...and editing and collating batches of photos on the same screen. This last feature is clearly provided for what Ron Glaz, director digital imaging services at IDC, calls the "consumer enthusiast": The serious amateur who's slowly becoming comfortable with more...
...and film cameras, scanners, digital camcorders and phone cameras," IDC Program Director of Digital Imaging and Solution Services, Ron Glaz, said, "less than eleven percent are ever uploaded to an online photo-sharing site." This means that even the most important...
...the third calendar quarter in a year generates the second-best unit sales, beaten only by the fourth-quarter holiday season. Ron Glaz, director of IDC's digital imaging research services, doesn't expect the promotion to have an effect on total units sold...
...among the XS's competition is the Nikon D60, a 10.2-megapixel CCD model that goes for about $700 with its 18-55mm lens. Ron Glaz, an analyst at industry research firm IDC, characterized the XS as "faster, better, and a bit less expensive" than its predecessor....
...here. http://www.microsoft.com/expression/products/overview.aspx?key=media In support of its move, Microsoft quotes: Ron Glaz, analyst at IDC, saying: "Geotagging is a hot new area in digital photography, and like other popular digital photo features, I expect...
...popular digital photo features, I expect photographers will be asking themselves how they ever lived without it", said Ron Glaz, analyst at the International Data Corporation. "Until now geotagging has been hard to do, requiring special expertise and tools....
...demand as consumers go digital. "With film becoming more of a niche market, it gives them an opportunity to do this," said Ron Glaz, a program director for Framingham, Massachusetts-based technology research firm IDC. "If someone's looking for film, they're...
...it to boxed software like its $99 Photoshop Elements or to a subscription-based version of Express that's in the works. Ron Glaz, a research analyst at IDC, says the move was necessary for Adobe to keep pace. Users are less likely to switch to a software they...
...move from it to boxed software like its $99 Photoshop Elements or to a subscription-based version of Express that’s in the works. Ron Glaz, a research analyst at IDC, says the move was necessary for Adobe to keep pace. Users are less likely to switch to a...
...to upgrade to software like its $99 Photoshop Elements or to a subscription-based version of Express that's in the works. Ron Glaz, a research analyst at IDC, said the move was important for Adobe to keep up with the direction of their competitors. "They have...