Nokia unveils virtual reality camera for filmmakers
Ball-shaped gadget captures 3D footage for content creation for devices like virtual reality headsets
HELSINKI:
Finnish telecoms equipment maker Nokia unveiled its new virtual-reality camera for professional filmmakers and content creators on Wednesday.
"We're thrilled to introduce OZO to the content creation world, and to define a completely new category of virtual reality capture and playback solutions," Ramzi Haidamus, president of Nokia Technologies, said in a statement.
The ball-shaped gadget captures 3D footage for content creation for devices such as the increasingly popular headsets that let users immerse themselves in virtual games.
Nokia was the world's top mobile phone maker between 1998 and 2011 but, after failing to respond to the rapid rise of smartphones, the Finnish company sold its handset unit to Microsoft in 2014.
Since then the company has concentrated on its network infrastructure business. Now Nokia Technologies, the company's advanced technology and licensing business, is eying a comeback to devices with its new camera.
But in mid-July the company announced it was looking at reentering the mobile phone market by striking a licensing deal with another firm by the end of 2016.
Nokia said the OZO camera has eight synchronised sensors and will capture spatial audio through eight integrated microphones. The device is being developed at the company's facilities in Espoo, Finland, where it will also manufactured. The first cameras could be rolled out by the end of the year.
Finnish telecoms equipment maker Nokia unveiled its new virtual-reality camera for professional filmmakers and content creators on Wednesday.
"We're thrilled to introduce OZO to the content creation world, and to define a completely new category of virtual reality capture and playback solutions," Ramzi Haidamus, president of Nokia Technologies, said in a statement.
The ball-shaped gadget captures 3D footage for content creation for devices such as the increasingly popular headsets that let users immerse themselves in virtual games.
Nokia was the world's top mobile phone maker between 1998 and 2011 but, after failing to respond to the rapid rise of smartphones, the Finnish company sold its handset unit to Microsoft in 2014.
Since then the company has concentrated on its network infrastructure business. Now Nokia Technologies, the company's advanced technology and licensing business, is eying a comeback to devices with its new camera.
But in mid-July the company announced it was looking at reentering the mobile phone market by striking a licensing deal with another firm by the end of 2016.
Nokia said the OZO camera has eight synchronised sensors and will capture spatial audio through eight integrated microphones. The device is being developed at the company's facilities in Espoo, Finland, where it will also manufactured. The first cameras could be rolled out by the end of the year.