Kodak says Sensor boosts Camera Power in Phones
Posted on Mon, 4 Feb 2008 07:22:04 CST | by Luigi Lugmayr
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NEW YORK (Reuters) - Photography company Eastman Kodak Co. on Monday introduced
chips that can boost the picture-taking power in mobile phones, and help
manufacturers cut development costs.
Kodak says its KAC-05020 Image Sensor is the world's first 1.4 micron,
5-megapixel device that allows capture of high quality images in small cameras,
with quality that equals what is available from current devices using larger,
1.75 micron pixel designs.
"It will help manufacturers reduce their costs...because of the size - you can
put more chips onto one wafer, for the same amount of money," said Fas Mosleh,
CMOS Sensors Marketing Director at Kodak. "This is the kind of technology that
can help upgrade all camera phones to a real camera."
The announcement is the latest from Kodak's growing patent licensing arm, which
has become a critical contributor to its profitability as the company emerges
from an expensive transition into a producer of digital imaging and printing
systems. Kodak expects to earn up to $350 million a year from royalties and
related revenue through 2011.
"It could be very well happening that one of those years will be a lot larger
than that," said Antonio Perez, Kodak's chief executive, on a conference call
last week. "It may be another year, a lot smaller than that. We see significant
legs to our program."
Industry analysts have looked skeptically at Kodak's rosy outlook, noting that
few details have been delivered on its patent plans, and that incremental
licensing contracts are hard to count on in the long term.
Still, Kodak has introduced some products from its patent portfolio, including
its own consumer inkjet printers, which it says makes longer lasting pictures.
In addition, last year it unveiled camera sensor technology that significantly
increases sensitivity to light, allowing users to potentially take pictures in
very low light.
Key to the performance of this new sensor is the "Kodak Truesense CMOS Pixel," a
reworking of the fundamental design and architecture of traditional CMOS pixels,
the company says. A CMOS (complementary metal oxide semiconductor) sensor is
less expensive to manufacture, while consuming less energy and performing more
functions on a single chip.
Manufacturing customers interested in the design will likely get a chance to
sample it in the second quarter of this year, but devices with the technology
are not likely to hit store shelves until 2009, Kodak says.
(Reporting by Franklin Paul; Editing by Diane Craft)
© Copyright 2007 Reuters.
Posted on Mon, 4 Feb 2008 07:22:04 CST | by Luigi Lugmayr
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