New Medical Camera the Size of a Grain of Salt
kkleiner writes "The German Fraunhofer Institute for Reliability and Microintegration recently reported the development of a camera with a lens attached that is 1 x 1 x 1.5 millimeters in size, which is roughly as big as a grain of salt. At about a cubic millimeter in size, this camera is right at the size limit that the human eye can see unaided. The camera not only produces decent images but is also very cheap to manufacture — so cheap, in fact, that it is considered disposable."
...with a grain of salt.
(But watch out, that grain of salt might be a tiny camera.)
There's no -1 for "I don't get it."
In the United States, where the hospital bills for a procedure of this kind are likely to run into thousands of dollars, "disposable" has a pretty broad definition.
Breakfast served all day!
It depends how far away your eye is from it. The claim stands.
Then you could make the same claim for anything.
"US Navy reveals a a new battleship that is smaller than the human eye can see*
*if the human is 5 million miles away from said battleship"
Reasonably, 'at the size limit the human eye can see' to me means exactly that. There is a size below which you can't see unaided, no matter how close you bring your eye to the object because there's a limit to how closely your eye can focus. That size is at least one, and probably 2 orders of magnitude smaller than this camera.
1. The image is 250 x 250 px at 44 fps.
2. It's so tiny that there's no way it could have a useful FOV for anything macroscopic, much less be able to focus on anything more than a few cm away.
3. This is medical technology we're talking about, so there's probably a hundred-thousand licensing fee to even look at it, even if the camera itself is only a few pennies.
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