The target for new SLRs is CosMOS

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Growing Little Guru
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New CMOS sensors catching on in cameras

LAS VEGAS--You may not know it from the outside, but digital cameras are getting something like an eye transplant.
Deep within every digital camera is a sensor chip whose job it is to capture light. Most camera sensors today use CCD (charge-coupled device) technology, but a newer approach called CMOS (complementary metal oxide semiconductor) is catching on, particularly at the high end of the market.


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CMOS advantages can include lower noise, lower power consumption, lower price, and faster response times. In the prestigious and fast-growing digital SLR (single-lens reflex) camera market, Canon and Olympus have used CMOS sensors for years, but high-profile new arrivals on the CMOS bandwagon include Sony, Pentax, Samsung, and most notably Nikon. [/B]
CMOS itself has been around for decades--it's the method used to manufacture the vast majority of computer processors--but its use as an image sensor rather than an information processor is a relatively new development. In recent years it's begun making inroads against CCD, a technology with many more years of refinement in image sensor technology.
In compact cameras, CCD still dominates. Where CMOS has caught on most widely is videocameras, mobile phone cameras, and notably, SLR cameras. In this latter category new CMOS-based cameras include Nikon's D3 and D300, Sony's Alpha A700, and Pentax's K20D, and Samsung's GX20, which is derived from Pentax's K20D. All these cameras top the companies' respective lines, and the Pentax and Samsung cameras are being shown off here at the Photo Marketing Association trade show here.
 
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