
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


A new startup out of Harvard Labs has invented a way to print camera lenses 5,000 at a time just like computer chips, and in the same semiconductor foundries that make our computer’s CPUs. They’re 100X thinner than standard smartphone camera lenses, are simpler and cheaper to make, sense the full electromagnetic spectrum — not just visible light — and have excellent 3D-sensing capabilities that could bring Lidar-based dimensional sensing functionality that’s currently only on high-end phones like the iPhone 12 to smartphones across the price spectrum.
In this episode of TechFirst with John Koetsier, I interview Metalenz co-founder Rob Devlin.
By John Koetsier4.7
1414 ratings
A new startup out of Harvard Labs has invented a way to print camera lenses 5,000 at a time just like computer chips, and in the same semiconductor foundries that make our computer’s CPUs. They’re 100X thinner than standard smartphone camera lenses, are simpler and cheaper to make, sense the full electromagnetic spectrum — not just visible light — and have excellent 3D-sensing capabilities that could bring Lidar-based dimensional sensing functionality that’s currently only on high-end phones like the iPhone 12 to smartphones across the price spectrum.
In this episode of TechFirst with John Koetsier, I interview Metalenz co-founder Rob Devlin.

43,958 Listeners

32,096 Listeners

1,097 Listeners

570 Listeners

548 Listeners

87,547 Listeners

112,192 Listeners

805 Listeners

5,107 Listeners

12 Listeners

10,179 Listeners

5,542 Listeners

16,195 Listeners

140 Listeners

10 Listeners