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by np422
3797 days ago
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Hasselblads cameras was used in the Apollo missions. [1] Twelve hasselblad cameras were left behind on the moons surface. It was not that many years ago, around y2k or shortly thereafter if I remember correctly, that hasselblad finally decided that digital photography could match the picture quality their cameras achieved using traditional/analog film and started to manufacture digital options for their cameras. When I look at the pictures from the moon I start to understand why they held a stiff upper lip for so many years. [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hasselblad#Hasselblad_cameras_... |
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And when they did go digital, it was slightly ridiculous. I mean, the cheapest option of the H3DII which launched in 2007 had 50% more megapixels than the most expensive Canon or Nikon camera you could buy that year. With almost twice the sensor area of a full-format DSLR the pixel count wasn't for show either. One of those low-end H3DII bodies (without a lens) in OK condition goes for more than $2000 today.