| Consumer Devices Ready to Revolutionize the Optics Industry Joseph Keller - December 11th, 2019
 
 
  Improvements  in artificial  intelligence, chip hardware and camera technology are  coming together to  offer new optical devices with impressive  capabilities.
 
 Increasingly sophisticated camera hardware is  becoming more  affordable at the consumer level, offering new  possibilities to those  without technical expertise. This tech is now  being married with  state-of-the-art artificial intelligence and machine  learning software  to create new consumer-grade optical products while  giving established  devices new capabilities.
 The average western  consumer has had a camera device in their pocket  for well over a decade  now, and the evolution of that camera over just  ten years shows just  how far consumer optical technology has come. The  iPhone 3GS was  released in 2009 and came with a three-megapixel camera  capable of  shooting at 480p and video at 30 fps. Fast forward ten years  and the  iPhone 11 now boasts a 12-megapixel camera with optical image   stabilization capable of shooting 4k video at up to 60 fps. Today’s   consumer-level smartphone cameras are now capable of rivaling some of   the professional-grade equipment from a decade ago. Small-sized   high-quality camera components can now be mass-produced at a low enough   cost to put a high-quality camera in the average consumer’s hand.
 
 Improvements  in camera technology are pushing the  optics industry forward, creating  new devices with impressive visual  capabilities.
 
 Increasingly sophisticated camera hardware is becoming more  affordable  at the consumer level, offering new possibilities to those  without  technical expertise. This tech is now being married with   state-of-the-art artificial intelligence and machine learning software   to create new consumer-grade optical products while giving established   devices new capabilities.
 
 The average western consumer has had a  camera device in their pocket  for well over a decade now, and the  evolution of that camera over just  ten years shows just how far  consumer optical technology has come. The  iPhone 3GS was released in  2009 and came with a three-megapixel camera  capable of shooting at 480p  and video at 30 fps. Fast forward ten years  and the iPhone 11 now  boasts a 12-megapixel camera with optical image  stabilization capable  of shooting 4k video at up to 60 fps. Today’s  consumer-level smartphone  cameras are now capable of rivaling some of  the professional-grade  equipment from a decade ago. Small-sized  high-quality camera components  can now be mass-produced at a low enough  cost to put a high-quality  camera in the average consumer’s hand.
 
 NexOptic Technology Corp. (TSXV: NXO, OTCQB:NXOPF, FWB:E3O1) plans to rapidly change the face of the  growing multi-billion-dollar optics industry. Send me an Investor Kit
 Improvements in camera technology have not been confined to   smartphones. The development of low-cost, high-quality camera hardware   has enabled the proliferation of dedicated special-purpose camera   devices like the GoPro, 360-degree cameras like the Orbi and a variety   of camera-mounted drones. Outside of the photography realm, increasingly   sophisticated digital optical devices are being integrated into gaming   devices, automobiles and more.
 
 The evolution of consumer-grade  camera hardware is only half of the  story for digital optic  innovation. Manufacturers can outfit their  devices with increasingly  high-quality lenses and sensors, however,  these upgrades inevitably hit  a point of diminishing returns. A  traditional camera simply captures  an image and leaves it up to a human  viewer to interpret what the image  shows, but an AI-driven device is  able to analyze and interpret visual  data from that photograph.  Artificial intelligence is now capable of  processing and re-organizing  the visual data it receives, presenting a  quality photo that was  previously technologically impossible.
 
 Camera technology incorporating AI Google (NASDAQ: GOOGL),   unsurprisingly, has been at the forefront of artificial intelligence   and digital optics development. In 2018 with the launch of the company’s   Pixel 3 phone, Google debuted ‘Night Sight,’ a camera mode that allows   users to take perfectly lit photos in almost complete darkness. Google   achieved this with a machine learning algorithm that has learned to   artificially ‘complete’ images using the available information. The   Pixel 4 took this same concept in another direction, using the shaking   of the user’s hand when taking photos from long distances to capture   multiple angles of a subject. The AI then uses that information to   construct a clearer image than the lens and sensor alone would have been   able to create.
 
 Canadian technology company  NexOptic Technology Corp. (TSXV: NXO,   OTCQB:NXOPF, FWB:E3O1) has developed its own artificial intelligence   platform called ‘ALLIS’ (Advanced Low Light Imaging System) for shooting   high-visibility photos in low-light situations. To shoot a digital   photo in low light, the sensor needs to be adjusted to be more sensitive   to light, which reduces the sensor’s accuracy and results in a grainy   or ‘noisy’ image. The level of sensitivity is referred to as ISO. ALLIS   is able to ‘repair’ high-ISO images based on how the AI algorithm   interprets what the image should look like. ALLIS can work on small   imaging devices like tablets and smartphones. In addition to consumer   and professional photography applications, ALLIS could be useful for   low-light facial recognition or object classification applications.
 
 NexOptic intends to integrate ALLIS into future versions of its own   unique consumer-grade optical device, DoubleTake. The company’s   DoubleTake device combines the long-range video and photography   capability of a DSLR camera outfitted with a telephoto lens, with the   usability of a smartphone camera. The device features an array of lenses   (not unlike those within a telescope, but much smaller) to create a   focal length equivalent to 423 millimeters, combined with AI image   correction to capture 4K video from a long distance. Rather than using a   viewfinder, DoubleTake features a smartphone-like touch screen   interface and can also be cast in real-time to smartphones and other   mobile devices. NexOptic plans to launch the DoubleTake in early 2020   for a price in the neighborhood of  US$1500, making the device competitive in price with traditional telephoto lenses for DSLR cameras.
 
 “One of our core objectives is to become a major fixture in the   growing sports optics and sports camera markets,” said NexOptic   Technology Corp. Chairman Rich Geruson. “The interest in DoubleTake   continues to grow even before consumers have had a chance to experience   it for themselves. I’m excited to get DoubleTake to them in the nearest   timeline possible.”
 
 The greater quality and lower cost of  high-quality optical components  are allowing for the invention of new  and unique optical products.  360-degree cameras are already widely  available, and product developers  are searching for new and unique  applications for the technology for  niche markets. Consumer technology  company Orbi Prime, for example, has  developed 360 camera tech into a  pair of sunglasses that act as a  hands-free camera. Orbi has also taken  the same concept and put it into a  football helmet capable of giving  fans a 360-degree view of on-field  action.
 
 Beyond photography,  one of the clearer applications for AI smart  cameras is in the world of  home and business security. A security camera  equipped with AI  software could be used to apply facial recognition to  identify when  someone other than the occupant enters the premises, or it  could warn a  shop owner when a person previously identified as a  shoplifter enters a  store. Beyond facial recognition, smart camera AI  systems can be  taught to identify signs of suspicious behavior and alert  home or  business owners accordingly. This type of functionality is  already  being integrated into consumer-grade security systems. Security   technology companies like Axis Communications see AI functionality as a   big part of the  future of security and are working to develop surveillance systems that utilize this technology.
 
 Takeaway Consumer optical devices can now do more than ever before.  Artificial  intelligence, in particular, is allowing product developers  to get more  out of camera sensors so that these devices become more  than the sum of  their parts. As high-quality optical devices become  more accessible for  the average consumer, there’s more room for  innovative technology  companies to develop unique and groundbreaking  products.
 
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