Bussard Ramjet
SENIOR MEMBER
- Joined
- Nov 10, 2014
- Messages
- 3,978
- Reaction score
- 2
- Country
- Location
Supplier companies are chosen based on the price quote and performance specifications.
If necessary, another company can meet the performance specifications at a higher price. It is simply a matter of economics.
You are implicitly arguing that some of those suppliers have a monopoly. That is not the case. Samsung and many other companies compete on price. They have the largest volume and charge lower prices. This is how they keep their smaller competitors at bay.
Umm... No.
It is not a matter of simply economics.
Also, pixels is just one parameter to judge an image sensor. There are many others that people don't pay attention to.
The fact remains that Sony has near monopoly over high end, premium CMOS image sensors. AND, it plays on its quality, not on price.
From this report:
OmniVision is another big name in the smartphone image sensor business, but you’re more likely to find its products in the low and mid-tier markets, rather than high-end smartphones.
The company’s typical sensor selling price is just $1.79, compared with upwards of $7 from Sony. As a result, OmniVision is expected to capitalize on the new demand for lower cost CMOS sensors from the growing Chinese and Indian smartphone markets.
ff
https://www.androidauthority.com/smartphone-camera-guide-sony-samsung-623791/