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Olympus Neo SPlan 5 NIC IC5 0.13 ∞/- f=180 US $290.00
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Olympus Neo SPlan 20 NIC 0.40 ∞/0 f=180 IC20 US $290.00
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Olympus Neo SPlan 50 NIC 0.70 ∞/0 f=180 IC 50 US $490.00
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Olympus ULWD NEO SPlan20x/0.40 ∞/0 f=180 objective US $499.00
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Olympus NEO DPlan50x/0.75 ∞/0 f=180 objective US $299.00
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Olympus NEO SPlan50x/0.70 NIC ∞/0 f=180 objective US $419.00
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Olympus NEO DPlan20x/0.40 ∞/0 f=180 objective US $269.00
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Olympus NEO SPlan20x/0.46 ∞/0 f=180 objective US $299.00
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Olympus NEO SPlan20x/0.40 NIC ∞/0 f=180 objective US $369.00
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OLYMPUS NeoDPlan / Neo-D-Plan ∞ / - f=180 0.25 Objective US $349.99
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Olympus Neo SPlan 5-2 0.13 105762 Lens US $299.00
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Olympus NEO S Plan 10 T6-104579 Lens US $399.00
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Olympus ULWD NEO SPlan50x/0.55 ∞/0 f=180 objective-2 US $499.00
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Olympus ULWD NEO SPlan50x/0.55 ∞/0 f=180 objective-1 US $499.00
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Another great place to shop for Olympus Neo products is Amazon. They have more than just books! Here are some more information for Olympus Neo: The term camera phone commonly refers to cellphones with a built in digital camera, that allows it to capture stills and short video clips, store them, and share them with other devices and users through wireless communications technologies. The first mobile picture phone prototype, entitled the Intellect, was invented in 1993 by Daniel A Henderson, and now resides in the Smithsonian Museum of American History. The Intellect was a hand held cell phone with a large monochrome display that could receive and display digital picture and video data sent by a wireless transmitter, and pioneered many of the technologies and protocols that were to find their way into the modern camera phone. During the nineties, there were several attempts to combine mobile phones with digital camera technology. Camera manufacturers Kodak and Olympus demonstrated several digital camera/mobile phone combinations at trade shows during the nineties, and Apple tried a different tack with a combined mobile videophone and PDA. Impressive as these devices were, they lacked one crucial element of the modern day cameraphone – they could not connect to the internet, and were therefore unable to quickly and easily share images with other users, without physical connection to a computer. The first camera phone to be able to do this, the Sharp J-SH04, was released commercially in Japan in 2001, with a US release the following year. The ability to take pictures and share them quickly and easily with others was one of the main selling points of the new 3G phone services, so naturally phone manufacturers were keen to include cameras with their new phones wherever possible in order to start making money from their expensive 3G licenses. By 2006, over half of all mobile phones had in built cameras, which was to prove catastrophic for the digital camera industry, forcing two of the big four manufacturers, Minolta and Konica, out of business. At the end of 2008, there were over 1.9 billion cameraphones in circulation worldwide, and that figure looks set to rise even higher over the coming years. Footage shot by citizen journalists on cameraphones has even started to crop up on major television news bulletins. The first major international breaking news story to use cameraphone footage in this way was the 2005 Boxing Day Tsunami. With the advent of video sharing platforms such as Youtube, and its rapid acceptance as a format for breaking news footage, cameraphone footage has become an increasing part of the visual fabric of our culture. About the Author Vodafone stock a great range of mobiles if you are looking to upgrade, or sim cards if you already have your phone of choice.
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Camera phones â from the Intellect to the Tsunami
Ghost Mountain At their best, Ghost Mountain plays like the love child of Animal Collective neo-psych and a syrup-slowed, heavy-lidded MC Paul Barman, incorporating vocab-heavy lines with layers of bright, warm-and-fuzzy M83 synths, cloud-sweeping atmospherics and a gleeful sense of childish abandon.

US $24.00