Micron Technology introduces two megapixel cameraphone sensor
Micron Technology has released a quarter-inch 2.2 megapixel sensor to mobile phone manufacturers. The new sensor has both a Mobile Industry Processor Interface (MIPI) standards serial interface and a parallel interface which give phone makers flexibility with traditional designs and future models that require high bandwidth. Pictures of up to 1600 by 1200 pixels can be taken, while videos of up to 15 frames per second can be recorded at maximum resolution.
As phones have become smaller and more powerful, camera interfaces had to become faster and smaller. Late last year, several phone manufacturers agreed on the MIPI serial interface standard which uses a small number of pins that transmit up to four gigabits per second. Micron’s sensor is only a quarter of a wide and has a built-in image processor that handles color correction and also auto-focusing.
While two megapixels sounds good, Micron faces an uphill battle with Samsung. In November of last year, Samsung’s President Lee Ki-tae demonstrated the company’s SPH-V8200 eight megapixel phone in a private meeting with technology analysts. In addition, Korean residents can already buy a five megapixel phone, like the SPH-V7800.
Related stories :
Micron releases high-res CMOS image sensors for cellphones
- Intel's Ultra Mobile PC on track for Q1 release
- Nanomemory market volume to reach $7 billion by 2010
- Adobe patches Photoshop, Illustrator flaws
- Librarians protest to parliament over DRM
- IBM and Freescale, together again
- AOL's and Yahoo's spam filters: Whom do they serve?
- VMware introduces free server virtualization software
- CD emulators may utilize rootkit-like stealth to circumvent DRM
- Opera to integrate widgets, BitTorrent search in next browser
- Sony releases 8 GB MicroVault USB drive in Europe
- Primera announces Blu-ray disc publishing system
- WD intros 120 GB portable Passport hard drive
- Global notebook PC market grows 33.5% in 2005
- Mitac aims to ship 4-5 million GPS devices in 2006
- Disappointment with quality and cost limits usage of camera phones
- DDR2 contract prices soar in H1 February
- Prices for 17" LCD monitor panels continue sliding
- Toshiba and NEC develop new fast, high density MRAM




