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A Camera Designed To Take And Send GIFs (Bring Your Own Cat)

The OTTO will sell for $199.
Courtesy of Next Thing Co.
The OTTO will sell for $199.

The selfie may be nearly over, but animated GIFs most certainly aren't. Now, making and sending GIFs can be easy as cranking a knob with a new retro-styled camera called OTTO. The bright blue gadget just launched a campaign on Kickstarter.

DesignTaxi explains how it works:

"To make a GIF, simply turn a rotating crank that pops up from its top—it would then send the GIF over to your smartphone, making it easy for you to share it on social media and with friends. In addition to GIFs, it is also able to produce 'time lapses, impromptu photo booths and something brand new'."

The designers, Thomas Deckert, Dave Rauchwerk and Gustavo Huber, call it the first product to turn a traditional camera into a GIF-maker.

But it does more than merely taking GIFs. The app that comes along with the device lets you choose on your smartphone all sorts of different capture modes like time-lapse, photo booth filters and user-generated modes found in a community library.

OTTO is one of the early commercial products built on the , a low-cost, credit-card-sized computing platform. Using Raspberry Pi allows these cameras to be "hackable" or customizable, for the tech-savvy.

"OTTO's modes have tons of detailed settings that you can adjust from inside the smartphone app," the designers explain on the Kickstarter page. "Without any special skills, you can completely change how OTTO's modes react to your input. Once you've made your tweaks, your settings are automatically sync'd to OTTO."

OTTO will sell for $199, or you can get one by pledging at least that amount. The cameras are expected to ship in December.

This post is part of our Weekly Innovation series, in which we explore an interesting idea, design or product that you may not have heard of yet. Do you have an innovation to share?Use this quick form.

Copyright 2021 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Elise Hu is a host-at-large based at NPR West in Culver City, Calif. Previously, she explored the future with her video series, Future You with Elise Hu, and served as the founding bureau chief and International Correspondent for NPR's Seoul office. She was based in Seoul for nearly four years, responsible for the network's coverage of both Koreas and Japan, and filed from a dozen countries across Asia.