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Adobe Labs has launched Project Indigo, a new computational photography camera app for iPhones. Former Google engineer Marc Levoy helped make it.
Earlier this year, Google lost the “Distinguished Engineer” responsible for the research that went into the Pixel’s imaging capabilities. Marc Levoy is now at Adobe, and sat down with The ...
After leaving Google in March, Marc Levoy, the imaging expert who helped create some of the Pixel lineup's most important computational photography features, has landed at Adobe. In an email, the ...
Following his departure as a leading camera engineer at Google, Marc Levoy has given an interview about his career and what is next for mobile photography. As reported by The Verge, Levoy now ...
Google's former camera leader Marc Levoy has discussed skepticism of high megapixel cameras, why Pixels stick to one sensor, and his work on Adope apps.
The Verge’s Nilay Patel talks to former Google engineer Marc Levoy about his move to Adobe, the state of the smartphone camera, and the future of computational photography.
Marc Levoy left Google in March. He was the main force behind the Pixel's impressive cameras and imaging software.
A former Google exec behind the Pixel camera, Marc Levoy, has joined Adobe to boost computational photography efforts with Photoshop Camera and beyond.
Marc Levoy left Google earlier this year, and he has joined Adobe since then. This might be sad news for diehard Pixel fans, but Levoy will apparently work on some sort of a “universal camera ...
Earlier this year, Marc Levoy and a couple other Googlers working on the Pixel, left the company. Now we know where Levoy has ended up, he is now working for Adobe and working on its universal ...
In a post, Marc Levoy says that his team at Adobe – called “Nextcam” – have launched “Project Indigo” (no, not that one) after five years of development.
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