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Kodak Unveils Brighter CMOS Color Filters

brownsteve writes "Eastman Kodak Co. has unveiled what it says are 'next-generation color filter patterns' designed to more than double the light sensitivity of CMOS or CCD image sensors used in camera phones or digital still cameras. The new color filter system is a departure from the widely used standard Bayer pattern — an arrangement of red, green and blue pixels — also created by Kodak. While building on the Bayer pattern, the new technology adds a 'fourth pixel, which has no pigment on top,' said Michael DeLuca, market segment manager responsible for image sensor solutions at Eastman Kodak. Such 'transparent' pixels — sensitive to all visible wavelengths — are designed to absorb light. DeLuca claimed the invention is 'the next milestone' in digital photography, likening its significance to ISO 400 color film introduced in the mid-1980's."

4 of 184 comments (clear)

  1. Sacrifices color resolution: is it worth it? by chennes · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Of course, you achieve this increased light sensitivity at the expense of losing 1/4 of your color resolution. Maybe if you want the increased sensitivity it might make more sense to pick up something like the Canon 1D Mk III, which, at least according to Ken Rockwell, gives great results all the way up to ISO 6400. I'd hate to lose 1/4 of my color resolution *all of the time* to get the added sensitivity that I only need for a small fraction of the shots I take.

  2. Calling all patent trolls! by R2.0 · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Kodak is going to patent this, and use it themselves and license it out to other companies (hard the story last night on NPR). For those who would abolish the patent system, why would this not be a "good" patent?

    Please discuss.

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    "As God is my witness, I thought turkeys could fly." A. Carlson
  3. Probably not intended for SLRs by MonorailCat · · Score: 3, Insightful

    As you state, DSLRs already have fairly decent sensitivity, so this is not likely to be a good compromise for them.

    Modern 'compact' digital cameras, however, which stuff 7-12 megapixels on 1/1.8" and 1/2.5" sensors (smaller than your fingernail) could benifit enormously from this. These sensors are already past the diffraction limit of most of the lenses, so a drop in color resolution may not be too damaging (the eye being less sensitive to color resolution, than luminance anyway). Kodak is claiming a 1-2 stop increase in sensitivity, which would be a great benefit to anyone using a compact inside, or in other poor light. (I have yet to own a camera that performs well above ISO 200)

    As with all such tech announcements the proof is in the pudding, and until we can compare full size samples to conventional bayer sensors, its hard to tell if this is the next big thing or not.

  4. CMOS version of Rods and cones by G4from128k · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Kodak has rediscovered what evolution found millions of years ago -- design a dual system such as the rods and cones of the biological eye. The average human eye has about 120 million sensitive, panchromatic rods and only 6 or 7 million color-sensitive cones (many in the central fovea). The brain merges the limited amounts of color information with the larger volume of B/W image data to paint color into the image that we think we see.

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    Two wrongs don't make a right, but three lefts do.