360 ° Photos in one take with Tamaggo


Tamaggo , a camera which looks like an egg, and with dimensions that fit in the palm of a hand, which is capable of shooting 360 degrees in one take. The camera has 14 megapixel sensor, and rides a 360-degree lens. The palm-sized (3.62 x 2.19 x 2.4-inch, 92 x 55.8 x 61.1 mm) 2012 CES Innovations Design and Engineering Awards honoree is topped by a 360-degree zero to infinity lens and features a 14 megapixel sensor. There's a 2-inch LCD touch screen on the bottom and a huge button on the side for thumb operation (although it also has its own stand for delayed triggering using a timer function). The 360-Imager is powered by a Lithium Polymer battery that's charged via a mini-USB port - which also caters for physical connection to a computer, tablet or smartphone - and has built-in Wi-Fi and Bluetooth capabilities.

The company says that its device is able to determine whether it's being held for 360 degree sky or ground shots or for horizontal or vertical panoramas. Once the shutter has been released, the 360-Imager's ImmerVision Enables panamorph technology freeze-frames everything seen through the lens. The captured Tamaggraph image can then be saved to and viewed on a digital device (such as a tablet) or shared online via social networking platforms, with users able to move around the scene in a similar way to those nifty virtual museum tours often seen online. A section of the image can also be cropped and sent to a printer.

The Tamaggo 360-Imager is expected to cost under US$200.