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- Date: Wed, 17 Feb 93 17:04:46 PST
- From: macmod@SUMEX-AIM.Stanford.EDU (Info-Mac Moderator)
-
- ec.photo,rec.video,comp.sys.atari.st,comp.sys.ibm.pc.misc,comp.s ys.mac,comp.sys.mac.digest
- Path: mfolivo
- From: mfolivo@sactoh0.sac.ca.us (Mark Newton-John)
- Subject: Definitive Photo CD (specs, file formats, etc)
- Message-Id: <1993Feb17.100606.5305@sactoh0.sac.ca.us>
- Keywords: Magazine_article
- Organization: Sacramento Public Access Unix
- Date: Wed, 17 Feb 93 10:06:06 GMT
- To: pacbell!ames!comp-sys-mac-digest@ames.arc.nasa.gov
- Resent-To: backmod
- Resent-Date: Wed, 17 Feb 1993 17:04:45 PST
- Resent-From: Info-Mac Moderator <macmod@sumex-aim.Stanford.EDU>
-
-
- Here is a informative article about the specifications of Photo CD.
- PLEASE, followups to the appropriate newsgroups! Atari Falcon/030
- applications mean little to IBM PS/2, and vice versa. This article
- is of general interest.
-
- This article is from Dealerscope Merchadising Magazine, a trade
- publication for electronics retailers.
-
-
-
- Photo CD: New Business Opportunities for Graphics and Photo
- Professionals
-
- While ultimately aimed at consumers, Kodaks new technology initially
- is attracting graphics professionals. Software announced in August
- will let DOS/Windows and Mac users read and save Photo CD image,
- adjust colors and enhance pictures.
-
- Features added to Kodaks's Photo CD system will allow sound, text.
- and graphics to be recorded along with photo-quality images onto
- Photo CD discs. THe discs, which will be housed in attractive "jewel
- boxe" case displaying the recorded images, will play back on TV,
- using dedicated Photo CD players.
-
- For nearly two decades, Peter Mackey has been creating audiovisual
- presentations and video productions for busines and industry.
-
- As vice president-media integration at Imergy, and interactive
- multimedia production and graphics firm in Norwalk, CT, Mackey is a
- beta site for the much heralded Photo CD technology on the way from
- Eastman Kodak Co. Simply stated, Photo CD puts 35mm film photos onto
- compact disc.
-
- In August, Kodak announced software that lets DOS/Windows and
- Macintosh users import and enhance Photo CD images, plus a host of
- new formats and functions aimed directly at graphics and photography
- professionals.
- Beta Tester Mackey is using Photo CD to produce narrated
- essays, captioned photo albums, and other projects that he is more
- secretive about. These have given him an early insight into the value
- of Photo CD.
- "If designers and artists can personally experience what
- these products can do," said Mackey, "I have no doubt that they will
- be sold on Photo CD."
-
- Opens busines doors
- For the computer graphics community, Photo CD promises to bring forth
- not only a robust, innovative medium, but also new business
- opportunities. Kodak itself is betting a large part of its future on
- Photo CD- essentially a hybrid electronic imaging/silver halide film-based technology intended to keep alive and hopefully grow users'
- ingrained habit of recording events and locations on film.
- Kodak is pumping about $30 million dollars into an ad
- campaign to promote Photo CD products, banking that the technology
- holds out the potential to be a "VCR"-line blockbuster product.
- While Kodak's ultimate focus is on the vast consumer
- marketplace where billions of dollars in film sales are at stake,
- Kodak is also very much aware that its battle also entails engaging
- the hearts and minds of the professional, industrial, and commercial
- computer graphics communities.
- For it is the visually creative practitioners who are likely
- to be the inital benficiaries and trend setters in applying Phot CD
- in myriad, unforseen ways.
-
- Photo Database
- For computer picture professionals, Photo CD's greatest potential is
- as an input source for digital images used in computer-based
- presentations and computer graphics of all kinds. "We can use Photo
- CD as a photo capture and archiving system and also as a delivery
- platform," Mackey said.
- While technolgy to scan film and hard copy directly to
- computer-readable media has been around for some time, existing
- systems work too slowly and cost too much for even high-volume shops.
- Photo CD overcomes this price/performance drawback.
- The film scanner component if the Sun Microsystems-based
- Photo CD Imaging Workstation (PIW) digitizes a full-color 35mm frame
- into a very high resolution image- 2048x3072- in just six seconds. To
- achieve this level of resolution, competing scanners typically take
- several minutes.
- Not surprisingly then, such fast performance also yields more
- palatble costs. Kodak estimates that a typical user will pay $20 to
- transfer a 24-frame roll of 35mm film onto a compact disc in Kodak's
- proprietary Photo CD format.
-
- Bought Image Bank
- Likewise, Photo CD will intrude in traditional photo sources. Wanting
- to encourage demand for images in Photo CD format, Kodak last year
- bought the Image Bank, one of the largest film stock houses in the
- world. Using the Kodak PIW, Image Bank will be able to transfer its
- hundreds of thousands of 35mm negatives held in inventory to Phot CD
- files rapidly and inexpensively.
- On August 25, Kodk announced plans for a Kodak Picture
- Exchange to go online next year using the public telephone network,
- much like text and data networks such as CompuServe. The Kodak
- Picture Exchange will link stock photo houses, graphic designers,
- pubishers, and oher distributors of images, and end users.
- Looking ahead, film will not long remain Photo CD's only
- image source. Kodak recently engaged Polaroid to manufature a Photo
- CD scanner to handle instant photos and existing prints whose
- negatives are lost.
- Kodak will market the scanner as an accssory under its own
- brand name to be sold along with the PIW to photo finishing labs and
- others having the output volume neccessary to warrant purchase of the
- $100,000-plus PIW system. Scanning capability is also being expanded
- to cover a variety of positive and negative film formats beyond 35mm-
- including 70mm, 120, and 4x5-inch.
-
- Four Basic Subsystems
- The turnkey PIW system consists of four basic subsystems: The film
- scanner, which digitizes negatives or slides, scanning film at a
- maximum resolution of 2048 lines by 3072 pixels by 12 bits in each of
- the primary colors; the Data Manager, which encodes the image data,
- automatically performing color and density adjustments; the Writer,
- which writes the digitized information to a Photo CD disc; and the
- Printer, which produces what Kodak refers to as a "near-photographic-quality" prints along with the thumbnail prints that serve as a
- picture index on the Photo CD storage case.
- The device also spews out standard-size prints and
- enlargements up to 10 inches square.
- There's even more functionality coming. Starting in 1993,
- photo finishers will be equipped to record tet, graphics, and sound
- on Photo CD discs; they will also be able to encode attribute data
- and other information on the discs that enable non-linear sequencing
- of the images to be programmed for playback.
- Photo CD playback takes place not just on one's computer
- display- where images can be manipulated- bit on an ordinary
- television set. This is key to Kodak's making Photo CD a burgeoning
- consumer electronics product.
- Kodak's approach entails use of a specialized Photo CD player
- that Kodak recently began shipping; and in a a stroke of consumer
- merchandising foresight, the unit also plays back audio on ordinary
- compact discs.
- In all, Kodak offers a selection of four Photo CD player
- models. A basic unit carries a $449 list price. But the top-of-the-line model offers some stunning capabilities. With it, an operator
- can change the viewing sequence at will, zoom in or out of an image
- using crop marks to focus in on any area of the image, and view the
- images under manual control or by automatic timing.
- This high-end player also incorporated a five-disc carousel
- along with capabilites to handle composite video, S-video, and audio
- output. Its price: $549.
- Kodak is even working on the ultimate jukebox player for the
- image junkie. It has exhibited a prototype player holding
- approximately 100 discs- or a nominal capacity of 10,000 images. The
- device selecs a disc, transports it to a built-in reader, and begins
- reding the disc- all in four seconds.
- For those who want to manipulate images and ultimately
- incorporate Photo CD images into a properly-sequenced, client
- presentation, Kodak launched at last month's MacWorld its Photo CD
- Access software.
- Available now for $40, it enables any user of PC Windows or
- Macinosh to access any image on a Photo CD disc; select and display a
- desired image or sequence of images; export the selected photo to a
- file in such formats as EPS, TIFF, RIFF, PCX, and PICT; crop and
- otherwise edit an image and paste it into any image processing,
- desktop publishing, and other Photo CD compatible application.
- In addition, Kodak offers PhotoEdge, a $139 program that lets
- Mac and Windows users zoom, crop, rotate, and flip Photo CD images;
- and adjust color, cotrast, and focus. For storage and retreival,
- Kodak will sell later this year its $399 Kodak Shoebox software for
- Windows and Mac users. The Shoebox also works with Kodak Picture
- Exchange.
- Photo CD Access software, however, is a entry-level, interim
- package that will become redundant once traditional software packages
- become Photo CD enabled. Towards that end, Kodak also sells a Photo
- CD Access Developer's Toolkit, priced at $695, intended to encourage
- application devleopers and other third parties to incorporate Photo
- CD compatibility into their products.
-
- Apple, Kodak Team
- Apple announced Aug. 25 it will work with Kodak to incorporate Photo
- CD access into curent and future Macintoh operating systems. Apple is
- also building Photo CD compatability into its QuickTime multimedia
- software; Micrografx Inc. has done the same with regard to its
- Picture Publisher software; EFI for its Cachet color managemnt
- software; Corel Corp. for CorelDraw; and Media Cybernetics for the
- Halo Desktop Imager image processing package.
- With Photo CD compatibility, a professional graphics creator
- will be able to import Photo CD images into an existing system, edit
- and combine them with other graphics, text, video, and audio
- elements, blending all of the disparate data types into a state-of-the-art presentation.
- The Toolkit actually consists of a library of C language
- functions that (1) read images from Photo CD discs into memory, (2)
- decompress high-resolution images, and (3) provide basic image
- manipulation capability. The Toolkit cannot be used to compress
- images and write them directly to a disc; that is a task for the PIW
- system- a strategy adopted by Kodak to assure high-quality image
- recording on film.
- In fact, Photo CD is a practicable technology because it
- utilizes image compression and decompression effectively. Just how
- Kodak handles this proprietary aspect of Photo CD turns out to be
- both surpising and ingenious.
- A Photo CD image is actually sored five times at five
- different resolutions on the same disc; this bundle of digitized
- pictures is called an ImagePac.
- At the high end- denoted by 2048x3072 as well as 1024x1536
- resolutions- images are stored in compressed form to reduce storage
- requirements; the lesser resolution images- 512x768, 256x384. and
- 128x192- are stored in noncompressed form.
- The different resolutions are used as follows: 128x192 for
- thumbnail index images printed on each disc jacket and used for image
- retrieval; 256x384 for previewing images on a computer screen;
- 512x768 for standard NTSC imagery; 1025x1536 for High Definition TV
- (HDTV) signals; and 2048x3072 for output to high-quality print.
-
- Fills Up to 6Mb
- Each Photo CD ImagePac occupies a total of three to six Mbytes,
- depending on the actual high-resolution image compression achieved.
- With present technology, it takes about an hour to fill a disc with
- 100 ImagePacs on a disc.
- What is of concern to end users is the type of CD-ROM drives
- neccessary to access Photo CD images. It requires an XA copact disc
- drive that supports so-called Mode 2 multisession operation, meaning
- that one 24-film roll can be recorded in one PIW session, and then at
- a later time returned to the photo finisher with another roll of film
- for recording on the same disc to add more image frames.
- The Photo CD approach contrasts with traditional CD-ROM
- drives where an entire disc is recorded in a single session. In both
- cases, once recorded, the images in a given sector an be read
- repeatedly, but they cannot be erased nor can they be recorded over.
- Such multisession drives wll be made by Philips, which along
- with Kodak co-developed Photo CD. Likewise, Sony, Pioneer, and
- Toshiba all plan to enter the market Photo CD compatible multi-session CD-ROM XA drives; the four manufacturers collectively account
- for 85 percent of the current market for CD-ROM dirves.
- Aside from the question of its ultimate acceptance, Photo CD
- raises another issue of concern to computer graphics professionals:
- the viablilty of the compression step that causes the higher
- resolution images to lose a bit of clarity, an essential tradeoff in
- exchange for efficient data storage. Presenations creator Mackey
- insists that he can see no deterioration in image quality when
- eyeballing his Photo CD works. However, neither he, nor anyone else,
- has worked with the tchnology to create, for example. slick magazine
- covers and pages. In such applications, even Kodak offocials have
- conceded tha Photo CD images will not be adaquate because of
- resolution loss.
- What about the use of Photo CD for high quality poster-size
- reproductions? One tell-tale experience is forthcoming from Alexandra
- Asmanis, creative director at Asmanis Design & Associates in
- Somerville, MA. Her design firm has begun an experiment to create
- 20x20-inch posters using Photo CD as an image source.
- Image security is yet another concern to some professional
- designers, artists, and photographers. No encryption technology is
- encorporated into the basic Photo CD to help image originators
- protect their creations.
- However, a Kodak Pro Photo CD Master disc, designed for
- professional photogtaphers and due to be available in the spring of
- 1993, offers three security features: a special identifier to
- indicate image ownership and copyright, the ability to place a
- watermark (such as "PROOF") over an image, and the ability to encrypt
- high resolution images. The Pro Photo CD Master disk, which otherwise
- looks like its consumer cousin, also will store images from larger
- film formats favored by pros- including 120 and 70mm, and 4x5-in., as
- well as 35mm.
- A long term threat to Photo CD is electronic cameras. True,
- current filmless imaging cameras already on the market are bedeviled
- by either high prices or unacceptably low resolutions. But in five to
- ten years, when solid state memories and higher capacity sensors
- become available, electrnic film cameras could give Photo CD a run
- for its money.
- Kodak competitors have been slow to respond to the Photo CD
- challenge, content to sit on the sidelines and let Kodak take the
- lead- and the risks.
- A few are even "supporting" Photo CD, including film
- producers Fuji and Agfa-Gevaert that will offer PIW equipment to
- photo finishers overseas for converting their own proprietary film
- into Photo CD format.
- At least for starters, Kodak seems to have the Phoo CD field
- largely all to itself, with the computer graphics professionals
- having the opportunity to call many of the shots- at least,
- initially.
-
- (Stanley Klein and Malcolm Stiefel have co-authored articlces for
- many years, for Computer Pictures and other publications. Klein is
- publisher/editor of the S. Klein Newsletter on Computer Graphics.
- Stiefel is a computer scientist at Mitre Corp.)
-
- --
- mfolivo@sactoh0.SAC.CA.US SAC-UNIX (916) 649-0161
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