AN FRANCISCO, Feb. 10 — If Carver Mead is right,
photographic film is an endangered species.
Dr. Mead, who is 67, was a pioneer of the modern computer chip
industry in the 1970's. But he has never stopped inventing. And on
Monday his Silicon Valley start-up, Foveon, plans to begin shipping
a new type of digital image sensor that outside experts agree is the
first to match or surpass the photographic capabilities of
35-millimeter film.
The company's sensor chip is being used in a single-lens reflex
camera that Sigma, a Japanese camera and lens maker, plans to begin
selling for about $3,000 later this month. A second generation of
Foveon's sensors is scheduled for shipping this fall and, if other
camera makers embrace it, could become available early next year in
more popular brands of digital cameras selling for less than $1,000.
The first new sensor the company is now shipping is made by
National Semiconductor (news/quote)
and will have approximately 3.53 million pixels. Such a resolution
would put the device in the middle of the market for digital image
sensor chips used in digital still and video cameras. Because of the
new technology's color-capturing technique, however, its designers
say it is actually comparable to existing sensors with 7 million
pixels that are currently available only in cameras costing $6,000
or more.
"It will completely transform the industry," George Gilder, an
economist and an information industry analyst, said of Foveon's
sensor.
Executives at Eastman Kodak (news/quote),
one of the largest makers of both consumer and professional digital
cameras, say they have talked with Foveon about possibly using the
company's sensors in at least one part of the Kodak product line.
"We've been very aware of what they're doing and monitoring their
progress," said Madhav Mehra, manager of Kodak's professional
digital-capture group. "Our contention is that if this technology
gets proven out, it's very significant."
If Foveon is to realize its goal of becoming a dominant player in
the market for digital image sensors, the company will need to
attract manufacturers like Kodak. The sensor market is currently
dominated by consumer electronics giants like Sony (news/quote)
and the big European chip maker ST Microelectronics, which have
invested billions of dollars in their own technologies.
"I have no doubts this is a great technology," said Chris Chute,
a senior analyst at the International Data Corporation, a research
house. "The rub is that the market has heavily entrenched
competitors. The No. 1 digital camera manufacturer in the world is
Sony. They're the 5,000- pound gorilla compared with little Foveon."
Still, photography experts say Foveon's approach to sensors could
be the most significant breakthrough in digital photography since
the original black-and-white sensor was invented at Bell
Laboratories in 1969. Foveon's sensor significantly simplifies the
process of capturing a digital image and avoids most of the color
aberrations that have plagued digital photography.
The current crop of digital sensors capture light using a mosaic
of red, green and blue filters that limit color information to one
color per picture element, or pixel, on the sensor surface. The
technique requires the chip to perform as many as 100 calculations
per pixel to approximate the color, which can cause inaccuracies.
The limitations also sacrifice picture resolution and limit the
sensor's ability to operate in low light.
"Most digital cameras don't do a good job of giving you the
colors you actually see," Dr. Mead said.
Foveon's sensor, rather than break images into separate colors
and distribute them among separate pixels, captures color by
measuring how deeply photons of light penetrate the surface of the
imaging material. Not only is there higher resolution from a given
number of pixels, but there is less loss of light and less need for
the correcting calculations that can distort the image.
"There is no longer any need to use film," Dr. Mead said.
With more than a billion film cameras in the world, conventional
photography is unlikely to disappear soon, in the view of Don Franz,
publisher of the trade publication Photo Imaging News. But Mr. Franz
notes that the digital camera market is growing fast, with about 8
million digital cameras sold in the United States last year and an
additional 10 million internationally, for a global market valued at
about $8.6 billion
Alexis Gerard, publisher of The Future Image Report, a newsletter
that tracks the digital photography market, said the industry was at
"a crossover point" in terms of digital technology and Foveon's
technology could help speed the transition. "Having a sensor that
measures all three colors at every element at full exposure has been
the engineering holy grail," Ms. Gerard said.
Industry experts say that one of the most intriguing aspects of
the Foveon sensors is that they might allow for a hybrid digital
camera that performs equally well for both video and still
photography. Currently, the markets for still and video digital
cameras are separate because most sensors cannot easily adjust from
high resolution for still pictures to lower resolution for moving
images.
Foveon's new sensor technology, which the company calls X3, is a
departure from the two types of image sensors that have proliferated
in a wide range of consumer products: CMOS, which is pronounced SEE-
moss and stands for complementary metal-oxide semiconductor, and a
more complex variety called C.C.D., for charged coupled device.
Two years ago, Foveon was concentrating on expensive,
professional cameras based on CMOS sensors but abandoned them after
coming up with the X3 approach.
Foveon is being deliberately vague about its manufacturing
methods but says its design greatly reduces the cost of making
sensors and could create an opening for American chip makers in the
digital-sensing field. National Semiconductor, one of Silicon
Valley's oldest chip companies and the maker of Foveon's current
sensors, is an investor in Foveon.
Brian L. Halla, National Semiconductor's chief executive, is
optimistic but does not assume it will be easy to gain ground on the
entrenched players. "Sony has invested in a brand new C.C.D. FAB,
and they could fight this technology by driving price down," Mr.
Halla said. A FAB is a chip-fabrication plant.
Dr. Mead, who founded Foveon in Santa Clara, Calif., in 1997, was
a longtime physicist at the California Institute of Technology
before his retirement two years ago. In the 1970's he pioneered
design techniques that helped form the basis for the modern
semiconductor industry — most notably, a process known as very large
system integration, or V.L.S.I., which made it possible to imprint
tens of thousands of transistors on a single silicon chip.
Dr. Mead was a co-founder of Synaptics, the dominant maker of
computer touchpads. He also helped start Impinge, a maker of analog
semiconductor technology, and Sonic Innovations (news/quote),
a maker of hearing aids.
"Carver's strength is his clever understanding of physics," said
Carlo Sequin, an electrical engineering professor at the University
of California at Berkeley, who was the co- inventor of the digital
video camera at Bell Labs in 1973. "He comes up with fundamental
shortcuts to make things simple again."