Re: Brooks Institute Graduate Student
Re: Brooks Institute Graduate Student
- Subject: Re: Brooks Institute Graduate Student
- From: bruce fraser <email@hidden>
- Date: Thu, 2 Feb 2006 08:49:28 -0800
I believe the first commercially-available one-shot color digital
camera (the Leaf was 3-shot color) was the Kodak DCS-100. Raw was the
ONLY option, though it wasn't named as such.
At 8:41 PM -0500 2/1/06, Derrick Brown wrote:
You might be able to find out which commercially sold camera was
the first to offer raw as a user selectable option (no, I don't
know), but the first "raw file" was more than likely written in a
lab somewhere when the CCD was being developed.
The first commercially available (for photographers) would likely be
the LEAF "brick" 2k X 2k pixel black white sensor with the color
filter wheel. It offered a 16bit HDR file. Back in the times
(circa 1992) that was considered by many to be a RAW file.
good luck!
Derrick Brown
email@hidden
www.integrated-color.com
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