Startup makes revolutionary breakthrough that could change camera tech forever: 'A significant advancement'
With a breakthrough that's now capturing the attention of major tech players, the company is proving it's possible to do all three, reported Tech In Asia.
The company's journey began with a simple question: Could traditional plastic-heavy camera lenses be made more efficient — and more sustainable?
With that lightbulb moment, the team brought together research scientists, engineers, and designers to rethink how lenses are made and used.
The result was the Advanced Color Metalens Imaging System — a first-of-its-kind single-layer glass "metalens" that uses AI and nanophotonics to outperform traditional multi-layer optics.
Thinner, lighter, and more durable than plastic lenses, MetaOptics' system also produces sharper, more vibrant images — even in low light — and reduces plastic waste in the process.
By eliminating the need for bulky, multi-component lenses in smartphones, laptops, VR devices, and security cameras, the company reduces plastic use. It minimizes production materials and opens doors to sleeker, more sustainable tech. The lens's advanced image-tuning software also reduces the need for post-processing, saving time and energy downstream.
Since launching in July 2024, MetaOptics has already secured purchase orders for direct laser writers and is exploring opportunities to scale in medical imaging and consumer electronics.
After showcasing the lens system at CES, interest from major tech brands quickly followed — a strong sign that the future of imaging could look a lot clearer and greener.
MetaOptics' story is a reminder that tackling climate problems doesn't always mean starting big. Sometimes, it's as simple as flipping the script on everyday objects we take for granted.
Would you live in a home made of bacteria?
Absolutely
Depends on the cost
Depends how it looks
No way
Click your choice to see results and speak your mind.
Senior corresponding author Junsuk Rho, Mu-Eun-Jae endowed chair professor at POSTECH in Korea, summed it up best in an article shared by Phys.org: "This deep-learning-driven system marks a significant advancement in the field of optics, offering a new pathway to creating smaller, more efficient imaging systems without sacrificing quality."
If a startup like MetaOptics can reimagine something as established as a camera lens, imagine what else is possible.
You can be part of the movement by choosing to support eco-friendly initiatives by your favorite brands — it's a simple shift that helps drive innovation and sustainability forward.
Join our free newsletter for weekly updates on the latest innovations improving our lives and shaping our future, and don't miss this cool list of easy ways to help yourself while helping the planet.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Bloomberg
21 hours ago
- Bloomberg
South Korea's Lee Calls Japan Indispensable Partner Before Visit
South Korean President Lee Jae Myung said Japan is an 'indispensable partner' for economic growth in a speech commemorating the end of Japanese colonial rule of the Korean Peninsula, signaling a departure from his previous hawkish rhetoric as he prepares to visit Tokyo this month. 'Japan is our neighbor across the sea as well as an indispensable partner in our economic development,' Lee said at a ceremony on Friday to mark the 80th anniversary of liberation. 'We will seek forward-looking, mutually beneficial cooperation with Japan while holding frequent meetings and frank dialogue through shuttle diplomacy.'


Gizmodo
a day ago
- Gizmodo
These $30,000 TVs With ‘Micro RGB' Are a Reminder That You Shouldn't Hype New Screens
Samsung and Hisense have a new type of TV you can buy right now if you have more than $30,000 sitting in an overstuffed piggy bank somewhere. You've heard of OLED, mini LED, and maybe even micro LED, but Samsung and Hisense are asking if you could care about micro RGB? Probably not, but the display makers are selling them at a premium and at a size you couldn't fit into any living room without barn-high ceilings. The price is just a distraction—a means of drawing eyeballs to new screen technology that's not yet available for most consumers. If anything, prototype screens serve as a reminder of just how long display technology needs to bake before it's actually consumer-ready. Samsung first teased this micro RGB technology at CES earlier this year. The technology is akin to the well-worn standard of mini LED you'll find in today's wide variety of expensive and affordable QLEDs. However, micro RGB is based on a back panel of miniscule 100μm RGB (red, green, and blue) lights arrayed behind the TV panel. Samsung claims this allows for higher precision of color accuracy compared to other standard displays. All that sounds well and good until you decide you want to try and buy one. The first display of its kind is a 115-inch flat panel that costs 44.9 million South Korean won, or more than $32,000. It's not available in the U.S. right away, but it'll arrive in the States eventually for a grand total of $30,000. The tech is still interesting enough considering it's using a special RGB 'AI engine' for fine control of each red, green, and blue backlight. In a press release, Samsung said the engine analyzes each frame for optimized color output while enhancing 'dull color tones.' The micro RGB television additionally runs with Bixby, Samsung's voice assistant that has slowly been supplanted by Google Gemini on its own smartphones. Some naysayers have pointed out that Samsung's TV still doesn't support Dolby Vision, which is one of the leading forms of HDR, allowing for brighter highlights and better contrast. That's to be expected. Samsung would rather promote its own HDR10+ version of high-dynamic range. It's been consistent about that for the last several years of its TV lineup. If you can't get enough of uber-expensive displays, Hisense has a somewhat related display tech in the form of an RGB-mini LED. The company's new 116UX (yes, the screen is a mammoth 116 inches) uses very similar technology to Samsung's. It even contains its own AI-based chip for reproducing accurate colors. You can buy it from Best Buy for $30,000 instead of putting down money on a home or buying a new car. Hisense has another TV that's more on the cutting edge. The company's 136MX, which first debuted at CES earlier this year, is a micro LED display. It's a kind of tech using more than 24 million microscopic LED lights with their own RGB light. These generate every pixel you see on a screen, potentially creating ultra-detailed and colorful images. The main difference between micro LED and micro RGB is that the latter is housed behind an LCD panel, where the RGB lights are the backlight. In micro LED, each pixel is its own light source using self-emissive light-emitting diodes. This allows for brighter screens up to a boggling 10,000 nits of stated peak brightness with a high color accuracy. Samsung has been talking this screen technology up for more than five years. Micro RGB may be the next replacement for QLED, which is a type of mini LED that uses a layer of miniscule quantum dots for more dynamic colors. TV technology takes a very, very long time to improve. LCDs, or liquid crystal displays, were around for many decades before they eventually eclipsed the picture quality of a good CRT TV. Meanwhile OLED, aka an organic light-emitting diode display, has pixel-level control over its colors. That screen type finally became ubiquitous in recent years after remaining way too expensive for most consumers (though they're normally pricier than other screen types). Getting to this point has taken years of effort, requiring companies to build up the specialized facilities for crafting these screens. Now that OLED serves as the standard for other screens thanks to its high contrast and inky blacks, it will take more years for micro RGB to scale up and size down. Micro LED, which does have pixel-level control, will also require a whole new manufacturing process. Which is to say, file micro RGB in the back of your brain along with micro LED, then wait a few years. That's when we'll find if QD-OLED or extremely tiny RGB LEDs will reign supreme.

Associated Press
3 days ago
- Associated Press
South Korean president will meet Japanese leader ahead of summit with Trump
SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — South Korean President Lee Jae Myung will meet Japanese Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba in Tokyo next week before flying to Washington for a summit with President Donald Trump, underscoring how Trump's push to reset global trade is drawing the often-feuding neighbors closer. Lee's two-day visit to Japan Aug. 23–24 will be an opportunity to deepen personal ties with Ishiba and put bilateral relations on firmer ground. Their talks will center on strengthening trilateral cooperation with Washington, promoting 'regional peace and stability,' and addressing other international issues, presidential spokesperson Kang Yu-jung said Wednesday. Their meeting will come weeks after South Korea and Japan secured trade deals with Washington that shielded their trade-dependent economies from Trump's highest tariffs. The separate agreements negotiated their rates of reciprocal duties down to 15% from the originally proposed 25%, but only after pledging hundreds of billions of dollars in U.S. investments. Lee and Ishiba previously met on the sidelines of the June G7 meetings in Canada, where they called for building a future-oriented relationship and agreed to cooperate closely on various issues including trade and countering North Korea's nuclear and missile programs. Relations between the two U.S. allies often have been strained in recent years over grievances stemming from Japan's brutal colonization of the Korean Peninsula before the end of World War II. South Korea's previous conservative president, Yoon Suk Yeol, made active efforts to repair ties with Tokyo, including a major compromise on compensation issues related to Korean victims of Japanese wartime slavery, aiming to bolster trilateral security cooperation with Washington against North Korean threats. But Yoon's presidency was cut short by his brief imposition of martial law in December, which led to his ouster and imprisonment, leaving uncertainty over Seoul-Tokyo relations under Lee, who has long accused Japan of clinging to its imperialist past and hindering cooperation. Since taking office in June after winning the early presidential election, Lee has avoided thorny remarks about Japan, instead promoting pragmatism in foreign policy and pledging to strengthen Seoul's alliance with Washington and trilateral cooperation with Tokyo. There also have been calls in South Korea to boost collaboration with Japan in responding to Trump, who has unsettled allies and partners with tariff hikes and demands they reduce reliance on the U.S. while paying more for their own defense. Following his meeting with Ishiba, Lee will travel to Washington for an Aug. 25 summit with Trump, which his office said will focus on trade and defense cooperation. His meeting with Trump comes with concerns in Seoul that the Trump administration could shake up the decades-old alliance by demanding higher payments for the U.S. troop presence in South Korea and possibly move to reduce it as Washington shifts more focus on China.