It's been a few years (OK, >10) since I spent some time at the Rochester Institute of Technology studying aspects of Color Science and later at UCLA studying image sensor design from the guys who designed and built nearly every image sensor that's gone into space.
The problem with the "we need better sensors" question is that, in reality "they" don't, "we" do.
By this I mean that the vast majority of the people on this planet are well served with a color system, from sensor to display, that provides the images we get today. These images are great for everything from selling you an iPhone to being entertained for a couple of hours by a movie to printing stunning images in a Victoria's Secret catalog and posting about your vacation in Maui with your kids on Facebook. There are well-understood color management approaches for making all of the above work very well.
In other words, from "their" perspective, there are no problems and "we" are all crazy.
Would people be amazed by the images one could produce with better sensors on matching display systems? Absolutely. Just as I was when I saw analog HDTV at least ten years before it got to consumer-land.
However, the issue really becomes one of economics. Consumer electronics isn't about excellence. It's about a simple question: "What's the next piece of shit we can get everyone hooked on?".
OK, that's a little harsh, but, yes, consumer electronics companies are always on the hunt for the next mass craze in the segment. Remember how everyone needed a 3D TV --not---, or how everyone needed a 240Hz TV --not-- and now everyone needs 4K --not? Consumer electronics companies are constantly throwing stuff up on the wall to see if anything will take off or if they can trigger a new "need" or "must have" through marketing and back-door content creation.
The reality has been that almost everything past the transition to HD and LCD TV's has failed to engage because, well, people don't need it. The transition from CRT's to LCD's, accelerated artificially due to RoHS [1], had a visible and measurable (in layman's terms) step improvement. People could derive satisfaction from spending the money and they, eventually, fell in line and behaved like good little consumers. Yet the entire transition had to be engineered at a massive level. I'd recommend anyone interested in the subject and, in particular, how it is that we got HDTV, read a nice little book titled "Defining Vision":
I'll just mention a tid-bit that might have a bunch of readers go off and buy it: We have to thank Donald Rumsfeld for it. Yes, that Donald Rumsfeld, ex. Secretary of Defense, etc.:
If you think we got HDTV on technical grounds...well, read the book.
That's a long way around to say we don't have better imaging systems because the segment of the population who might legitimately need them is minuscule and has virtually no market power. A better imaging system would be a set of very expensive laboratory instruments used for a range of what I'll term esoteric tasks. In the meantime, what we have today is beyond good enough for anyone watching the World Cup or an episode of Lucy.
can't emphasize that point enough really - it's also why these products have an incredibly hard time conquering the market: no one realises they "should want this" because as far as they can tell, there's no reason to. I am super happy about the move to 4K, but until 4k displays are ubiquitous (TV + desktop at the very least) I don't expect camera manufacturers to push their chip shops to true rec.2020 4K sensors (they already cover part of rec.2020, but they still lack response in the greens)
The problem with the "we need better sensors" question is that, in reality "they" don't, "we" do.
By this I mean that the vast majority of the people on this planet are well served with a color system, from sensor to display, that provides the images we get today. These images are great for everything from selling you an iPhone to being entertained for a couple of hours by a movie to printing stunning images in a Victoria's Secret catalog and posting about your vacation in Maui with your kids on Facebook. There are well-understood color management approaches for making all of the above work very well.
In other words, from "their" perspective, there are no problems and "we" are all crazy.
Would people be amazed by the images one could produce with better sensors on matching display systems? Absolutely. Just as I was when I saw analog HDTV at least ten years before it got to consumer-land.
However, the issue really becomes one of economics. Consumer electronics isn't about excellence. It's about a simple question: "What's the next piece of shit we can get everyone hooked on?".
Famously: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8AyVh1_vWYQ
OK, that's a little harsh, but, yes, consumer electronics companies are always on the hunt for the next mass craze in the segment. Remember how everyone needed a 3D TV --not---, or how everyone needed a 240Hz TV --not-- and now everyone needs 4K --not? Consumer electronics companies are constantly throwing stuff up on the wall to see if anything will take off or if they can trigger a new "need" or "must have" through marketing and back-door content creation.
The reality has been that almost everything past the transition to HD and LCD TV's has failed to engage because, well, people don't need it. The transition from CRT's to LCD's, accelerated artificially due to RoHS [1], had a visible and measurable (in layman's terms) step improvement. People could derive satisfaction from spending the money and they, eventually, fell in line and behaved like good little consumers. Yet the entire transition had to be engineered at a massive level. I'd recommend anyone interested in the subject and, in particular, how it is that we got HDTV, read a nice little book titled "Defining Vision":
http://www.amazon.com/Defining-Vision-Broadcasters-Governmen...
I'll just mention a tid-bit that might have a bunch of readers go off and buy it: We have to thank Donald Rumsfeld for it. Yes, that Donald Rumsfeld, ex. Secretary of Defense, etc.:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Donald_Rumsfeld
If you think we got HDTV on technical grounds...well, read the book.
That's a long way around to say we don't have better imaging systems because the segment of the population who might legitimately need them is minuscule and has virtually no market power. A better imaging system would be a set of very expensive laboratory instruments used for a range of what I'll term esoteric tasks. In the meantime, what we have today is beyond good enough for anyone watching the World Cup or an episode of Lucy.
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Restriction_of_Hazardous_Subst...