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People Aren’t Using AI as Much as You Think

2026-04-17 05:28:05

AI adoption is far lower than it appears online. Most people aren’t using real workflows, but social media creates pressure that makes builders feel behind.

How to Enable Core Isolation in Windows 11

2026-04-17 04:57:38

Enable Core Isolation in Windows 11: Core Isolation protects critical parts of the Windows 11 operating system from attacks by using virtualization-based security (VBS). This creates a secure environment where essential system processes can run separately from the rest of the OS, making it much harder for malware to interfere.

71% of Finance Teams Are Leaking Revenue. Vayu's 2026 CFO Report Shows Why

2026-04-17 04:16:04

The shift from per-seat SaaS to usage-based and AI-powered pricing has outpaced the billing infrastructure most finance teams inherited. Vayu's 2026 CFO Signal Report, produced with PwC and The SaaS CFO, surveyed nearly 100 finance leaders and surfaced an uncomfortable picture: 71% report measurable revenue leakage, only 11.9% have the automation to support their current pricing models, and 39% still depend on engineering to ship billing logic.

\ In this exclusive interview, we sit down with Erez Agmon, co-founder of Vayu, to unpack what the data reveals about the state of revenue infrastructure, why "automation" has become a paradox for finance teams, and what it actually takes to run AI-era pricing without breaking the close cycle.

\ 📊 Read the full 2026 CFO Signal Report here.

\ Ishan Pandey: Hi Erez, welcome to our "Behind the Startup" series. Take us back to the origin of Vayu, your background and what convinced you that revenue infrastructure was a problem worth building Vayu around?

\ Erez Agmon: I've been working with finance teams for about 10 years, and I've kept seeing the same frustration time and again. Every time companies changed how they price, the systems just couldn't keep up.

\ In the past, it was less common and easier to fix because subscription models were simple, making it relatively easy to fix. However, over the last few years, AI has spurred a rapid shift to usage-based models, making pricing far more dynamic and complicated. Suddenly, finance teams were expected to operate in real time to be able to ride the AI wave, yet they lacked the systems to do that.

\ During the subscription era, and far too often today, finance teams relied on spreadsheets, engineering teams for basic changes, and manually gathering their own data. Even then, it created the feeling of being responsible for revenue, but not having control, and now that feeling has become a full-blown five-alarm fire for finance teams.

\ I started Vayu together with Shenhav Avidar and Shay Gross. All of us come from fintech, from companies like PayPal and Melio, and we were looking for a problem worth solving. This one turned out to be inescapable and with surprisingly few solutions for what amounts to a problem that could easily turn into an extinction-level event for companies.

\ Ishan Pandey: The report opens with a striking number, only 11.9% of finance teams have the automation to support their current pricing models, even though 54% have already moved to hybrid or usage-based pricing. Why is there such a wide gap between what GTM teams are selling and what finance systems can actually process?

\ Erez Agmon: I don't think the gap is surprising. Pricing changed very fast, but infrastructure didn't.

\ GTM teams are under pressure to capture value, so they moved to usage, hybrid models, and anything that better reflects how customers actually consume the product. But finance systems remained built for fixed subscriptions.

\ The result is that companies layer new pricing atop old infrastructure. It's financial scaffolding that kind of works, but only with a herculean manual effort behind the scenes.

\ That's why you see automation's capabilities so far outpacing adoption. It's not that teams don't invest in tools; it's that the underlying model those tools are built on doesn't match how revenue actually behaves today.

\ And over time, that gap just compounds. The more flexible your pricing becomes, the more fragile your operations get.

\ Ishan Pandey: You introduce the idea of an "Automation Paradox," where 82% of finance teams still rely on manual spreadsheets despite investing in tools, and the month-end close stays stuck at three to seven days. From a systems design perspective, why do point solutions consistently fail to compress the close cycle, and what does true data unification look like in practice?

\ Erez Agmon: What we see in most companies is that they didn't really automate the system, they just automated parts of it.

\ A billing tool is added, maybe something for revenue recognition, maybe a data pipeline. Each one does its job, but they don't really talk to each other without manual handoffs, which results in a fragmented system that requires tons of upkeep and is highly likely to break down.

\ That's where the time goes. Not in generating the invoice, but in reconciling everything around it. Making sure usage matches contracts, contracts match billing, and billing matches what actually happened.

\ So the close doesn't get shorter. It just moves the work around.

\ Real speed comes when all of that lives in one flow. When your usage data, pricing logic, and billing are connected from the start is when companies stop reconciling and start trusting the system.

\ Ishan Pandey: One of the most alarming findings is that 71% of surveyed companies report measurable revenue leakage, with over 30% losing more than 5% of revenue annually. Walk us through where that leakage actually originates in a usage-based contract lifecycle, and why it tends to scale with company size rather than shrink with maturity.

\ Erez Agmon: Leakage usually doesn't come from one big mistake. It's a lot of small gaps across the lifecycle.

\ In most companies, usage lives in one place, contracts in another, and billing somewhere else. And the connection between them is never perfect.

\ So you might capture usage, but it's not fully aligned with the contract, or the contract has edge cases like credits or custom terms that don't make it cleanly into billing. And by the time you generate the invoice, you're already slightly off.

\ Some of it gets caught later, but not all of it, and as companies grow, this only gets worse. You have more pricing variations, more contracts, more exceptions. That's why leakage scales with the company. It isn't an execution issue; it's just that the system itself was never designed to keep everything in sync.

\ Ishan Pandey: The report frames usage-based pricing as a forecasting upgrade rather than a source of unpredictability, with 65% of usage-based teams reporting confidence in their forecasts versus 43% of flat-rate teams. This challenges the conventional CFO instinct that recurring subscriptions are inherently more predictable. What is the data infrastructure, insights, and real-world experience that flips this assumption?

\ Erez Agmon: I think the instinct makes sense. Variable pricing should feel less predictable.

\ The reality is that subscription models offer the illusion of predictability because it's a fixed number every month, but it's a black box where you really have no idea what's happening and what kind of value you're getting.

\ With usage, you're forced to build a much better data layer. You start tracking real customer behavior, how usage grows, where it slows down, and how it changes over time. That leads to real-time data on usage that can be optimized continuously instead of relying on a once-a-year seat-based subscription check-in. Businesses are forced to build better and enjoy better forecasting if they pull it off.

\ Ishan Pandey: 39% of finance teams depend on engineering to execute pricing and billing logic, and complexity consumes up to 60 hours of engineering time per month. How does this dependency change the power dynamic between finance, product, and engineering, and what does a "finance-native" architecture actually mean at the code and data model level?

\ Erez Agmon: It creates an unhealthy, unsustainable, and costly dynamic.

\ Finance is accountable for revenue, but they don't actually control how revenue is defined or executed. Every change goes through engineering, whether it's pricing, packaging, or even fixing billing logic. When that happens, it creates waiting times for an in-demand resource, and engineers' valuable time usually ends up getting wasted on maintaining logic and routine maintenance rather than building new, innovative tools.

\ GTM can't experiment, finance can't adapt, and engineering becomes a bottleneck without really wanting to be one.

\ Finance-native architecture gives back control to finance. All of a sudden, pricing logic, usage metering, and billing are defined in a way that finance can actually own and operate, without writing code or opening tickets.

\ And once that happens, the whole dynamic shifts. Finance stops being dependent and starts operating as part of the growth engine instead of just reporting on it.

\ Ishan Pandey: 60% of finance leaders prioritize AI, but 38% are blocked by data quality, and only 20% have moved AI workflows into production for billing. There is a lot of marketing noise around "AI for finance" right now. What use cases are real today versus aspirational, and how should a CFO evaluate whether their data foundation can actually support agentic or predictive workflows?

\ Erez Agmon: There's definitely a lot of noise right now.

\ The real use cases we see working today are often quite simple. Teams want to ask basic questions and get answers they can trust.

\ Things like what revenue hasn't been billed yet, which customers are about to go over their commitments, and why a specific account dropped this month. TAI dreams are great, and sometimes they work out, but at the heart of this is the day-to-day work of finance and RevOps.

\ Most companies struggle to answer simple finance questions without pulling data from three or four different systems and trying to piece it together.

\ AI's real value, therefore, comes when it sits on top of a clean, connected data layer and just lets users explore and understand what's happening. Ask a question, get a clear answer, and do so without the manual lift of traditional approaches.

\ Where it's still early is execution. Actually trusting the system to take actions, adjust billing, or automate decisions. Most teams are not there yet because the underlying data isn't reliable enough.

\ So the way we think about it is in two layers. First, AI is a way to understand your revenue. Then, over time, AI can actually operate parts of it.

\ But you can't skip the first step. If you can't explain your numbers today, AI won't fix that. It will just surface the gaps faster.

\ Ishan Pandey: Looking ahead, AI-native products are pushing toward outcome-based and agent-based pricing, where a single transaction might involve pooled credits, model costs, and variable margins. What does the next generation of revenue infrastructure need to look like to support pricing models that do not exist yet, and where do you see the industry being two years from now?

\ Erez Agmon: We're already starting to see where things are going.

\ Pricing is becoming much more tied to outcomes. Not just how much you use, but what you actually get. And in AI products, a single "transaction" can involve a lot of moving parts, models, credits, and diverse cost structures. Current infrastructure isn't built for that level of flexibility.

\ That means the next generation of revenue systems for this new usage-based AI era must be dynamic with the ability to define, change, and experiment quickly, without rebuilding the system every time. It also should be real-time and, perhaps most importantly, everything has to live in one place. Usage, contracts, and billing need to be connected.

\ If I look two years ahead, I think the gap we see today only gets bigger. The companies that solve this infrastructure layer will move much faster. The ones that don't will keep adding complexity on top of systems that were never designed for it.

\ Don’t forget to like and share the story!

\

The “Apple Pay” Moment for Web3: Mixin Integrates Coinbase to Make Fiat-to-Crypto Faster Than a Text

2026-04-17 04:00:35

HONG KONG, China, April 15th, 2026/Chainwire/--Mixin, the leading self-custodial privacy wallet with built-in encrypted messaging, has integrated Coinbase Onramp (Fiat-to-Crypto). This integration enables users to seamlessly purchase cryptocurrency with fiat currency directly inside the Mixin app in as little as 60 seconds.

Solving Web3’s Biggest Barrier: Onboarding Complexity

Despite the multi-trillion dollar growth of the cryptocurrency industry, the "onboarding and entry" process remains the single biggest barrier to mainstream adoption. Complex seed phrases, confusing gas fees, and fragmented cross-chain experiences continue to frustrate newcomers.

Mixin addresses these challenges by combining a simplified user experience with secure self-custody and seamless fiat access.

Key Highlights

1. Onboarding as Simple as Social Media

Mixin eliminates traditional “seed phrase anxiety” with a streamlined, seconds-long registration process. Users can get started without the burden of manual seed phrase backup or verification. While maintaining full self-custody, Mixin delivers a smooth, Web2-like experience that matches top-tier consumer apps.

2. Seamless Fiat-to-Crypto with Institutional-Grade Infrastructure

Through its integration with Coinbase Onramp, Mixin enables users to purchase crypto directly within the app using fiat currencies. Eligible users can complete transactions via Apple Pay, bringing a familiar Web2-level payment experience into Web3.

  • Compliance & Security: All identity verification (KYC) and payment processing are handled by Coinbase
  • Privacy Protection: Mixin does not store sensitive personal or payment data
  • Transparent Pricing: Mixin covers transaction spreads (up to $20), ensuring users receive the full value of their purchase — “Pay $100, get $100 in crypto.”

3. Gas-Free, Multi-Chain Experience

Mixin supports major blockchain networks, including Bitcoin, Ethereum, Solana, and BNB Chain, enabling seamless cross-chain interactions.

  • Unified Wallet Management: Manage up to 99 wallets in one interface
  • Gas Fee Optimization: Users enjoy 100% gas fee rebates on transfers between imported wallets.
  • One-Click Transactions: No need to hold multiple native gas tokens across chains

4. Messaging Meets Self-Custodial Finance

By integrating end-to-end encrypted messaging based on the Signal Protocol, Mixin enables users to send crypto as easily as sending a message.

This approach reduces the risk of address errors while making crypto transfers more intuitive and accessible.

Executive Commentary

“Crypto shouldn’t be limited to technical users — it should be as simple as sending a message,” said Sonny Liu, CMO of Mixin. “Our integration with Coinbase is designed to remove the final layer of friction and make Web3 accessible to everyone.”

About Mixin

Founded in 2017, Mixin is an open-source, self-custodial wallet focused on privacy, security, and usability.

  • Technology: Built on MPC architecture with CryptoNote privacy features and Signal Protocol messaging
  • Ecosystem: Supports 40+ blockchains and over 10,000 assets
  • Scale: Over 10 million users globally
  • Assets: More than $1 billion in user-managed funds

Contact

CMO

Sonny Liu

Mixin Ltd

[email protected]

:::tip This story was published as a press release by Chainwire under HackerNoon’s Business Blogging Program

:::

Disclaimer:

This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice. Cryptocurrencies are speculative, complex, and involve high risks. This can mean high prices volatility and potential loss of your initial investment. You should consider your financial situation, investment purposes, and consult with a financial advisor before making any investment decisions. The HackerNoon editorial team has only verified the story for grammatical accuracy and does not endorse or guarantee the accuracy, reliability, or completeness of the information stated in this article. #DYOR

Image Engineer's Notes, Part7: In-Depth Analysis of IR Camera System Design

2026-04-17 02:44:18

Achieving Maximum Energy Transfer Efficiency with Minimum IR LED Current

When designing an IR Camera system that supports Windows Hello (Face Authentication), the core challenge is not only how to meet Microsoft's stringent image quality and security specifications, but more importantly, how to achieve maximum infrared energy transfer efficiency with the minimum IR LED current. This optimization goal directly relates to the product's power consumption, heat generation, battery life, and Signal-to-Noise Ratio (SNR) performance in low-light environments. This article will start from the perspective of the Optical Link Budget, deeply analyzing 10 key parameters (including shutter temporal efficiency) from light source emission to sensor reception. It introduces a computable engineering model, parameter optimization weights, and practical non-ideality considerations, establishing a system-level evaluation and design tool centered on "efficiency maximization" for imaging engineers and system architects.

\

1. Windows Hello Certification Requirements and the Necessity of Energy Efficiency

Windows Hello has clear HLK (Hardware Lab Kit) testing requirements for IR Camera image quality, such as Spatial SNR > 30dB in an 80 lux environment. To achieve these metrics, the sensor must receive sufficient infrared energy. However, excessively high IR LED current leads to increased power consumption, severe heat generation, and higher costs.

Therefore, optimizing the optical link to ensure every milliwatt of IR LED energy is efficiently utilized is the key to a successful design. The core requirements of Microsoft HLK testing are as follows:

\

2. Design Choice: RGB-IR Hybrid Sensor vs. Dedicated IR Camera

In the early stages of system design, the sensor selection strategy directly determines the upper limit of energy efficiency.

\

2.1 RGB-IR Hybrid Sensor

Captures both RGB and IR simultaneously through a single sensor and lens. While saving space and cost, it faces severe IR-RGB Crosstalk challenges. To compensate for the SNR loss caused by crosstalk, it is often necessary to increase the IR LED current, which contradicts the efficiency optimization goal. In scenarios pursuing ultimate energy efficiency, RGB-IR hybrid sensors are usually not the first choice.

\

2.2 Dedicated IR Camera

Uses a dedicated Monochrome Sensor and an independent optical path. It has no crosstalk issues, and the lens can be optimized specifically for NIR, achieving the same image quality with a lower IR LED current. It is the preferred solution for pursuing ultimate efficiency and a high Windows Hello pass rate.

\ Design Recommendation: If budget and space permit, a Dedicated IR Camera is the best choice to achieve "minimum IR LED current, maximum energy transfer efficiency".

\

3. Shutter Type: The Impact of Global Shutter and Rolling Shutter

In an IR Camera system, the sensor's shutter type significantly impacts image quality, system complexity, and power consumption. The main types are Global Shutter and Rolling Shutter.

When discussing the impact of shutter types on the system, a core concept is Temporal Efficiency, which quantifies the proportion of energy emitted by the IR LED that actually falls within the sensor's effective exposure time. The signal strength (Signal) received by the sensor can be expressed as: Signal ∝ ILED ⋅ t exp ⋅ ηtemporal

Where ILED is the IR LED drive current, and texp is the exposure time.

\ Global Shutter (GS)

The working principle of a Global Shutter is that all pixels are exposed simultaneously and read simultaneously. This means that during exposure, the entire sensor array collects light at the same time, and then transfers the charge of all pixels to storage units in a very short time. Its advantages are:

  • No Jello Effect: Because all pixels are exposed simultaneously, Global Shutter does not produce the geometric distortion (like tilting or wobbling) common in Rolling Shutter when capturing fast-moving objects. This is crucial for capturing rapid head movements or micro-expressions in biometric systems, ensuring geometric accuracy of the image.
  • Better Synchronization and High Temporal Efficiency: In IR Camera systems, the IR LED usually emits light in pulses (Strobe). Global Shutter ensures all pixels are exposed simultaneously during the IR LED pulse, achieving more precise synchronization. This allows almost all emitted IR energy to be effectively utilized, so its temporal efficiency ($\eta_{temporal}$) is close to 1. This enables the system to achieve the target SNR at a lower average current.
  • Ambient Light Suppression: Combined with Strobe exposure, Global Shutter can more effectively collect signals when the IR LED pulse is on and suppress ambient light when the pulse is off, further improving SNR.

\ However, the disadvantage of Global Shutter is that it usually requires a more complex pixel structure to achieve simultaneous exposure and storage, which leads to:

  • Higher Cost: Manufacturing costs are generally higher than Rolling Shutter sensors.
  • Lower Quantum Efficiency (QE): Complex pixel structures may reduce the light-sensitive area, thereby lowering quantum efficiency.
  • Sensor Power Consumption: GS is more complex in pixel structure and readout architecture, which may increase the sensor's own power consumption. However, at the system level (especially IR LED power consumption), it may actually have an efficiency advantage.

\ Rolling Shutter (RS)

The working principle of a Rolling Shutter is to expose and read pixels sequentially, row by row or column by column. Its advantages are:

  • Lower Cost: Relatively simple structure, lower manufacturing cost.
  • Higher Quantum Efficiency (QE): Simple pixel structure, larger light-sensitive area, usually higher quantum efficiency.
  • Lower Power Consumption: Sequential row reading generally consumes less power.

\ But the main disadvantages of Rolling Shutter are:

  • Jello Effect: When capturing fast-moving objects, it produces image distortion, which can lead to inaccurate feature extraction in facial recognition.

  • Synchronization Challenges and Low Temporal Efficiency: Due to the row-by-row exposure mechanism, it is difficult for the IR LED to perfectly align with the exposure time of all pixels, resulting in some emitted energy not being effectively received. This makes the temporal efficiency ($\eta_{temporal}$) significantly lower than 1. To achieve the same Signal or SNR, the system usually needs to increase the average IR LED current to compensate for this temporal energy loss.

  • Poorer Ambient Light Suppression: Due to sequential exposure, it is difficult to precisely synchronize the IR LED pulse with the exposure time across the entire frame, resulting in less effective ambient light suppression compared to Global Shutter.

    \

Impact on IR LED Current

From the perspective of energy utilization efficiency:

  • Global Shutter: High temporal efficiency (ηtemporal ≈ 1) → Can use low average current
  • Rolling Shutter: Low temporal efficiency (ηtemporal < 1) → Needs to increase average current for compensation

Therefore, under the design goal of pursuing "minimum IR LED current", Global Shutter is generally the more advantageous architectural choice.

\ Impact on Windows Hello

For biometric systems like Windows Hello that have extremely high requirements for image quality and real-time performance, Global Shutter is usually the better choice. It provides distortion-free images, ensuring the accuracy of facial features under various user behaviors (like rapid head turning), and effectively improves the signal-to-noise ratio through precise synchronization mechanisms. Although Global Shutter is more complex in pixel structure and readout architecture, potentially increasing the sensor's own power consumption, its performance in suppressing ambient light and avoiding motion blur at the system level (especially IR LED power consumption) makes it a key factor in meeting the stringent Windows Hello certification standards. While Rolling Shutter has a lower cost, its image distortion in dynamic scenes and weaker ambient light suppression capabilities may require more complex software algorithms to compensate, increasing the overall complexity and risk of the system.

\

4. IR Camera System Deconstruction and Optical Link

The IR LED and Sensor are located on the same side (camera side). This means the optical link is a "round-trip" process, and its impact on energy transfer efficiency is doubled:

  1. Emission Path: IR LED emits infrared light → penetrates Cover Lens → illuminates the face.
  2. Reception Path: Face reflects infrared light → penetrates Cover Lens again → penetrates IR BPF → enters lens (F No) → reaches Sensor receiving end.

\ In this optical path, the Cover Lens is penetrated twice (once for emission and once for reception), producing a square attenuation effect; while the IR BPF is only penetrated once at the receiving end. This structure optimizes the energy efficiency at the emission end, reducing the burden on the IR LED.

Figure 1: IR Camera System Efficiency Optimization Cross-Section (Image Source: AI Generated)

5. System Energy Equation: From Qualitative to Quantitative Design

To achieve "minimum IR LED current, maximum energy transfer efficiency", a computable engineering model is needed to quantify the impact of each parameter. Rewriting the infrared energy (Signal) equation received by the sensor into a form with I_LED as the target variable is as follows:

Where:

  • k: System constant, including geometric factors, etc.
  • I_LED: IR LED drive current.
  • η_LED: IR LED photoelectric conversion efficiency (mW/A), affected by non-idealities.
  • T_cover^2: Infrared transmittance of the Cover Lens, squared due to the round-trip optical path.
  • R_face: Reflectance of the face to infrared light (approx. 40-60%).
  • d: Complete optical path distance, including the emission distance from IR LED to face and the reception distance from face reflection to Sensor. Because light travels back and forth, energy attenuates with the square of the distance (1/d²), where d can be approximated as the distance between the IR LED/Sensor and the face (since the IR LED and Sensor are adjacent, their distances to the face are approximately equal).
  • T_BPF: Transmittance of the IR Bandpass Filter.
  • F: Lens F-number, its inverse square represents energy gain.
  • QE: Quantum efficiency of the sensor in the NIR band.
  • t_exp: Exposure time.
  • η_temporal: Temporal efficiency, representing the proportion of IR LED emitted energy that falls within the effective exposure time (Global Shutter is close to 1, Rolling Shutter is less than 1).
  • G_bin: Sensitivity improvement multiplier brought by Binning mode.

This equation is the foundation for Design Budget and Current Estimation. The design goal is to maximize the product of the denominator of the equation to minimize the required IR LED drive current.

\

6. In-Depth Analysis of Core Hardware Parameters and Optimization Weights

After understanding the system energy equation, the following will deeply analyze each key parameter and rank their weights based on their impact on energy transfer efficiency to guide the design optimization direction.

\

6.1 Parameter Optimization Sensitivity Ranking

In situations with limited resources, it is crucial to prioritize optimizing the parameters that have the greatest impact on energy efficiency. The following table ranks the optimization potential of each parameter based on rules of thumb:

\ Design Priority: Priority should be given to parameters like F No, Binning Mode, Shutter Type, Sensor QE that can bring "passive gain" or "high-efficiency conversion". IR LED Current should be used as a final fine-tuning method, not the primary optimization goal.

\

6.2 Light Source Emission End: Precise Energy Delivery and Non-Ideality Considerations

  • IR LED Current:

    • Optimization Strategy: Use Strobe mode precisely synchronized with Sensor exposure to ensure energy is concentrated within the effective time, reducing average power consumption.

    • Practical Pitfalls: IR LED Non-Idealities:

    1.Efficiency Droop: As current increases, the photoelectric conversion efficiency (lm/W or mW/A) of the IR LED actually decreases. This means "adding current does not equal proportionally adding light", and blindly increasing current leads to energy waste.

    2.Thermal Coupling: Under long-term high-current operation, the temperature of the IR LED will rise significantly. High temperatures will cause the output optical power of the IR LED to drop, thereby reducing the system's SNR performance.

    3.Wavelength Shift: The emission wavelength of the IR LED will shift towards longer wavelengths as temperature rises (e.g., 940nm → 950nm). If the center wavelength of the IR BPF is fixed, wavelength shift will cause the BPF filtering efficiency to drop, and a large amount of energy will be directly filtered out, severely affecting energy transfer efficiency.

    • Conclusion: Under high current and high temperature conditions, the photoelectric efficiency and wavelength stability of the IR LED will decrease. Therefore, simply increasing the current is not an effective strategy and may even reduce the overall energy efficiency of the system.

    Figure 2: IR LED Non-Ideality Effect Diagram (Image Source: AI Generated)

  • IR LED Distance (Physical Distance): Optimize the distance between the LED and Sensor to balance parallax and illumination uniformity, avoiding being forced to increase overall current due to insufficient local illumination. A distance that is too close may cause internal light leakage (Flare), while a distance that is too far may cause uneven illumination.

    \

6.3 Optical Transmission: Combating Square Attenuation

  • Cover Lens T (Transmittance): Use high-quality AR coating, striving for NIR transmittance > 95%. Because the Cover Lens is penetrated twice, its total transmittance is T^2. For every 1% increase in transmittance (e.g., from 94% to 95%), the total energy can increase by about (0.95^2 / 0.94^2) - 1 ≈ 2.1%, which can significantly reduce the demand for LED current.

  • IR BPF (Bandpass Filter) and Angle of Incidence (AOI) Blue Shift Effect: The center wavelength needs to precisely match the light source to maximize passband transmittance and block ambient noise. However, in practical design, the impact of the Angle of Incidence (AOI) of light on the BPF transmittance curve must be considered. When light enters the BPF at a non-perpendicular angle (e.g., 30 degrees), its transmittance curve will experience a Blue Shift, meaning the center wavelength shifts towards shorter wavelengths.

  • 0 Degree Incidence (Center Area): Light enters perpendicularly, the center wavelength of the BPF precisely matches the design value (e.g., 940nm), and energy transfer efficiency is highest.

  • 30 Degree Incidence (Corner Area): Due to the lens's Field of View (FOV) and Chief Ray Angle (CRA), light reaching the edge of the sensor has a larger angle of incidence. According to the principle of thin-film interference, a 30-degree angle of incidence may cause the center wavelength of a 940nm BPF to shift towards shorter wavelengths by more than 30nm. If the BPF bandwidth is too narrow, the effective 940nm signal will be partially or even completely filtered out, resulting in severe energy loss caused by spectral mismatch in the corner area (Spectral Mismatch Loss).

  • Design Countermeasures: This forms a dual challenge with the drop in corner MTF. To compensate for the corner energy loss caused by angle blue shift, it is necessary to select an appropriate BPF bandwidth (FWHM) during design, or adopt a design where the center wavelength is slightly shifted towards longer wavelengths (e.g., 945nm), to ensure that the 940nm signal still falls within the high-transmittance passband at large angles of incidence. At the same time, high refractive index coating materials can be selected to reduce angle sensitivity.

    Figure 3: BPF Angle Blue Shift Effect Diagram (Image Source: AI Generated)

6.4 Receiving End: Passive Gain and Sensitivity

  • F No (F-number) and MTF Trade-off: According to the camera equation, a large aperture (low F-number) is the most effective means to obtain passive energy gain. The energy received by the sensor is proportional to 1/F^2. For example, upgrading from F/2.8 to F/2.0 provides an energy gain of about (2.8^2 / 2.0^2) ≈ 1.96 times, directly reducing the reliance on LED current by nearly 50%. However, an excessively large aperture will increase aberrations, leading to a drop in corner MTF (Modulation Transfer Function). During design, a balance must be struck between "improving SNR" and "maintaining corner MTF" to ensure that facial features in edge areas remain clear. (Note: In practice, SFR curves are often used to approximate MTF measurements, but it should be noted that SFR includes the impact of digital processing and is fundamentally different from pure optical MTF.)

    Figure 4: F No and MTF Trade-off Diagram (Image Source: AI Generated)

  • Sensor QE (Quantum Efficiency): Select NIR-enhanced sensors (QE > 40%) to improve photoelectric conversion efficiency. High QE means each photon can generate more electrons, directly increasing signal strength.

  • Pixel Size / Binning Mode: Utilize large pixels or 2x2 Binning to improve sensitivity. Under the premise of meeting the 320x320 resolution requirement, Binning can reduce the required illumination energy by several times (e.g., 2x2 Binning can increase sensitivity by 4 times), but attention must be paid to the impact Binning may have on spatial resolution.

\

7. Noise Model and SNR Optimization: The Challenge of Ambient IR

Signal-to-Noise Ratio (SNR) is a key metric for measuring image quality, defined as the ratio of Signal to Noise. The main sources of Noise include:

Where:

  • Shot noise: Already directly represented by ==Signal== in the formula, its value is equal to the variance of Shot noise, so it does not need to be squared again inside the square root.

  • Nread (Read Noise): The noise of the sensor's readout circuit itself. In the formula, ==Nread^2== represents the variance of the read noise, which is usually a fixed value.

  • N_ambient (Ambient Infrared Noise): Represents the variance of ambient infrared noise, i.e., additional photon noise, so it does not need to be squared again inside the square root. This is an extremely critical and often overlooked noise source in practice, especially under high ambient light conditions.

    \

Sources and Impacts of Ambient IR

Main sources of Ambient IR include:

  • Sunlight: Especially in outdoor environments, the infrared radiation in sunlight is very strong. The advantage of choosing the 940nm band is that this band is located in the Water Absorption Band of the solar spectrum. This means water vapor in the atmosphere absorbs most of the 940nm solar infrared, significantly reducing the ambient infrared noise entering the sensor, thereby improving the system's SNR performance in outdoor environments.

  • Indoor Lighting: Some indoor lighting (like halogen lamps) also emits significant infrared light.

  • Multi-Device Interference: In scenarios like conference rooms or open office spaces, when multiple devices equipped with IR Cameras (like laptops) operate simultaneously, the IR LED light sources emitted by other devices may become ambient noise for the local device.

    \

Under high ambient light (especially outdoor) conditions, Ambient IR will dominate the noise floor. At this time, simply increasing the IR LED current has limited improvement on SNR, because both signal and noise increase simultaneously, and the SNR improvement is not obvious.

Key Conclusion: In the ambient noise dominated regime, the sensitivity of SNR to IR LED current drops significantly.

\ At this time, the following strategies must be used for joint optimization:

  • IR BPF Bandwidth: Choose a narrower BPF bandwidth to precisely match the emission wavelength of the IR LED, maximizing the blocking of out-of-band ambient infrared noise. (Note: This needs to be balanced with the aforementioned "BPF Angle Blue Shift". While a bandwidth that is too narrow can effectively block ambient noise, it may cause effective signals incident at large angles at the edges to be filtered out. In practice, an optimal trade-off must be made based on the lens CRA and ambient light intensity.)

  • Temporal Filtering: Through multi-frame image stacking and averaging, effectively reduce random noise (like Shot Noise and Read Noise), but the effect on Ambient IR Noise is limited.

  • Strobe and Ambient Light Alternating Exposure: Utilize IR LED Strobe mode to alternately expose under two modes: with IR LED illumination and without IR LED illumination. By subtracting the images, the impact of ambient light is eliminated, extracting a pure IR image.

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8. Design Flow: Actionable Design Methodology

To translate the above theoretical analysis into a practical design flow, it is recommended to follow these steps to systematically optimize the IR Camera system, achieving minimum IR LED current and meeting Windows Hello certification requirements:

Step 1: Define Target SNR & MTF

  • Purpose: Clarify the image quality standards the system needs to achieve.
  • Practical Considerations: Based on the Windows Hello HLK specifications, for example, Spatial SNR must be > 30dB in an 80 lux environment, while ensuring center MTF and corner MTF meet the minimum requirements for feature extraction.

Step 2: Set Boundary Conditions (Worst-Case Scenario)

  • Purpose: Simulate the most severe usage environment to ensure design robustness.
  • Practical Considerations:
  • Maximum Usage Distance: For example, the face is 70cm away from the module (i.e., the complete optical path from IR LED to face and face reflection to Sensor).
  • Maximum Ambient Light (Ambient IR) Noise: For example, infrared radiation under strong outdoor sunlight.

Step 3: Calculate Required Signal

  • Purpose: Based on the target SNR and noise levels under boundary conditions, back-calculate the minimum signal strength required by the sensor.

  • Practical Considerations: Use the modified SNR formula:

Here, Signal needs to be solved iteratively

Step 4: Apply Energy Equation

  • Purpose: Substitute the calculated required ==Signal== into the system energy equation to find the initial I_LED required to achieve that ==Signal== under current hardware parameters.

  • Practical Considerations:

Step 5: Sensitivity-Based Optimization

  • Purpose: Utilize Sensitivity Ranking to systematically adjust hardware parameters to minimize I_LED.
  • Practical Considerations:
  • Priority: Prioritize parameters like F No, Binning Mode, and Sensor QE that can bring "passive gain" or "high-efficiency conversion".
  • Avoid Blindly Increasing Current: IR LED Current should be used as a final fine-tuning method, not the primary optimization goal, to avoid non-ideality issues like efficiency droop, thermal coupling, and wavelength shift.
  • Dual Verification of Corner Energy and Clarity: While optimizing F No to improve center SNR, it is necessary to verify whether corner MTF meets requirements, and consider the edge energy loss caused by BPF Angle of Incidence (AOI) Blue Shift, ensuring the quality of feature extraction across the entire facial area.

This design flow will help engineers establish a clear optimization path early in the design phase, avoiding repeated debugging later and significantly improving development efficiency.

Figure 5: Design Flow Diagram (Image Source: AI Generated)

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9. Conclusion

Windows Hello certification is not just a stacking of specifications, but a precise energy budget battle and a balance of optical quality. By introducing the System Energy Equation for quantitative analysis, and prioritizing high-impact parameters like F No, Binning Mode, Shutter Type (Temporal Efficiency), and Sensor QE based on Sensitivity Ranking, maximum energy transfer efficiency can be effectively achieved with minimum IR LED current. In particular, the high temporal efficiency brought by Global Shutter is a key architectural choice for reducing average system power consumption.

However, while pursuing ultimate efficiency, the overall robustness of the system must be considered. During the design process, one must be vigilant against the challenges of IR LED non-idealities (like thermal coupling and wavelength shift) and Ambient IR noise; more crucially, while optimizing center SNR, one must properly handle the corner MTF drop brought by large apertures, and the edge energy loss caused by BPF Angle of Incidence (AOI) Blue Shift due to large incident angles. Only by achieving a perfect balance between "energy efficiency" and "edge feature clarity" can an efficient, low-power, and secure biometric system be built, successfully passing Windows Hello certification and enhancing user experience.

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Disclaimer

The content of this article is based on the author's years of practical experience in Windows Hello IR Camera system design and imaging engineering. All content is based on the author's experience and public information, including text and images, and is intended to provide technical exchange and reference in areas such as IR Camera system efficiency optimization, optical link energy budget, shutter temporal efficiency, and BPF angle blue shift. The standards, test methods, and product names mentioned in the text are for illustrative purposes only and do not represent any form of recommendation or endorsement. All illustrations, unless otherwise noted for their source, are AI-generated. Readers should carefully evaluate relevant information based on their own needs and professional judgment. The author is not responsible for any direct or indirect losses arising from the use of the content of this article.

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Most Production Outages Have Nothing to Do With Bad Code

2026-04-17 02:37:15

The last three outages at my company had nothing to do with logic errors. One was a DNS TTL that nobody updated after a migration. One was an expired TLS certificate on a Saturday. One was a config file that pointed to a staging database for eleven days before anyone noticed.

No bugs. No broken functions. No failed tests. The code was fine. Everything else wasn't.

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The Pattern Nobody Talks About

Pull up your last ten incident postmortems. Count how many trace back to an actual code defect - a wrong conditional, a bad loop, a missing null check.

Now count how many trace back to configuration, infrastructure, deployment timing, or human miscommunication. I've done this exercise with six different teams. The split is roughly the same every time: 70-80% of production incidents originate outside application code.

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The Categories repeat:

  • Config drift. A value changed in one environment but not another. Nobody noticed because the config isn't reviewed like code.
  • Certificate and credential expiry. Something expired. The alert either didn't exist or went to an inbox nobody checks.
  • Deployment sequencing. Service A deployed before Service B, creating a 90-second window where the API contract was broken.
  • DNS and networking. A TTL cached too long. A security group rule got tightened. A load balancer health check was too aggressive.
  • Dependency failure. A third-party service went down. Your retry logic either didn't exist or made things worse.

These aren't exotic failure modes. They're mundane. That's what makes them dangerous - nobody builds defenses against boring problems.

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Why We Keep Missing This

Developer culture worships code quality. Code reviews, type systems, linting, test coverage - we’ve built an entire industry around making sure the code is correct.

That’s great. The code should be correct. But we’ve accidentally created a blind spot.

When production breaks, the first instinct is to search the recent commits. "What changed in the code?" But often, nothing changed in the code. Something changed in the environment, the config, the network, or the timing - and nobody tracks those changes with the same rigor.

Config changes don’t go through pull requests at the most companies. Infrastructure changes happen in consoles, not version-controlled files. Deployment order is “whatever finished the pipeline first.” Certificate renewals live on a spreadsheet or, worse, in someone’s memory.

We've professionalized one layer of the stack and left the rest to hope. Three Things That Actually Reduce Outages Forget adding more unit tests. If 75% of your outages aren't code bugs, more code tests won't move the needle. Here's what will.

1. Treat config like code. Literally.

Every configuration value that touches production should be version-controlled, reviewed, and diffable. Not "stored in a wiki." Not "documented somewhere." Checked into a repo with a history you can search when something breaks at 2 AM.

This includes environment variables, feature flags, DNS records, firewall rules, and service mesh configs. If changing it can break production, it deserves the same review process as a code change.

The teams I've seen do this well use a dedicated config repo with mandatory approvals. Overkill? Maybe. But they also have 60% fewer config-related incidents.

2. Build an expiry calendar that actually works.

TLS certificates. API keys. OAuth tokens. Domain registrations. Third-party contract renewals. Every one of these has an expiry date, and every one of them will eventually surprise you.

The fix is boring: a single calendar (not a spreadsheet, not a Slack reminder) with automated alerts at 90, 60, and 30 days before expiry. Assign each item an owner. If the owner leaves the company, the item gets reassigned that same week.

I've watched a 200-person engineering org go down for four hours because a wildcard certificate expired. The renewal took eight minutes. The four hours were spent figuring out what happened.

3. Practice deployment ordering, not just deployment.

Most teams test whether each service deploys correctly in isolation. Few teams test what happens when services deploy in the wrong order, or when one service deploys, and another doesn't.

The fix: document your deployment dependency graph. Which services need to be deployed before which? What happens during the gap between deployments? If Service A expects a field that Service B hasn’t started sending yet, you have a sequence bomb.

Contract testing helps here - verify that the expected interface between services holds before deploying either one. But even a simple checklist of "deploy B before A" taped to the deployment runbook prevents the most common version of this failure.

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The Uncomfortable Implication

If most outages aren't code problems, then most reliability improvements aren't code improvements either.

That means the highest-leverage work for system reliability is often the least glamorous: config management, certificate tracking, deployment sequencing, dependency health checks. Nobody gets promoted for building a certificate renewal calendar. But it prevents more outages than a thousand unit tests.

The best infrastructure teams I've worked with spend less than half their reliability budget on code quality. The rest goes to operational hygiene - the boring stuff that keeps the lights on when everything around your code is trying to turn them off.

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One Exercise Worth Doing This Week

Open your incident tracker. Tag every incident from the last six months as either "code defect" or "operational/config/infra." Count the split.

If your numbers look like everyone else's, you'll find that your biggest reliability risk isn't in your codebase. It's in everything you haven't been paying attention to.