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Novator of the company Kodak has received the highest award of Germany's photographs

Officer Steve Kodak Sesson (Steve Sasson), the inventor of the world's first digital camera, at a solemn ceremony in Cologne, was awarded Prizom culture - the highest award of Germany's photographs and imidzhinga granted to the German photographic society (DGPh). Awarding was held during Photokina, the world's largest industrial exhibition.



The German photographic society, numbering more than 1000 members since its founding in 1951, represents the cultural interests of photographs in Germany.

Sesson began to develop in 1975, and in 1978, has been patented technology, applications for building the first digital camera that uses a charge-coupled device (CCD, CCD).

Culture Prize awarded since 1959 in recognition of outstanding contribution to photography in the artistic, humanitarian, social, technical, educational and scientific spheres. Among the previously awarded this prize - known around the world, scientists, inventors, authors, publishers, educators, art directors and photographers.

This is the sixth award, presented by Sessonu for the development of the first digital camera. Last year he entered the Hall of Fame Consumer Electronics USA, received the prize for prescience Association photographic manufacturers and distributors. In 2006 he was awarded the prize for scientific achievements, Peking University School of Journalism Prize progress and photographic society of America, and in 2001, Kodak has said his achievements Prizom behalf of Eastman for innovation.

Sesson - fourth researcher of Kodak, was awarded the Prize of Culture. In previous years the award were Dr. Leopold Godovski (1973), Dr. Wesley T. Hanson (1977) and Dr. Paul B. Gilmen (1989).

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