Skip to main content

A cluster of lenses is better than one: Startup to bring super cameras to smartphones in 2016

Light camera lenses
Image used with permission by copyright holder
Smartphone photography has come a long way, but the quality of photos you can snap with your phone still falls short of the quality of photos you can snap with a DSLR camera. A startup called Light thinks it has a way to bridge that gap: a cluster of small lenses each coupled with its own image sensor. This departure from the one lens, one image sensor approach found in today’s phones may find its way to smartphones in 2016.

Light, based in Palo Alto, California, wants to implement its idea of a bunch of small lenses each paired with its own image sensor in smartphones and other devices. “They’ll fire simultaneously when you take a photo, and software will automatically combine the images,” according to MIT Technology Review. “This way, Light believes, it can fit the quality and zoom of a bulky, expensive DSLR camera into much smaller, cheaper packages — even phones.”

In a demonstration at its office, Light showed an array of 16 functional camera modules, which could eventually be used in self-driving cars or home security cameras. Co-founder and chief technology officer Rajiv Laroia explained to MIT Technology Review that when someone takes a picture with a Light camera, they’re essentially taking numerous photos simultaneously from different perspectives. These shots are digitally melded in a way that mimics what a larger camera lens could yield.

“Light cameras will put an end to the ‘good enough’ photos being produced by most smartphones today,” Laroia said in an interview with The Daily Dot. “We don’t think people should trust their memories to ‘good enough.’”

CEO Dave Grannan said he expects Light’s technology to add about $50-60 to the cost of producing a phone using one of its cameras.

While the company has yet to develop a full prototype, it has camera modules that can combine photos with its software. Light says it expects its first 52-megapixel cameras to be found in smartphones in 2016.

To achieve that goal, the startup obviously needs a partner to help it roll out its innovation to the masses. On Tuesday, Light plans to announce a deal with that partner: Foxconn, the world’s largest contract electronics manufacturer and the world’s largest manufacturer of Apple products.

Foxconn is licensing Light’s technology for use in mobile devices and is investing an undisclosed amount in the company. Last June, Light raised $9.7 million in a Series A round of investment co-led by Bessemer Venture Partners and Charles River Ventures.

While this is certainly exciting for the future potential of smartphone cameras, there are questions about the real-world implications of Light’s super cameras. For example, how will this affect the time needed to snap a photo with your smartphone? How large will the resulting photo files be? Will consumers accept the added bulk Light’s camera will add to a phone, since it would make the device as thick as a current smartphone in a case?

Despite the concerns, “There’s no question what they’re doing is the future of cameras,” David Brady, leader of Duke University’s imaging and spectroscopy program and CEO of a camera-array company called Aqueti, told MIT Technology Review.

Jason Hahn
Jason Hahn is a part-time freelance writer based in New Jersey. He earned his master's degree in journalism at Northwestern…
Samsung’s $450 phone does one thing way better than the iPhone 14
The back of the purple Galaxy A54.

When Apple introduced the iPhone 5C, it was the first time that the company added fun colors to the iPhone lineup — despite the iPhone 5C being mostly a flop. It stopped with the colors for a few years until the iPhone XR came around, which brought back fun shades for the iPhone. Ever since then, Apple made the standard iPhone 11, iPhone 12, iPhone 13, and iPhone 14 come in a slate of more visually-interesting colors while leaving the iPhone Pro devices in more “professional” hues.

Even though Apple just recently released a yellow iPhone 14, which may appeal to some (I’m honestly not a fan of yellow), it historically has a track record of just not being great with iPhone colors. And the purple iPhone 14 is proof of it.
How is that iPhone 14 even considered purple?

Read more
6 years later, the iPhone X still does one thing better than the iPhone 14 Pro
iPhone X.

I’ve been an iPhone user since the very beginning, starting with the original iPhone. You know, the one with the 3.5-inch display that was perfect at the time, making it super easy to use a phone with one hand? As the years go by, the iPhone — and every other smartphone out there — just get bigger and bigger. We now have phones that with almost 7-inch displays, and honestly, I don’t understand how anyone can comfortably use these giant phones — especially if you have smaller hands!

With the iPhone, we’ve gone from 3.5-inch to 4-inches, then 4.7-inches to 5.8-inches, and now the standard 6.1-inch and 6.7-inch of the iPhone 14/iPhone 14 Pro and iPhone 14 Plus/iPhone 14 Pro Max, respectively. I personally use an iPhone 14 Pro as my primary device, and while I have gotten used to the 6.1-inch size over the past few years, I still think it’s too big. In fact, the last perfect size iPhone was the iPhone XS with the 5.8-inch display ... and I really wish Apple would bring it back.
5.8 inches was a perfect middle ground

Read more
Android does this one thing so much better than iOS, and it drives me crazy
Individual volume control sliders on a Samsung Galaxy S23

I’ve long been an iPhone user and always will be — it's just what's in my blood. Even though I’ve been dipping my toes into various Android devices since I started here at Digital Trends, my primary device is still an iPhone 14 Pro. There are a few reasons behind this decision: I’m heavily vested in the Apple ecosystem already, I bought the 1TB model to not worry about storage, and some apps I use don’t have a good enough Android equivalent.

Despite my personal choice of using iOS primarily, the more time I spend with Android, the more I notice things that it does way better than Apple’s iOS. And one of those things is how Android handles volume controls compared to iOS’ rather rudimentary and infuriating system. It may sound like a small thing to home in on, but it's something I just can't overlook.
Apple’s iOS volume controls are badly outdated

Read more