Interesting find, Saby. I don't understand the subject well enough to know if they have invented a new "HDR" sensor (it doesn't seem to list one) or a camera that simply makes the current process/technique easier?
I'm sure that sensors in the future will have increased dynamic range, but don't understand the science so don't know if there is a barrier to prevent true HDR sensors. Film (both print and slides) had/have limits to their dynamic range; printers, computer monitors, photographic papers all have dynamic range limits (
if I understand what I've read correctly) that are below what the current HDR software can create.
There are commercial photography purposes which could find near-HDR cameras useful -- those who shoot interiors of buildings for real-estate, architectural purposes discuss some interest in HDR methods on DPreview.com. If there is a market for it, I'm sure there will be companies trying to fill the need.
I'm still just trying to catch up with the current software to simulate near-HDR.
