen did and taking as many risks as they do. He also played the role of direc- tor of photography coordinating all the camera- men at work.
(+34) 656 55 06 57 sergio@sergiocaro.com sergiocaro.com/

ERNESTO VILLALBA Cameraman
Ernesto Villalba is a Spanish multimedia journal- ist. He is a co-founder of Once Upon a Time, a pioneer online production company that makes short films and other multimedia materials for the web. The company’s first work, “Time to Time”, was selected by Innovative Interactivity as one of the fifty best multimedia packages of the year. Since 2008, he has directed all graphic design- and social media-related strategies for REC, the main feature aired by Cuatro, one of Spain’s “Big Five” TV networks.
Villalba is currently focused on his work at Once Upon a Time developing several documentary projects and combines them with his role as a teacher for several innovative seminars.
In Sea Bites, he was the cameraman that followed Serxo, our protagonist, outside the sea. Villalba’s particular sensitivity made our protagonist feel so comfortable with him that he even got the nick- name “Sombra”, shadow in Spanish.
(+34) 667 55 56 10 ernestovillalba.photo@gmail.com e
4:38
The Projector - 8mm Direct to 5Dmk2
Many thanks to Mitch Aunger (Planet5D) for getting this story rolling and spreading the wo...
published: 12 Mar 2011
author: James Miller
The Projector - 8mm Direct to 5Dmk2
Many thanks to Mitch Aunger (Planet5D) for getting this story rolling and spreading the word.
http://home.planet5d.com
----------------------------------------------------------
This is my method for transferring 8mm footage using the Canon 5Dmk2 in real time. The results are very good for such a fast method if you cannot afford the money or time for frame scanning.
00:42 - It very important to use a flat type LED's not the dome shaped ones. The dome shape LED's will give you lots of blooming and the focus will drift at the edges making you suspect the lens.
00:58 - I drilled 3 holes in the body of the projector for the LED flexible light strip, behind where the original bulb used to sit. I mask out light I don't want projected with putty. The position of the lights helps mask out some of the scratches. I need to add another couple of (horizontal) lights either side of the centre light.
01:29 - I modified the original projector lens to try and achieve a flat field image. Made from the rear element from a Carl Zeiss Flektogon 35mm and attached to the original lens tube with a bit a tape no less. You could use standard lens and there are some very nice ones out there.
03:08 - Utilising the body from the old 35mm lens, it proved a good way in shielding the projector from light pollution, I also added a 12mm extension tube. A lens cloth draped over the front further seals the light from entering, of course you could just film in very low light.
00:12 - I put 2 drive belts on the motor, this slowed the motor down just enough to reduce the shutter flicker. The Canon 5Dmk2 was set to 24p and 1/50 for our electrical phase.
ISO ranged from base up to 1000, depending on exposure of original film. The footage is fine at ISO 1000 but this could be reduced by using a more powerful flat lens LED.
03:30 - Focus and frame size changed by moving the projector or camera and adjusting the screw type lens. Try and focus on the film grain and not the scratches.
00:37 - I removed the internal mask for 8mm & S8mm aspects at the gate to project an unrestricted image into the camera. You gain areas that are hidden but they have the perfs though them and you see the top and bottom of the next and previous frame, but you can re-mask in post. If it's personal footage you want to see everything on the frame, some times it makes the difference.
You can use the crop sensor DSLR's but the lens would need changing or modifying unless you wanted a cropped image. On this lens and projector I can not bring the camera near enough without fouling on the body of the camera or projector body to get a full image captured.
I have tried to make this project as accessible as possible and apart from the camera, all the items are fairly cheap to pick up.
Projector used: Eumig Mark 501, I also use the Eumig 610D & the Eumig Mark DL
Camera: Canon 5Dmk2
Ref LED: http://www.maplin.co.uk/dc-12-v-flexible-led-light-strip-400mm-47376
Here are links to a couple of films transferred using this exact setup:
http://www.vimeo.com/20900718
http://www.vimeo.com/20871186
I have other 8mm transfers back from when I started this 2 years ago, but the quality was not as good. They are further down my videos.
Youtube results:
6:38
How a Pixel Gets its Color | Bayer Sensor | Digital Image
This video explains how pixels are assigned RGB values using a bayer filter system. It is ...
published: 09 Aug 2008
author: MichaelTheMentor
How a Pixel Gets its Color | Bayer Sensor | Digital Image
How a Pixel Gets its Color | Bayer Sensor | Digital Image
This video explains how pixels are assigned RGB values using a bayer filter system. It is one of the many bonus lessons on my new DVD, Photoshop Crash Course...- published: 09 Aug 2008
- views: 67302
- author: MichaelTheMentor
6:57
Photography Tips ( Image Sensor Size )
Hello Everybody, This video is presented by http://www.samys.com This tutorial is designed...
published: 18 Feb 2010
author: FontanaKnowledge
Photography Tips ( Image Sensor Size )
Photography Tips ( Image Sensor Size )
Hello Everybody, This video is presented by http://www.samys.com This tutorial is designed to teach you the difference between Full frame and APSC size senso...- published: 18 Feb 2010
- views: 10896
- author: FontanaKnowledge
1:02
CMOS Image sensor size 1/2.3" 10.3-megapixel Fujifilm HS10
Fujifilm HS10 Finepix CMOS sensor 1/2.3" 10.3-megapixel Optical Image Stabilizer (sensor s...
published: 29 Jan 2013
author: TheRareCoin
CMOS Image sensor size 1/2.3" 10.3-megapixel Fujifilm HS10
CMOS Image sensor size 1/2.3" 10.3-megapixel Fujifilm HS10
Fujifilm HS10 Finepix CMOS sensor 1/2.3" 10.3-megapixel Optical Image Stabilizer (sensor shift mechanism) BSI-CMOS, CMOS Just so you have an understanding of...- published: 29 Jan 2013
- views: 429
- author: TheRareCoin
4:21
Panasonic 3D Sensor: D-Imager
After 7 years of extensive research and development, Panasonic Electric Works proudly pres...
published: 23 Nov 2010
author: PanasonicEWEurope
Panasonic 3D Sensor: D-Imager
Panasonic 3D Sensor: D-Imager
After 7 years of extensive research and development, Panasonic Electric Works proudly presents the ''D-IMager'' 3D image sensor. The D-IMager uses advanced, ...- published: 23 Nov 2010
- views: 1283
- author: PanasonicEWEurope