The answer to the question is no. Nobody cares. When you buy a camera, you want to take photos. Preferably good quality ones.
If you want to do something neat with the image, you put it on your PC and fiddle with it. You don't need to fiddle with it inside the camera.
I know some people enjoy the challenge of hacking the firmware, but the camera companies aren't going to waste time and money opening up their specs so they can sell 3 more cameras to the people who care.
And besides, if you were a real hacker, you would take the damn thing apart and figure it out yourself.
Yup, my MSN desktop search already has more than 200,000 documents indexed across the network... why pay $5000? Everybody is giving that stuff away now!
"Adobe Portable Document Format (PDF) Versions through 6.0" is listed under "Graphic Formats". Is that what you were looking for? Doesn't that mean yahoo can do PDFs?
MSN can also do PDF's - you just need the PDF ifilter installed (Get it here)
I don't think google does it yet... but I could be wrong...
The answer to the question is no. Nobody cares. When you buy a camera, you want to take photos. Preferably good quality ones.
If you want to do something neat with the image, you put it on your PC and fiddle with it. You don't need to fiddle with it inside the camera.
I know some people enjoy the challenge of hacking the firmware, but the camera companies aren't going to waste time and money opening up their specs so they can sell 3 more cameras to the people who care.
And besides, if you were a real hacker, you would take the damn thing apart and figure it out yourself.
Yup, my MSN desktop search already has more than 200,000 documents indexed across the network... why pay $5000? Everybody is giving that stuff away now!
"Adobe Portable Document Format (PDF) Versions through 6.0" is listed under "Graphic Formats". Is that what you were looking for? Doesn't that mean yahoo can do PDFs?
MSN can also do PDF's - you just need the PDF ifilter installed (Get it here)
I don't think google does it yet... but I could be wrong...
This is absolutely true. But it doesn't count because it isn't in the USA. Georgia tech will no doubt get a patent for this 'cutting edge' work.