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Teleconverter Kenko 1.4× Teleplus MC4 DGX. Kenko Co., Ltd. (株式会社ケンコー, Kabushiki-gaisha Kenkō) is a Japanese manufacturer and trading company of photographic accessories, especially known for its teleconverters and filters.
Grundig Mobile: Hagenuk Telecom GmbH: insolvency in 1997, mobile phone development and manufacturing business acquired by Telital in 1998 [9] Siemens Mobile: Acquired by BenQ Corporation in 2005 to form BenQ Mobile: Telefunken Italy: Onda Mobile Communication India: YU Televentures: Was a subsidiary of Micromax Indonesia: Nexian Japan: Sanyo ...
Zuiko (Japanese: ズイコー or 瑞光) is a brand of optical lenses [1] made by Olympus Corporation that was used up to and into the Four Thirds system era. The name Zuiko (瑞光) means 'Holy Light', using a character from the Mizuho Optic Research Laboratory (瑞穂光学研究所), where the lens was developed, and a character from Takachiho Corporation (高千穂製作所), which would ...
This is a list of smartphones with a telephoto lens that offers a focal length (35mm equivalent) of at least 100mm or "4× optical zoom" with an imaging area equivalent to a 1/3.5″ or larger sensor. Smartphone lenses are often marketed in terms of "optical zoom" [1] relative to the phone's main camera. For example, 120mm is usually referred ...
Hoya Corporation (Hoya株式会社, Hōya Kabushiki-gaisha) is a Japanese company manufacturing optical products such as photomasks, photomask blanks and hard disk drive platters, contact lenses and eyeglass lenses for the health-care market, [4] medical photonics, [5] lasers, photographic filters, medical flexible endoscopy equipment, and software.
Tokina AT-X Pro 12–24 f /4.0 lens Tokina Co., Ltd. ( 株式会社トキナー , Kabushiki-gaisha Tokinā ) is a Japanese manufacturer of photographic lenses and CCTV security equipment. Lens designations
Japan was a leader in mobile phone technology. The first commercial camera phone was the Kyocera Visual Phone VP-210, released in Japan in May 1999. [2] The first mass-market camera phone was the J-SH04, a Sharp J-Phone model sold in Japan in November 2000. [3] It could instantly transmit pictures via cell phone telecommunication. [4]
Cosina is the successor to Nikō (or "Nikoh"), a company set up as a lens processing factory in February 1959, which was a pioneer in optical polishing and lens grinding in Japan. [1] In 1966, it also started to manufacture 35 mm compact cameras and 8 mm cine cameras , and a year later started the manufacture of 35mm film SLR cameras ; in 1968 ...