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Tim Cook Pays Tribute to Apple's Enduring Partnership With Sony to Develop 'World's Leading Camera Sensors' for iPhones

Tim Cook today publicly paid tribute to Sony's long-term partnership with Apple in creating cutting-edge camera sensors for successive iPhone models for over a decade.

tim cook sony japan visit
In a tweet posted during his visit to Sony's camera development facility in Kumamoto, Japan, Cook acknowledged the company's successful partnership with Apple to create "the world's leading camera sensors for iPhone," and thanked the team at the facility for showing him around.

Apple doesn't usually reveal the specific makers of the hardware components that it uses in iPhones, but its use of Sony camera hardware has long been known by close followers of the company's supply chain.

Apple reportedly used Sony's camera sensor for the iPhone 6, and subsequent hardware teardowns by the likes of iFixit have identified Sony-made components in successive iPhone models.

Cook's tweet suggests Apple's partnership with Sony remains strong, and rumors to that effect already signal the Japanese company's contributions to future Apple products. For example, According to a November report from Nikkei, next year's iPhone 15 models will be equipped with Sony's newest "state of the art" image sensors.

Compared to standard sensors, Sony's image sensor doubles the saturation signal in each pixel, allowing it to capture more light to cut down on underexposure and overexposure. Nikkei said that it is able to better photograph a person's face even with strong backlighting.


Apple is working on a periscope telephoto lens that will improve the ‌iPhone 15‌ Pro's optical zoom capabilities, allowing for up to 10x optical zoom to match some Android smartphones that are on the market. The Sony image sensor technology would likely be used for the Wide camera that Apple considers the iPhone's "main" camera as Apple typically uses different technology for each lens.

Also for next year, Sony is expected to supply Apple with an OLED on silicon (OLEDoS) – also known as micro-OLED – display for the company's first-generation mixed-reality headset.

Tags: Japan, Sony

Top Rated Comments

43 months ago
Interesting that Tim would visit Japan this close to the holidays. Given the rumor of Sony being involved with the development of the display in the AR/VR project, this makes me wonder if that has something to do with it. Regardless, it is neat to see two innovative companies working together instead of being enemies.
Score: 13 Votes (Like | Disagree)
43 months ago

As a user of Sony phones before I defected to iOS I can’t help but wonder why it’s therefore taken this long to change from a 12 megapixel sensor, when Sony had some excellent 23 megapixel sensors in their Z5 range back in 2015
if you go back and look at your 2015 photos next to modern day phone images, your excellent photos won't look so excellent all of a sudden.
Score: 11 Votes (Like | Disagree)
Gudi Avatar
43 months ago

I can’t help but wonder why it’s taken this long to change from a 12 megapixel sensor, when Sony had some excellent 23 megapixel sensors in their Z5 range back in 2015
Because photo quality can't be measured in megapixels alone. It's equally important how accurately each sensor measures the light for each pixel. And accuracy rises with more light on fewer bigger pixels.
Score: 8 Votes (Like | Disagree)
McWetty Avatar
43 months ago
Wonder why Phil Schiller didn’t tweet this… oh wait. Nevermind.
Score: 8 Votes (Like | Disagree)
43 months ago
I wonder if Tim is paying his blue tick through the site to save those 3 bucks.
Score: 7 Votes (Like | Disagree)
GuruZac Avatar
43 months ago
Bring on the 15 Pro Max or whatever the heck it'll be called. USB-C and camera upgrades are what I'm looking forward to.
Score: 4 Votes (Like | Disagree)