Toshiba Developing Mini Lytro-style Sensors – Could End Up in a Future iPhone!

Lytro pioneered a new type of camera this year that allowed you to refocus the image after you’d taken it, which is probably the biggest camera revolution since digital. However The Asahi Shimbum (via Cult of Mac) reports that Toshiba is developing a smaller Lytro-style sensor, which could potentially allow smartphone or iPhone users to refocus after the image is taken.

Asahi Shimbum:

The cube-shaped module is about 1 centimeter per side and contains a dense array of 500,000 lenses, each 0.03 millimeter in diameter, in front of an image sensor measuring 5 mm by 7 mm. The same mechanism works similar as the way the compound eye structure functions in insects.

Those 500,000 lenses each takes one tiny picture, from which the camera can measure the distance to the object. The camera then adjusts the focus as desired by magnifying and superimposing the images needed.

Unlike the Lytro, Toshiba’s version also has video functionality.

It will be commercialised ‘at the end of fiscal 2013’, however I imagine that many of the big tech companies already have their eyes on this. Could we be seeing this in a future iPhone? Quite possibly.

Henry Taylor-Gill

Henry is a student who is a huge Apple fan, and has used their products since day one. He can remember how happy he was when he received the first iPod back in 2001 as a birthday present. He has an international background, having spent most of his life in France but he now lives in the UK. He is also a native French speaker and can also speak Spanish at a decent level. In addition to tech, Henry is an avid sports fan and has his own sports blog.