Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Emerging Tech
  3. Photography
  4. News

Light's L16 computational camera gets a wider zoom and double the internal memory

Add as a preferred source on Google

In October of last year, a company nobody had heard of introduced a product that promised to revolutionize the way we take pictures. That company was Light, and the product was the L16 camera, which put 16 small lens and sensor modules into one device, combining the power of each through computational photography to create “DSLR quality” images. This week, Light announced some key improvements to the hardware.

First up, as detailed by PetaPixel, the planned 35-150mm (full frame equivalent) lens has been extended on the wide end to 28mm. In a blog post, Light says this move was in response to feedback from pre-order customers. The company says the new, wider lens will make for “more dramatic landscapes, more interesting street and architectural photos, and a more versatile camera overall.”

Recommended Videos

Second, Light has doubled the already respectable 128GB of internal memory. The company says it was able to secure “early access to a limited supply of a 256GB internal memory parts” and will provide the upgrade at no additional charge to current pre-order customers. This is good news, since the L16’s 52MP photos likely require a fair amount of space. Whether the boosted capacity will be made permanent is unclear, but it would certainly make the camera’s $1,700 price tag a little easier to stomach.

The final announcement made in Light’s July update was that it received $30 million in series C funding from GV (formally Google Ventures). Needless to say, that’s a significant chunk of a change. Light says it “will put these funds to good use as we scale our global supply chain to meet overwhelming demand.”

Overwhelming demand is right: the L16 has yet to ship, but a statement on the company’s homepage says the camera is sold out until 2017. In fact, Light has stopped taking pre-orders altogether. Interested buyers can sign up to be notified when pre-orders reopen, but it sounds like the wait could be quite a while. Apparently, revolutions don’t happen overnight.

Daven Mathies
Daven is a contributing writer to the photography section. He has been with Digital Trends since 2016 and has been writing…
Smart glasses are finding a surprise niche — Korean drama and theater shows
Urban, Night Life, Person

Every year, millions of people follow Korean content without speaking a word of the language. They stream shows with subtitles, read translated lyrics, and find workarounds. But live theater has always been a different problem — you can't pause or rewind it. That's the problem: a Korean startup thinks it's cracked, and Yuroy Wang was one of the first to try it. The 22-year-old Taipei retail worker is a K-pop fan who loves Korean culture but doesn't speak the language. When he went to see "The Second Chance Convenience Store," a touring play based on a Korean novel that was a bestseller in Taiwan, he expected supertitles. What he got instead was a pair of chunky black-framed AI-powered glasses sitting on his nose, translating the dialogue in real time directly on the lenses. "As soon as I found out they were available, I couldn't wait to try them," he said. Wang is part of a growing audience discovering that smart glasses, a category of tech that has struggled to find mainstream purpose for years, might have just found their calling in the most unexpected of places: live Korean theater.

How do the glasses work?

Read more
Amazon thinks you love AI, so it has launched a special storefront for AI-powered gadgets
Google AI mode mockup showing new feature

You're browsing for a new laptop — one has a better processor, another has more RAM, a third says "AI-powered" in bold letters, and you're not entirely sure what that means. But Amazon has noticed you pausing on that third one, and it has thoughts. The company just launched an AI Store on Amazon.in — a dedicated storefront that rounds up AI-enabled gadgets across categories, from smartphones and laptops to refrigerators and washing machines. So, instead of you wading through spec sheets trying to figure out which "AI feature" actually does something useful, the store spells it out for you.

What the AI store actually is

Read more
Gemini now makes personalized images by understanding your taste from Photos library
Logo, Disk, Symbol

Up until now, using Google Gemini meant being very specific. If you wanted an image, you’d spell it all out, the mood, the lighting, the tiny details, just to get something close to what you had in mind. That’s still how most AI tools operate. But this is where things start to shift. With the integration of Nano Banana 2 and Google Photos, Gemini feels much more familiar. It leans on your preferences, what you like, what you usually capture, and the kind of visuals you gravitate towards, and uses that context to shape what it creates for you.

So instead of over-explaining every prompt, you’re nudging it in a direction, and it fills in the rest in a way that feels personal. The goal here is simple: spend less time describing and more time seeing your ideas come to life, almost the way you imagined them, without having to say everything out loud.

Read more