logo
Your next Galaxy phone might finally lose the camera bump – or will it?

Your next Galaxy phone might finally lose the camera bump – or will it?

Phone Arena8 hours ago
Receive the latest Samsung news
By subscribing you agree to our terms and conditions and privacy policy
Do you need flatter camera bumps on a Galaxy phone?
Yeah, the flatter, the better.
Both flat and thick are fine with me.
No, I prefer something that protrudes.
Yeah, the flatter, the better.
0%
Both flat and thick are fine with me.
0%
No, I prefer something that protrudes.
0%
Impressive, but do Galaxy phones really need flatter camera bumps right now? Let me know in the comments below!
I know that on a Friday, you're all about metalenses, metasurfaces, nanostructures, modulations and diffractions – so let's see what Samsung has been up to lately. Galaxy phones with flatter camera bumps: well, that was unexpected!There's a recent study , titled "Compact eye camera with two-third wavelength phase-delay metalens", and it has introduced a new approach to creating ultra-compact metalenses for eye cameras. The project was carried out through a collaboration between Samsung Electronics and Pohang University of Science and Technology (POSTECH) and has been published in the journal Nature Communications.Samsung's team worked on every stage of the process , from concept development to implementation and testing, aiming to demonstrate the potential of advanced photonic technologies while finding new ways to make products stand out in a competitive market.One of the most notable outcomes of the study is the potential to make extended reality (XR) devices thinner and lighter, as well as to reduce the height of smartphone camera modules, addressing the familiar "camera bump" problem.That's great, but there isn't an urgency for Galaxy phones to get slimmer camera bumps. Maybe this technology would be better suited for something like the Vivo X200 Ultra, since it looks like this:Anyway, mtalenses are getting a lot of attention lately. They're basically ultra-thin lenses that bend and control light using tiny structures on a flat surface, instead of the curved glass you see in regular lenses. This makes them much smaller and lighter.Until now, making them work well meant they had to delay light by a full wavelength, which required building millions of super tall, skinny structures. These were tricky to make, easy to break, and not ideal for mass production.The new approach in this research only delays light by two-thirds of a wavelength. That small change keeps the light focused just as well but lets the structures be shorter and sturdier. As a result, they're easier to produce, less likely to have defects, and cheaper to make.To showcase the concept, the team created a thin infrared eye camera for XR devices. The camera's thickness was reduced by 20% compared to traditional versions, from 2.0 mm to 1.6 mm, while still delivering precise pupil tracking and iris recognition over a wide 120-degree field of view.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

vivo X300 runs Geekbench, confirms its chipset
vivo X300 runs Geekbench, confirms its chipset

GSM Arena

time17 minutes ago

  • GSM Arena

vivo X300 runs Geekbench, confirms its chipset

Vlad, 15 August 2025 vivo is expected to launch the X300, X300 Pro, and possibly the X300 Pro mini in the fourth quarter of this year (October to December). Ahead of that, today the 'vanilla' X300 model has seemingly been spotted in the Geekbench database. The benchmark run confirms the fact that it will employ MediaTek's upcoming Dimensity 9500 chipset, which MediaTek is expected to unveil in September. In the prototype (with model number V2509A) that ran the benchmark, this was paired with 16GB of RAM. The phone ran Android 16, naturally, as that's the version it's expected to launch running. #VivoX300 V2509A spotted on Geekbench with MediaTek's Dimensity 9500 processor.🤯Specifications❗🔳 Dimensity 9500 Chipset/SoC1 Core @ 4.21 GHz3 Cores @ 3.50 GHz4 Cores @ 2.70 GHz🎮 Mali-G1-Ultra MC12 GPU🍭 Android 16- 16GB RAMScoresSingle-core: 2352 Multi-core: 7129 — Ayan Ghosh (@ayansonunigam) August 15, 2025 The X300 managed a 2,352 single-core score and a 7,129 multi-core score in Geekbench 6.3.0 for Android, but as we usually say - don't take such benchmark results by prototype devices too seriously, they're still in active development. Interestingly, the benchmark run reveals that the Dimensity 9500's CPU has one prime core clocked at 4.21 GHz, three cores clocked at 3.5 GHz, and four clocked at 2.7 GHz, while the GPU is identified as Mali-G1-Ultra MC12.

So Apple is just discarding two heavily marketed features of the iPhone, what gives?
So Apple is just discarding two heavily marketed features of the iPhone, what gives?

Phone Arena

time2 hours ago

  • Phone Arena

So Apple is just discarding two heavily marketed features of the iPhone, what gives?

There have been two very heavily marketed features on the iPhone for the last 2-3 years, and Apple is apparently getting rid of both of them. What's worse is that I actually quite liked both of these characteristics of the iPhone, even though one of them has been a very contentious change. Titanium looks great for phones. | Image credit — PhoneArena Yep, Apple is ditching titanium with the iPhone 17. It's not like this was a must-have feature for flagship phones, but it was appreciated nonetheless. I don't think I'm alone in saying that the titanium iPhone models looked stunning, like a truly premium piece of gear. At least we still have the Galaxy Ultra phones, unless Samsung is planning to ditch titanium for the Galaxy S26 Ultra as well. I truly believed that titanium was here to stay, to distinguish the flagship offerings from the rest. And, on a very minor note, titanium sounds so much cooler than aluminum, glass, or stainless steel. But what truly bugs me is remembering how much Apple focused on the titanium finish when it was first announced. The people announcing the iPhone 15 Pro couldn't stop mentioning just how beautiful the new phones looked, and I agreed. But now, just like that, we're ditching titanium this year. The reasoning behind this decision is likely quite complex and not just a change of heart. Some suggest that manufacturing costs are to blame, and that makes sense because Apple is trying to make its phones as affordable as possible with the threat of tariffs looming over it. Perhaps it's the lack of titanium that has made it possible to not increase the cost of the iPhone 17 too much this titanium isn't the only heavily marketed feature Apple is getting rid of. Apple was really proud of the Dynamic Island. | Image credit — PhoneArena Who remembers when Apple first announced the Dynamic Island? This was one of Apple's more contentious changes, I remember a lot of the internet clowning on it back then. However, I thought that it was a pretty clever way to get around a problem that existed in smartphones back then, and still does today. See, every phone manufacturer had started to introduce punch holes or notches into their phones. Even the cheapest budget phones made for low income regions featured a notch at the very least. This was being done to minimize bezel thickness, and because I suppose it was just the new thing to do. Apple, who I blame for popularizing the notch in the first place, came up with a pretty clever solution: the Dynamic Island. Immediately, the iPhone was recognizable everywhere, and it wasn't just another phone with a water drop notch. Even better, the Dynamic Island actually served a integration with the Dynamic Island is superb, when it works of course, and it usually always does. And, personally speaking, I just like the pill-shaped cutout much more than a water drop notch, or a circular punch hole. But guess what, Apple is ditching the Dynamic Island in favor of a punch hole design. This won't happen until the iPhone 18, but many reports have said that it is happening. Apparently, the punch hole iPhone 18 will bridge the gap between the iPhone 17 that has a Dynamic Island, and the cutout-free 20th anniversary iPhone Pro. But…why not just stick with the Dynamic Island? Has Apple forgotten how much it showed it off back when the company first announced it? Not to mention that the iPhone 18 will just look like any other phone from the front. Apple is already making this mistake with the iPhone 17 redesign, and I wouldn't fault some people for confusing it for a Google Pixel 9, especially the iPhone 17 Air. Suffice to say, I just don't understand why Apple would abandon heavily marketed features like this out of the blue. It honestly just makes the company look like it has no direction or sense of self, and is just throwing random things at a wall to see what sticks.

iPhone 17 Pro's physical SIM card slot purportedly shown in leaked images
iPhone 17 Pro's physical SIM card slot purportedly shown in leaked images

GSM Arena

time3 hours ago

  • GSM Arena

iPhone 17 Pro's physical SIM card slot purportedly shown in leaked images

Vlad, 15 August 2025 The iPhone 17 Pro and Pro Max have recently been rumored to drop the physical SIM card slot altogether on a global scale, but today a new rumor comes to contradict this assertion. A tipster over on X has shared the images you can see below, which purportedly depict the iPhone 17 Pro's SIM card slot. Thus, the Pro and Pro Max will definitely still have a physical slot, at least in some markets. That is, of course, if this rumor pans out - we cannot independently verify that what we're looking at here is indeed the iPhone 17 Pro's SIM card slot. So, as usual, take all of this with a pinch of salt. Purported iPhone 17 Pro SIM card slot The iPhone 17 Pro is also rumored to start at 256GB of storage and sport repositioned antennas for better and more reliable reception. Its long-rumored redesigned camera island has most recently been confirmed by case maker dbrand. The iPhone 17 family is expected to become official on September 9. Source

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store