
Highlights: Sony to boost camera 3D sensorsā production The sensors are said to power the front as well as the rear 3D cameras They will go into mass production in the summer of 2019 Japanese multinational company Sony will boost the production of its next-generation of 3D sensors amid high demand of the product from phone makers, including Apple, a Bloomberg report has said. These sensors are said to power the front as well as the rear 3D cameras of models from customers in 2019. Sony will commence the mass production in late summer to meet demand, Satoshi Yoshihara, Head of Sonyās sensor division, was quoted as saying. The executive, however, declined to provide sales or production targets, but said the 3D business is already operating profitably and will make an impact on earnings from the fiscal year starting in April. Bloomberg says that Sonyās technology āprovides much needed optimism to the global smartphone industry, which is suffering a slowdown as consumers find fewer reasons to upgrade devices.ā The company has reportedly started providing software toolkits to third-party developers to let them experiment with the chips and create supported apps. āCameras revolutionized phones, and based on what Iāve seen, I have the same expectation for 3D. The pace will vary by field, but weāre definitely going to see adoption of 3D. Iām certain of it,ā Yoshihara was quoted as saying. According to the executive, Sonyās technology differs from the āstructured lightā approach of existing chips, which have limitations in terms of accuracy and distance. Sony uses ātime of flightā method that sends out invisible laser pulses and measures how long they take to bounce back, which, he claimed, creates more detailed 3D models and works at distances of five meters. Bloomberg says that Sony controls about half of the camera chip market and supplies chips to Apple, Alphabet, Samsung, and Huawei, among others, although Yoshihara declined to identify them by name, citing confidentiality agreements. Related read: 38MP Sony IMX607 sensor Image Courtesy: Bloomberg
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