Skip to main content

Qualcomm's Clear Sight uses dual cameras to deliver improved clarity, contrast

qualcomm
Karlis Dambrans/Flickr
The iPhone 7 Plus’s stunner of a camera has reinvigorated the smartphone industry’s pursuit of dual-sensor tech. Sony, a major smartphone camera supplier, said dual-lens camera modules would appear in a number of high-end handsets in the coming months. LG’s top-of-the-line G5 sports a dual-sensor camera, as does Huawei’s P9. And phonemakers aren’t the only companies jumping aboard. Another is veritable chipmaker Qualcomm, and on Wednesday, the company took the wraps off its latest dual-camera project: Clear Sight.

Qualcomm describes Clear Sight as a “processing solution” for phones with dual cameras, and that’s more or less the gist. The platform comprises a hardware module, a Snapdragon 820 or 821 processor, and a “computational low light … algorithm,” and leverages dual cameras to produce photos with contrast, sharpness, and clarity better than what they’d spit out independently. The key is the method of capture: While one sensor grabs a monochrome image, the other, captures a full-color frame in tandem.

Recommended Videos

The improvements are reportedly measurable. The black-and-white sensor is able to capture light three times better than its color-capturing companion, Qualcomm said, while the color sensor’s able to nab a much more nuanced light spectrum than it’d be otherwise able. There’s a downside in that few phones on the market pack the requisite hardware — one of the newest, LG’s V20, specifically doesn’t because of sensors that have “incompatible lens angles” — but Qualcomm said it’s working with manufacturers to build Clear Sight into future smartphones.

clear-sight-diagram-feature
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Clear Sight is an expansion of the imaging platform that Qualcomm launched last October. The chipmaker rolled out specialized hardware, a dual-image signal processor (ISP) dubbed Spectra, destined for two-sensor camera phones like the ZTE Axon and Axon Pro HTC One M8, and HTC Butterfly 3. It facilitates image processing between the twin shooters, of course, but enables a bevy of features besides. One, “refocus,” allows the adjustment of an image’s focus by simultaneously capturing different focal lengths between the phones’ cameras. Another, “segmentation,” maps a pic’s foreground and background focus planes. And a third, fast autofocus, boosts the speed at which the cameras narrow on focus planes.

Please enable Javascript to view this content

They’re far different approaches than the one Apple’s taken with the iPhone 7 Plus. The handset’s module combines image data from two rear-facing sensors — a wide-angle lens and a 2x telephoto — in order to deliver optical zoom without loss of detail. In the near future, it’ll gain another unique trick: the ability to simulate bokeh, or depth of field. Apple said that functionality will roll out in October.

Kyle Wiggers
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Kyle Wiggers is a writer, Web designer, and podcaster with an acute interest in all things tech. When not reviewing gadgets…
The OnePlus 13 is coming on January 7 — along with a surprise
The OnePlus logo on the back of the OnePlus Open Apex Edition.

It's official: the OnePlus 13 will launch on January 7, 2025. Preempting the anticipated event by several weeks, OnePlus has officially confirmed the date we’ll see its next major smartphone release outside of China. Additionally, it has revealed some key features and news of a surprise new launch to go along with the phone.

OnePlus will release the OnePlus 13 in three different colors — Black Eclipse, Arctic Dawn, and Midnight Ocean. It’s the latter that is likely to be the model to have, as it is wrapped in a material called micro-fiber vegan leather, which is apparently corrosion and scratch-resistant but still luxurious to the touch. For the Arctic Dawn phone, the glass will have a special coating to give it a silky-smooth finish. It’s likely these are the same colors offered in China, where the phone has already been announced, just with different names.

Read more
I’m really worried about the future of smart glasses
The front of the Ray-Ban Meta smart glasses.

The Ray-Ban Meta smart glasses are among the most interesting, unexpectedly fun, and surprisingly useful wearables I’ve used in 2024. However, as we go into 2025, I’m getting worried about the smart glasses situation.

This isn’t the first time I’ve felt like we’re on the cusp of a new wave of cool smart eyewear products, only to be very disappointed by what came next.
Why the Ray-Ban Meta are so good

Read more
We need to talk about this fantastic, industry-leading Motorola collab
A person holding the Motorola Edge 50 Neo.

We are accustomed to tech brands partnering with adjacent brands, whether it’s OnePlus with Hasselblad or Honor and Huawei with Porsche Design, and often — such as with Xiaomi and Leica — singing the praises of the resulting collaborations. But not enough has been said about Motorola’s now established partnership with color experts Pantone.

It was when the recently released Motorola Edge 50 Neo arrived for me to try out that I finally understood how impactful the collaboration has become. Why? It manages to make even ordinary colors look fantastic.
Boring gray?

Read more