Cameras
Casio's Dynamic Photos Deliver Green Screen Effects Without the Green Screen
Posted by Adam Frucci at 5:28 AM on January 9, 2009
Casio just unveiled its new Dynamic Photos technology. It lets you cut out video of yourself from the background, placing it elsewhere. Get ready for a slew of horrible green screen videos on YouTube.

This is Yama, a pinhole camera made of silver, gold, mercury, gem stones and a Tibetan monk skull blessed by a Lama. Even if I had the $US5,000 that it costs, I won't buy it.
No matter what they do, the new Polaroid PoGo Instant digicam will never have the magic nature, heartwarming charm, and craptastic retro quality of their good old Instamatics. But they are kind of cool, anyway.
The Cybershot G3 is a camera so special Sony Sir Howard Stringer himself did the honours: It's the world's first Wi-Fi camera with a built-in browser.
Sony's CES camcorder lineup might've
Trickle down seems to be one of Sony's major CES themes: Bringing features from higher-end products down to its cheaper entry models, like its new entry-level Cybershot DSC-W220.
Fact: Writing up Sony's camcorder line at CES is the worst part of my year, every year. Luckily, Sony provided this handy chart of their 18 camcorders so you could decipher it all.
Sony's pile of new photo frames is topped by the 10-inch V1000 and X1000, which have supposedly 15x sharper contrast and are 13 percent than last year's models, for that superduper better-than-reality look.
Olympus' SP-590UZ manages to exceed the once impressive 20x optical zoom of the
The Samsung HMX-R10 HD camcorder is a pretty run-of-the-mill cam with 1/4-inch sensor, flash memory storage, and 9-megapixel photos, but what makes this thing interesting is its angled cut lens and smooth shape...