The BBC has been sharing footage from its archives on YouTube, and one video caught our attention. The clip is from the Tomorrow's World programme, and it was originally broadcast on BBC One on February 22, 1990. In it, three broadcasters look back at some of the cameras they'd covered in the past that were meant to change photography, and how successful they ended up being.
The segment walks through different types of camera innovations, starting with a digital "video stills" camera that recorded images on floppy disks and Minolta's hybrid camera that supported film and video stills using a very bulky detachable back. They also walk through 3D cameras, autofocus and disposable cameras.
It's a fascinating look back at some of the technology that lead to (and, in video stills' case, was eventually supplanted by) the digital cameras we rely on today. There are plenty of modern videos that look back at old technology, but I think it's especially interesting to see footage like this when it was contemporary and looked like it could be the future, as predicted in 1990.
The BBC also shared a separate video that looks back at when cameras first appeared on phones. It was a move by cell phone makers to boost sales, and was considered a bold move that we now know paid off big time. Interestingly, the cameras in those phones were based on technology originally developed for NASA, which you can learn more about in another video we shared.

2 weeks ago
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English (US) ·