h a l f b a k e r yClearly this is a metaphor for something.
add, search, annotate, link, view, overview, recent, by name, random
news, help, about, links, report a problem
browse anonymously,
or get an account
and write.
register,
|
|
|
Please log in.
Before you can vote, you need to register.
Please log in or create an account.
|
A major annoyance with digital cameras is the orientation of the image. Portrait shots are always recorded in a horizontal format. Programs exist to losslessly rotate the images after they are uploaded, but why not do it right when they are taken?
A small mercury switch inside the camera determines
what direction it is being held, and records the image accordingly. It wouldn't be perfect in all situations, but it would correct most portraits.
[link]
|
|
This is one of those things that seems so obvious it's shocking it hasn't been baked. |
|
|
I imagine it's not done on the camera because the camera screens are normally orientated landscape wise. And maybe because the lossless rotation requires a fair bit of processing power. That said, I reckon a little tilt switch that records the orientation and puts it into the jpeg header EXIF style would be nice, that way your desktop imaging software could orient them all automatically. |
|
|
Oh for crying out loud even my crummy little HP digital camera does automatic image orientation. If you posted this 6 years ago you might have had something. |
|
|
Search for "orientation sensor" and ye shall be rewarded; HP does it, Kodak does it, Canon does it, Olympus does it, the gorgeous Panasonic Lumix does it, Leica does it.... |
|
|
I'd say it's widely known to exist. |
|
|
Yup, what [bris] said. It is so baked, it has gone stale. |
|
|
//I'd say it's widely known to exist.// - How come I've never seen this on anyone's camera? I'd say that it's known to exist and should be more widely so. |
|
|
My associate [fridge duck] has a phone camera which does this. |
|
|
//My Nikon 995 doesn't// The Coolpix has got so many bendy bits, the damn thing would need a degree in three-dimensional trigonometry to know which way it was pointing. For the record, my Pentax *istDS doesn't have an orientation sensor either, though I'd guess they've been around for around four or five years at least. |
|
|
"When mine starts doing it, then I'd say it's baked." |
|
|
When your camera starts sprouting new features unbidden I'd say it's a miracle. |
|
|
There will always remain a lot of cool stuff out there, baked, that I don't know about (yet). So, [-]/baked, but cool anyway. |
|
|
One of the great things about this place is that you can found out about all that cool stuff from people's links. |
|
|
Baked, but hold the mercury. |
|
|
I have two top-of-the-line digital cameras and neither comes with this feature. Maybe this was once baked, but I think it's gone stale and got fed to the pigeons. We need to bake a new one. |
|
|
Nice idea, but my point-and-shoot Canon Digital ELPH does this. |
|
|
OK... I just posted this; [Ian] and [AWOL] were kind enough to point out a) that it was even staler this time around, and b) that [aq_bi] got there first. [+] even though it's baked. |
|
| |