Inventor of the modern CMOS sensor, Eric Fossum interview

Shaminder Dulai:

It’s not an overstatement to say his technology changed the world. We may look at our smartphones, turn on the TV, or use a webcam for virtual meetings. When we leave our homes, we may back a car out of a parking space with a backup camera, be seen by security cameras or be captured in the background of social media videos. A CMOS image sensor makes these devices possible in each of these instances.

The funny thing is, this father of modern photography didn’t even care much for the medium growing up.

“I enjoyed it, but I wouldn’t say I was fascinated by it,” Fossum said about cameras and photography during his youth.

To put it into context, Fosum was born in October 1957 (the same year Sputnik was launched, but more on that later), and picture-taking was an expensive endeavor. He recalled his parents giving him permission to use the family’s Kodak Brownie to take a picture on rare occasions and then just one, saying things like, “Okay, today is Wednesday; you can take another picture.”