melgross said:
I don't see it as being a problem in that way. The first thing to note is that if only Canon is doing this, it's unlikely that a third party lens manufacturer would bother. Right now, optical designs are the same, and it's the minor difference of the lens mount and electronics that they match. Since they don't do that for all mounts, because of sales, can you imagine them designing lenses just for Canons' platform? That would be a difficult decision.
The second thing is that if they did decide to do it, they wouldn't need to exactly duplicate it. If there's a big enough difference, optically, between the curved sensor and the flat state, then just approaching it would result in a big improvement.
My point was not that 3rd parties would design new lenses for a curved sensor, but rather that they would not need to change their flat-field designs to work with such a curved sensor.
melgross said:
Thirdly, since it appears that the curved state is functioned by an electric signal, it's possible that it can vary its curved state depending on the signal. Perhaps wide lenses could see more curvature, and tele's, less. It's even possible that the curve could vary according to the focal length in a zoom. Now, that would be something!
I believe that's the whole point of this patent - a dynamically controlled amount of curvature. The necessary degree of curvature to avoid the need for in-lens optical correction is going to vary based on focal length, so a fixed sensor curvature would only be optimally effective at a single focal length. Without the ability to dynamically adjust the curvature, the application would be limited to a fixed prime lens camera, not a fized zoom lens or an ILC.
melgross said:
Lastly, what's to say that Canon would even allow the curved state to work with third party lenses?
Good point, but by the same token why should they allow a 3rd party lens to work with their AF system? But...they do.