Monday, March 21, 2022

Weekly Updates


Nikon Designs Sensor That Has Both a Global and Rolling Shutter

Nikon has filed a patent for a new type of sensor that would allow it to perform both a rolling and global shutter operation. It’s not the first time the company has proposed such a design, but it expands on the use case of a previous filing. ...


Programmable Black Phosphorus Image Sensor For Broadband Optoelectronic Edge Computing

Image sensors with internal computing capability enable in-sensor computing that can significantly reduce the communication latency and power consumption for machine vision in distributed systems and robotics. Two-dimensional semiconductors have many advantages in realizing such intelligent vision sensors because of their tunable electrical and optical properties and amenability for heterogeneous integration. ...


Samsung Quietly Unveils The Galaxy A73 5G, Its First Mid-Range Phone with a 108MP Camera


In 2020, Samsung introduced the Galaxy S20 Ultra to the market, and its main selling point was an all-new 108MP rear sensor. The camera experience was a little rough around the edges, but it improved a bit in the Note20 Ultra and the S21 Ultra and even more in this year's S22 Ultra. Up to this point, those 108MP cameras had remained a selling point of the Ultra range, as other S devices didn't get them. But now Samsung has unveiled the Galaxy A73 5G, the phone that's breaking that trend for the first time. ...


Intel Investing $100 Million in Semiconductor Education

"Our goal is to bring these programs and opportunities to a variety of two-year and four-year colleges, universities, and technical programs, because it is critical that we expand and diversify STEM education." An additional $50 million will be matched by the U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF), which will be asking for proposals from educators for a curriculum that aims to improve STEM education at two-year colleges and four-year universities. ...


The Neon Shortage Is a Bad Sign: Russia's war against Ukraine has ramifications for the chips that power all sorts of tech

Neon, a colorless and odorless gas, is typically not as exciting as it sounds, but this unassuming molecule happens to play a critical role in making the tech we use every day. For years, this neon has also mostly come from Ukraine, where just two companies purify enough to produce devices for much of the world, usually with little issue. At least, they did until Russia invaded. ...


Patent Tip, Based on a True Story: Contour IP Holdings, LLC v. GoPro

"Patent Owners should avoid describing and claiming the advance over the prior art in purely functional terms, in a result-oriented way that amounts to encompassing the abstract solution no matter how implemented. Instead, Patent Owners should describe and claim technical details for tangible components in the claimed system, showing that such components are technologically innovative and not generic. For computer-implemented inventions, this may include a specific set of computer digital structures to solve a specific computer problem." ...

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