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Condition ONE app combines iPad and photo journalism

Traditional photo journalism has always had a limited point of view. You could only see what was in front of the camera. Video photo journalism added a new dimension to reporting as the camera could pan around an area giving the user views from multiple vantage points. However, with both photo and video journalism, viewers have no control over what they see in the shot. War documentarian Danfung Dennis is on the brink of changing this thanks to a custom camera system and the iPad. The former is a new tool for the photo journalist to record events, and the latter is a tool for the viewer to immerse themselves in that event and control what they see.

Dennis created an app called Condition ONE, which allows viewers to use their iPads as fully interactive windows into photo journalist images. As you can see in the video below (warning, NSFW language), Condition ONE allows you to interact with a current scene in what is probably most easily comparable to a moving photograph from the world of Harry Potter. Users can pan up, down and rotate around to get a complete look at an event in a set moment in time as if they were actually there. Dennis told Time that the point of Condition ONE is to create a new form of storytelling that will "shake viewers out of their numbness to traditional media and provide them a powerful emotional experience."

While there is no hard launch date or price, the Condition ONE app is set to debut in mid-2011 and is sure to change the way many see an event that has occurred halfway around the world. "Once viewers enter a video experience, they can move the tablet in any direction and see the corresponding field of view," says Dennis. "The traditional two-dimensional, rectangular frame is shattered as viewers step inside the frame and experience the stories as the protagonists."



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Traditional photo journalism has always had a limited point of view. You could only see what was in front of the camera. Video photo...
 

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E92Owner

"Once viewers enter a video experience, they can move the tablet in any direction and see the corresponding field of view,"

that's really cool, I can't wait to see this done in more apps.

April 08 2011 at 10:25 AM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
Emil

I am definitely with you (I would address you by name, but you seem to have used an acronym),

As a tech-related site, The Unofficial Apple Weblog servers should be easily capable of handling the additional bandwidth required to serve up the automatically-expanded full text behind each acronym.

I look forward to reading articles about the new Mac Operating System X 10.7, High-Definition Multimedia Interface cables for the iPad 2, and Worldwide Interoperability for Microwave Access in future mobile products, not to mention stimulating discussions of the new Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers 802.11n standard.

Who else can't wait for the cost of 4 GigaByte small outline dual in-line memory modules to go down?

Is anyone actually using their Secure Digital Extended Capacity port(s)?

April 08 2011 at 9:17 AM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
1 reply to Emil's comment
JTO

Hi Emil, I use Compactflash instead! : )

Here is a reason to use Apple:

PC - USB
Apple - Firewire

PC - USB 3
Apple - Thunderbolt

Words or names or quicker to understand and lead to less confusion.

IMHO...

:D

April 09 2011 at 5:00 PM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
JTO

NSFW??? QTVR???

I think we should turn this site into an 'AFZ'! So who is with me?


Oh yes, AFZ as I am sure you all know is an Acronym Free Zone.

April 08 2011 at 8:30 AM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
CharlesV

How is this different from old QTVR?

April 08 2011 at 7:36 AM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
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