Sep 27, 2008, 05:11
Unnoticed from the public, there seems to have been a major breakthrough in image stabilisation.
According to a newsletter I get regularly from an online vendor, the image stabiliser of the Fuji FinePix A850 can do this:
![[Image: Bildstabilisierung.JPG]](http://www.shuttertalk.com/forums/images/upload/Bildstabilisierung.JPG)
It seems that the Fuji FinePix A850 image stabiliser eliminates motion blur. This is good news to all sports photographers who struggle with motion blur in badly lit environments. Let the image stabiliser do it! Almost unbelievable, you can get this wonderful piece of technology for only 99 Euro.
I'm just wondering how they do it. If it's done optical, they must have developed a flexible lens that the image stabiliser deforms to remove the blur in just a part of the picture. The same principle applies if it's done by moving the sensor - they must have developed a flexible sensor. And if it's done by software, it's certainly not less impressive. Imagine an in-camera process that calculates the motion blur out of the picture. This is really unheard of!

According to a newsletter I get regularly from an online vendor, the image stabiliser of the Fuji FinePix A850 can do this:
It seems that the Fuji FinePix A850 image stabiliser eliminates motion blur. This is good news to all sports photographers who struggle with motion blur in badly lit environments. Let the image stabiliser do it! Almost unbelievable, you can get this wonderful piece of technology for only 99 Euro.
I'm just wondering how they do it. If it's done optical, they must have developed a flexible lens that the image stabiliser deforms to remove the blur in just a part of the picture. The same principle applies if it's done by moving the sensor - they must have developed a flexible sensor. And if it's done by software, it's certainly not less impressive. Imagine an in-camera process that calculates the motion blur out of the picture. This is really unheard of!
