jlw
Rangefinder camera pedant
Did anybody else notice this news release on Digital Photo Review the other day?
Here's a link to it.
For the link-deprived, it's a news release from Cypress Semiconductor about their new imager chip. It uses CMOS technology (which Canon has proved can work fine); is APS-size (meaning the same size used in the Epson R-D 1 and all Nikon DSLRs -- big enough for a lot of people, including me); and the biggie... does NOT require a microlens array, thanks to their "proprietary, high-fill-factor pixel architecture."
Of course, to coin a phrase, there's many a slip 'twixt the chip and the ship (i.e., between announcing a new imager and producing a good shipping product.) But if I understand this issue correctly, it's the need for microlenses that's one of the main challenges to designing a digital RF camera that uses an existing lens line -- so it's especially good news for us RF users when any sensor manufacturer tries to think outside the microlens box.
This news release has some interesting implications for the imaginative gossip-monger. Granted, 9 megapixels doesn't sound like a lot in today's marketplace... although my 6-megapixel Epson R-D 1 has made me a lot of pictures with which I'm very happy, so presumably a 9-megapixel imager would make me 50% happier.
But going beyond that... the news release notes that Cypress acquired Belgian chipmaker FillFactory in 2004, making them (plausibly) a European sensor maker.
Could a low-cost chip with no microlenses be the secret ingredient behind a viable digital RF, frequently rumored to be coming soon at a surprisingly semi-reasonable price from a certain very-well-respected German company, using sensors from an unspecified European maker?
Here's a link to it.
For the link-deprived, it's a news release from Cypress Semiconductor about their new imager chip. It uses CMOS technology (which Canon has proved can work fine); is APS-size (meaning the same size used in the Epson R-D 1 and all Nikon DSLRs -- big enough for a lot of people, including me); and the biggie... does NOT require a microlens array, thanks to their "proprietary, high-fill-factor pixel architecture."
Of course, to coin a phrase, there's many a slip 'twixt the chip and the ship (i.e., between announcing a new imager and producing a good shipping product.) But if I understand this issue correctly, it's the need for microlenses that's one of the main challenges to designing a digital RF camera that uses an existing lens line -- so it's especially good news for us RF users when any sensor manufacturer tries to think outside the microlens box.
This news release has some interesting implications for the imaginative gossip-monger. Granted, 9 megapixels doesn't sound like a lot in today's marketplace... although my 6-megapixel Epson R-D 1 has made me a lot of pictures with which I'm very happy, so presumably a 9-megapixel imager would make me 50% happier.
But going beyond that... the news release notes that Cypress acquired Belgian chipmaker FillFactory in 2004, making them (plausibly) a European sensor maker.
Could a low-cost chip with no microlenses be the secret ingredient behind a viable digital RF, frequently rumored to be coming soon at a surprisingly semi-reasonable price from a certain very-well-respected German company, using sensors from an unspecified European maker?