Apple could be planning a game-changing M1 moment for iPhone photography
In-house sensor camera rumors are growing
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WhenApplelaunched its M1-equipped MacBook Air in 2020, we called its in-house chip a “game-changer” – and the tech giant might be planning an equivalent move for iPhone cameras, according to the latest rumors.
According toBloomberg’s Mark Gurman, Apple “is eyeing an in-house strategy for camera sensors”. In other words, making its own camera sensors in much the same way as Apple Silicon. And while there’s no rumored timescale for this, it would be a big moment for mobile photography and videography.
The benefits of Apple making an in-house camera sensor – beyond the business benefits of moving into an expanding sector – are potentially many. But the main one for the iPhone would be a much better-optimized image processing pipeline, which could unlock image quality and performance improvements when combined with Apple’s Photonic Engine. It could also put Apple at the forefront ofspatial photos and video.
Apple introduced its Photonic Engine – a computational photography development of Deep Fusion – in theiPhone 14series. Its main advancement was that it applied Apple’s multi-frame processing earlier in the image development process than Deep Fusion, this time on uncompressed (or raw) images. This gave Apple more control over detail, color, and exposure – and adding an Apple-made sensor to this mix could again unlock more computational processing advancements.
Apple doesn’t disclose the image sensors used in iPhones, but the iPhone 15 Pro’s 48MP sensor isstrongly rumoredto be theSonyIMX803 (also used in theiPhone 14 Pro). Sony dominates the CMOS camera sensor market (according toThe Elec, it had a 51.6% market share by the end of 2022), so most iPhone cameras (and their Lidar scanners) are based on Sony sensors – this means an in-house Apple camera sensor would deliver a sizable earthquake through that market.
This rumored move also wouldn’t just be about iPhone cameras. As Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman reported, image sensors are also “core to future developments in the mixed-reality and autonomous-driving industries” as well. That means theApple Vision Proand, potentially, the long-rumoredApple Carwould also benefit from the tech giant taking on image sensor giants Sony andSamsung.
Analysis: A distant but likely Apple move
If Apple does decide to pursue this rumored in-house strategy for camera sensors, it won’t happen anytime soon. TheiPhone 16 Prois already rumored to be packing a stacked sensor (most likely Sony’s IMX903), so the prospect is likely at least a few years off.
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But it would also make strategic sense for Apple. Recently, we heard rumors thatApple could be making its own batteries for future iPhones. And this year, the Apple M3 made usrethink the whole concept of integrated graphicson processors and could even turnApple into a gaming force to be reckoned with.
Today’s iPhones aren’t exactly being held back by Sony’s excellent image sensors and computational processing is now the most important part of the image pipeline for smartphones.
It also isn’t uncommon in the professional camera world for Sony rivals to use its sensors – the flagshipNikon Z9, for example, is built around a stacked Sony sensor (theSony IMX609AQJ), despite the fact that Nikon is competing with cameras like theSony A9 IIIfor the title ofbest professional camera.
But aside from making business sense, it’s clear from Apple Silicon that Apple has the technological might and financial muscle to optimize and rethink the architecture of chips that have been traditionally outsourced.
If it does the same with image sensors, that could give it far greater control over the future of our pocket cameras – moving them into new spaces, like thespatial video that’s already possible on the iPhone 15 Pro. And also helps promote the concept of ‘spatial computing’ that Apple is so keen to push into the mainstream with the Apple Vision Pro.
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Mark is TechRadar’s Senior news editor. Having worked in tech journalism for a ludicrous 17 years, Mark is now attempting to break the world record for the number of camera bags hoarded by one person. He was previously Cameras Editor at both TechRadar and Trusted Reviews, Acting editor on Stuff.tv, as well as Features editor and Reviews editor on Stuff magazine. As a freelancer, he’s contributed to titles including The Sunday Times, FourFourTwo and Arena. And in a former life, he also won The Daily Telegraph’s Young Sportswriter of the Year. But that was before he discovered the strange joys of getting up at 4am for a photo shoot in London’s Square Mile.
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