Nikon wins five 2012 iF Design Awards

Not one but five Nikon products have won iF Design Awards 2012. Notably absent is anything from the 1 range, perhaps the awards were votes for/finalized before it was introduced.

iF_awards

The "iF design award" has been sponsored by International Forum Design GmbH of Hanover Germany since 1953. Each year, recipients of these prestigious awards are selected from worldwide industrial products exhibiting superior design. The awards include the product design award, communication design award and packaging award, etc. This year, 4,322 products from 48 countries were evaluated and the awards are presented to 1,218 products. In selecting recipients, product aspects including quality of design, functionality, degree of innovation, simplicity of operation and environmental impact are considered for the product design award, while usability, look and feel, and uniqueness are accounted for the communication design award.

The awards are as follows:

  • Product design awards for:
    • COOLPIX P3000
    • COOLPIX AW100
    • D5100
    • ShuttlePix (Digital Microscope)
  • Communication design awarded to:
    • COOLPIX S100

New firmware out for D7000 and D5100, fixes issues

D7100Just available, updated firmware releases for the Nikon D5100 and D7000 DSLRs.

The D5100 moves to version 1.01 with the following changes:

  • An error recognizing some memory cards has been addressed.
  • When Selective color from the retouch menu is performed on a picture taken with the image quality set to NEF (RAW)+JPEG and an image size of M or S, the edges of the image may not have changed color. This issue has been resolved.
  • When Metering was set to Matrix metering, the exposure mode set to M (Manual), and the HDR exposure differential set to Auto, the exposure differential was fixed at a value equivalent to 2 EV. This has been changed to enable automatic adjustment of exposure differential so that it is appropriate for the scene.

The D7000 update is version A 1.02 and B 1.03 (the D7000 update is in two parts, but is one download):

  • An error recognizing some memory cards has been addressed.
  • The following issues occurred when the mode dial was rotated from U1 or U2 to another shooting mode or from another shooting mode to U1 or U2 when the power was off or when the exposure meters are off (Auto meter-off). These issues were resolved.
    - A new folder is sometimes created despite the fact that the current folder does not yet contain 999 files and none of the files are numbered “9999”.
    - The number of remaining exposures may not be displayed as specified in the settings.
    - The setting for Role played by card in Slot 2 may change between Overflow, Backup, and RAW Slot 1- JPEG Slot 2.
  • An issue where Battery info in the setup menu sometimes showed sufficient remaining charge even when the remaining charge for the AA batteries inserted in the MB-D11 battery pack was low has been resolved.
  • An issue where a saved photo may not have been displayed properly when a movie was displayed in playback mode while saving the photo has been resolved.
  • An issue where zoom in or zoom out may not have performed properly when the playback zoom in or playback zoom out button was pressed while in Live view has been resolved.
  • The message displayed when the internal memory of the Wireless Transmitter WT-4 is formatted from the Format transmitter's memory under Device settings in Wireless transmitter of the camera’s setup menu was changed from Done to Built-in memory formatted.

European support links for firmware downloads: D5100 and D7000.

Intellectual Ventures sues Nikon on 5 counts of patent infringement

Patent

Watch out Nikon, Intellectual Ventures I LLC have you in their sights.

Intellectual Ventures is a private company that also happens to be one of the top five owners of US patents, according to Wikipedia.

Its business model has a focus on developing a large patent portfolio and licensing these patents to companies. Publicly, it states that a major goal is to assist small inventors against corporations. In practice, much of their revenue comes from licensing patents from other corporations and then filing lawsuits for infringement of patents. This, however, is not without controversy.

IV are claiming against Nikon for infringing the following:

  • 6,181,836: “Method and system for non-destructive image editing” by Delean and assigned to MGI Software Corporation. Prosecuted by Blakely, Sokoloff, Taylor & Zafman. Includes 16 claims (4 indep.). Was application 08/933,798. Filed 9/19/1997 & Granted 1/30/2001.
  • 6,121,960: “Touch screen systems and methods” by Carroll et. al. and assigned to ViA, Inc.. Prosecuted by Patterson, Thuente & Skaar, P.A.. Includes 30 claims (3 indep.). Was application 08/919,527. Filed 8/28/1997 & Granted 9/19/2000.
  • 6,979,587: “Image sensor and method for fabricating the same” by Lee and assigned to Hynix Semiconductor Inc.. Prosecuted by Birch, Stewart, Kolasch & Birch, LLP. Includes 10 claims (4 indep.). Was application 10/330,287. Filed 12/30/2002 & Granted 12/27/2005.
  • 6,221,686: “Method of making a semiconductor image sensor” by Drowley et. al. and assigned to Motorola, Inc.. Prosecuted by Huffman; A. Kate. Includes 34 claims (4 indep.). Was application 09/493,366. Filed 1/28/2000 & Granted 4/24/2001.
  • 7,733,368: “Virtual reality camera” by Teo. Prosecuted by Perkins Coie LLP. Includes 22 claims (4 indep.). Was application 11/935,344. Filed 11/5/2007 & Granted 6/8/2010.

According to the complaint , Intellectual Ventures first approached Nikon about licensing these patents in 2008, but Nikon declined to meet with them. They say that a second approach was made in 2011, and that "good faith efforts to negotiate a license" failed.

IV are also suing Canon for two of the above patents, plus others.

[ Via Techdirt ]

Nikon issues 3rd Notice on the damage from the Thai flood, factory still under water

The flooding in Thailand continues, and is having a major negative impact on Nikon's financials with an estimated reduction in sales of 65 billion yen (around $833m). Nikon's press release, with full financial results due later today:

This is to advise you of the latest situations of submersion at Nikon (Thailand) Co., Ltd., a consolidated manufacturing subsidiary of Nikon Corporation in the Rojana Industrial Park in Ayutthaya Province located in Central Thailand.

  1. Damages

    The 1st floor of all buildings at the premises continues to be submerged. Operation of the factory has been suspended since October 6. No human damage is reported. As for the water level, the Rojana Industrial Park, where Nikon (Thailand) Co., Ltd. is located, announces that it has lowered by about 40 centimeters from the highest period at measuring points in the Park.

  2. Estimated impact to our business performance

    The impact of the flood on our business performance for the financial period ending March 31, 2012 has been estimated, within the scope of our current findings and understanding, to push down net sales by 65 billion yen and operational income by 25 billion yen. Our estimation of the financial results for the Year Ending March 31, 2012, announced at 15:00 JST today, has reflected these negative factors.

  3. Recovery

    We have set up support and recovery system under the Emergency Headquarters for Disaster Control headed by president and will endeavor to restart the operation as early as possible. Every possible measure is now under preparation to resume production by means as purchase of new manufacturing equipment, review of production allocation among Nikon group companies, etc. As for drainage from the industrial park, the Rojana Industrial Park authority explained to us that they expect water pumping-out to start in the beginning of November and complete by the end of November.
    We are planning to start production at other Nikon group manufacturing plants and our partner factories in Thailand one after another from December 2011. Production will partially resume from January 2012 at Nikon (Thailand) Co., Ltd., and production of digital SLR and interchangeable lenses will return to the normal level by the end of March 2012.

We deeply apologize you for any inconveniences caused by the disaster such as short supply of our products.

Zeiss updates Distagon T* 2/25 for Nikon to ZF.2

Zeiss Distagon T* 2/25

Zeiss have announced an new lens for Nikon F mount, the Distagon T* 2/25 ZF.2.

Although manual focus only, it does include a CPU that reports information back to modern digital bodies, allowing the use of some automatic exposure modes and ensuring EXIF information is correct.

The lens will be available at the end of 2011, and is priced at €1217 (excluding VAT).

Full press release and specs after the break

Is Nikon interested in buying HP's ailing webOS?

Nikon heart of the image
HP webOS

There's a rumor that has been doing the rounds recently, and it's a strange one. Fox News reports that Nikon, of all companies, has been talking to HP about buying the latter's ailing webOS operating system.

webOS, for the uninitiated, is the operating system for phones and tablets originally created by Palm and introduced with the Palm Pre cellphone in 2009. Fast forward a couple of years and Palm was swallowed up by HP for a trifling $1.2bn. HP launched a few more devices and a tablet called the Touchpad, then practically killed the platform stone dead by pulling out of the webOS hardware business.

HP TouchPad

The webOS operating system itself lives on officially, though its future has been in doubt since HP rid itself of devices running the OS in a huge firesale.

To quote the article:

Layoff notices are also on hold as HP assesses former CEO Leo Apotheker's decision to shutdown the PC division. Part of that assessment includes WebOS. Sources on the WebOS team say that HP is actively meeting with a number of interested buyers including HTC, LG, Nikon, and Amazon.

So it is just a rumour and will probably come to nothing - but what could Nikon possibly want with a mobile operating system? Sure, todays cameras are rather powerful computers and it would be fascinating to see what could be done if one was running an open OS that supported user-downloadable apps… or perhaps they have something completely different in mind?

Fox News via PetaPixel.