The digital camera has brought a revolutionary shift in the
nature of photography, sweeping aside more than 150 years of
technology based on the weird and wonderful photochemistry
of silver halide crystals. Curiously, though, the camera
itself has come through this transformation with remarkably
little change. A digital camera has a silicon sensor where
the film used to go, and there's a new display screen on the
back, but the lens and shutter and the rest of the optical
system work just as they always have, and so do most of the
controls. The images that come out of the camera also look much
the same—at least until you examine them
microscopically.
But further changes in the art and science of photography
may be coming soon. Imaging laboratories are experimenting
with cameras that don't merely digitize an image but also
perform extensive computations on the image data. Some of
the experiments seek to improve or augment current
photographic practices, for example by boosting the dynamic
range of an image (preserving detail in both the brightest
and dimmest areas) or by increasing the depth of field (so
that both near and far objects remain in focus). Other
innovations would give the photographer control over factors
such as motion blur. And the wildest ideas challenge the
very notion of the photograph as a realistic representation.
Future cameras might allow a photographer to record a scene
and then alter the lighting or shift the point of view, or
even insert fictitious objects. Or a camera might have a
setting that would cause it to render images in the style of
watercolors or pen-and-ink drawings.