Photon counting in one or in arrays of pixels is useful in a number of applications, from more traditional ones, such as low-light-level and fluorescence imaging, superresolution microscopy, 3D time-of-flight sensing, and NIR optical tomography [1-6], to niche applications, such as voltage-sensitive-dye (VSD)-based imaging [7,8], particle image velocimetry [9], instantaneous gas imaging [10,11], fluorescence-based time-resolved imaging (both single-and multiphoton, and lifetime, and correlation based) [12][13][14], and applications based on time domain interferometry, like the Hanbury Brown-Twiss interferometry, for the analysis of microlight and macrolight sources as well as for stellar bodies [15][16][17]. In this context, and in the context of consumer applications, compactness, weight, and power consumption have prompted a boost to the development of solid-state photon-counting sensors, where CONTENTS