![]() Rather, the Nolab digital Super 8 cassette sports a little digital camera, complete with a custom-made sensor and lens, which records the incoming images off a matte screen and saves them on an SD card as a 720p H.264 video. What differentiates Nolab from all previous attempts is that it doesn't simply try and put a digital sensor behind an analog shutter. The Digipod returns little of that experience to your film SLR, and yet brings you few of the advantages of a modern interchangeable-lens digital camera. The project is called Nolab‒quite fittingly, as we find. Now, there's a new attempt at creating such a device, albeit this time it's for Super 8 cameras. ![]() The project called DigiPod saw a couple of first prototypes, but failed to be financed via the crowdfunding platform IndieGoGo. The project has been set up with Atlas Entertainment with Charles Roven and Richard Suckle producing. Earlier this year, another attemp was stareted at creating a digital film cassette to fit into any analog 35mm camera. The studio is developing an animated Scooby-Doo feature film, returning to the franchise that produced a pair of live-action/animated hybrid films a decade ago. Unfortunately, at that time, technology was nowhere near at being able to realize such a venture, and consequently the company went bust in 2001. First, there was the (e)film by Silicon Film, which was first announced in 1998 and aimed at putting a digital sensor into a 35mm film cartridge. In the past, many attempts have been made at digitalizing old analog photographic gear.
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