Video: Microsoft Camera On WP8.1, With Hints Of Nokia Camera Not A Patch On Nokia Camera UI. Cor
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We're almost exactly a year on from our first hands-on with the Nokia 808 PureView, hailed by me, somewhat tongue in cheek, as Nokia's custom design for me, from my own personal checklist. Insane camera, Xenon flash, replaceable battery, FM transmitter, large OLED screen, deafening speaker, and so on. All present and correct. One year on and, thanks to a brace of updates and third party additions, I find myself just as in love with the 808 now as when I first popped my microSIM card in...
The camera specs are more than decent, and with a big aperture low light photos technically should be good, but as it goes camera performance is more about the quality of the lens, sensor and the photo processing algorithms than mere specs.
This being my first owned phone with a fingerprint scanner, I was curious to see how it worked compared to the implementations I have seen with Samsung and Apple devices. What I noticed is that when it works, its super fast and downright good. The fingerprint sensor is located at the back of the phone near the camera, and the location is very intuitive.
While I am not an Apple fanboy, the native camera app for Apple phones may have very little control, with things improving with the new iOS 8 (which now features exposure control). However Apple iOS does support in its latest version many advanced photographic control capabilities similar to the Windows OS, which is harnessed by third party camera apps such as ProCam. My comparison table is with the native camera app, however expect some great camera apps for iOS 8 devices. The * in the apple column is to indicate that these are supported by iOS and third party apps currently do provide this capability for iOS devices.
UPDATE (1-OCt-2014): The new Nokia Denim update due rebrands the Nokia camera as the Lumia camera, and it seems the big grievences with regard to the camera performance is supposedly getting some serious fixes that should bring joy to Nokia 1520, 930, 830, 730 users! Fixes include the following and if this works, the Lumia phones are going to really improve on their camera performance! However all these features will only come for the latest snapdragon processor models, the older Snapdragon S4 plus based phones such as the Lumia 1020, 925/920, etc will not have these
You will also notice that the focus of HTC and Apple has been different in the camera department, as they have avoided the megapixel game, and opted for a larger pixel size to allow more light per pixel. HTC with a 4MP version sadly may have gone with too low a resolution, but Apple seems to have picked the correct spot with the 8MP resolution. However unlike the samsung phones, the Lumia phones with Pureview use what is called downsampling where the photos are taken at full resolution and with something called pixel binning scaled into a smaller (usually 5MP) version that results in a super sharp image (if the focus had got it right that is).
This has been and continues to be the area that Apple still takes the cake, as it provides possibly the best camera app for even the dumbest of users to end up with good photos. Samsung comes a close second is my opinion. Nokia has great cameras, the camera app in Windows is super featured, but in auto mode you may say that the photos are not that great, even with the Lumia 1020. You really need to make use of those settings to get great pictures, and for many this a bit too complex is my opinion, and an area that Nokia / Microsoft needs to put some serious work into. My current phone is a Nexus 5, not a great camera phone but a decent one, but I can take much better photos (though they may not be that great in sharpness) than the Lumia 1520, though the Nexus 5 has much less capable photography specs and the google camera app lacks many of the advanced features.
The Lumia 1520 also brought back something that was missing across the Lumia flagships prior, which was a MicroSD card slot. While the phone had 32GB internal storage, of which around 25GB was available for the user, microSD was the latest variant supporting upto 128GB cards either microSD, microSDHC or microSDXC. This would make this phone an ideal multimedia device with great storage flexibility. The 20MP camera with the capability to store in RAW format, would also require large degree of space
For the purest camera capability currently available get the Lumia 1020, even if its supposedly at the end of life by this year (which also means its not going to get any new updates from Microsoft). To me the Lumia 1020 still remains a favorite, and still question the Nokia team why they launched the Lumia 1020 with the slower chipset when they could have done better and made the Lumia 1020 a stunner.
One of the customized apps strangely is the camera app, though you download third party camera apps and even the Goggle Camera app to use. The Motorola camera app is rather primitive and can make taking decent photos with the limited camera capabilities hard. I used the Google Camera app to get better results than the native Motorola camera app.
The native camera app has a tendency to shoot fast, without getting proper focus, and though the native interface saw some tweaks with the Android 4.4.4 update, I was able to get much better focus results with the Google Camera app on the same phone.
The Nexus 5 unlike the other all other Nexus 5 phones before, has fixed the biggest gripe, and now offers a very decent camera. The phone is simple and effective in its design, the performance is great, the display is very good, and the battery life adequate. For many this should be a great phone, and with Google ensuring this device will get several more updates this is a definitely a safe and solid buy. Just make sure you are fine with the low loudspeaker performance and poor headset audio quality!
The field of view (FOV) of the camera compared to my HTC Butterfly is not great, but HTC is known for there very wide angle lenses compared to the competition. The FOV i would say is more in line with the Samsung S3 though possibly a bit better (Samsung has one of the worst wide angle implementations, specially in video mode).
While the F2.0 lens of the Butterfly gave it an edge in low light, the Z10 did fairly well but more importantly when i analyzed the photos taken (in auto mode so that i can also consider the camera app IQ) the details were fastly better on the Z10. A few reviews i read also showed comparison with the illustrious Galaxy S3, and here the Z10 does better than the S3 which is a good indication but came second to the Apple IPhone 5.
The auto focus of the camera is sufficiently fast, but compared to the speed of AF i have been exposed to this is more in line with the Sony Xperia range than the HTC and Samsung phones for auto focus speed.
The z10 is capable of recording 1080p at 30fps from its main (rear) camera, and 720p @ 30fps from its front camera. The Z10 really shines here, as the video footage under good and semi-decent light is amazing. There is very good detail and smoothness on the video, and the audio quality is also very good. The continuous auto focus does tend to hunt a bit when the subject is moving, and takes around 1-2 seconds to get the focus back. Under low light conditions the footage becomes grainy and looses the color vibrancy. However the video footage is very impressive and any Blackberry owner can be happy that the video is in par with the competition.
UPDATE: The Sense 5 update has almost all the features first seen with the HTC One, with the only exclusion being Zoe which seems to be an exclusive for phones with Ultra pixel type cameras (possibly this might be linked to the different imagechip used for these phones).
While the camera performance is good, the pictures tend to be a tad noisy, a historic issue with the HTC range in recent times. However under low light the camera performs quite well, possibly due to its large aperture lens. One of the advantages with HTC is that the Field of View (FOV) of their cameras are exceptionally wide, both in stills and videos, an advantage for group shots and landscapes compared to Samsung.
The camera interface is superbly implemented, and provides a great set of features including very easy to select camera effects to be applied on the fly. The camera also supports real time HDR, which is very useful when taking photos in testing light and bright light situations. The focus and burst performance are exceptional, as it was with the HTC One X.
The front camera features a new introduction, that would be seen on the HTC One, with a F2.0 lens for low light, and a wide angle 88 degree view for group and a 2.1MP, and is considered the best front camera in the market, even better than the one on the Galaxy S4.
The Lumia 820 is separated from its bigger brother by having a slightly smaller screen (4.3in vs 4.5), with a lower resolution (800 x 480 vs 1280 x 768), and the smaller phone misses out on the 920's PureView camera with its 'floating lens' technology.
Thankfully it does, but despite being all black, my Lumia 820 review unit sports a striking and impressive design, with the satin black finish giving it an almost rubberised feel, set against the glossy black buttons and rear camera surround.
The left side is blank, while the right is home to a volume rocker, screen lock button, and two-stage shutter button for using the camera. On top there is a 3.5mm headphone jack, and the bottom edge has a microUSB port for charging, along with a speaker and mic.
On the back, there is an 8-megapixel camera with LED flash. For me, the camera of the Lumia 820 is positioned better than it is on the Lumia 920, where it is lower and more likely to be obscured by your fingers while taking a photo.
What these numbers mean in the real world is that you can just about spot individual pixels on the 820's screen, and text doesn't quite have the same smoothness as it does on the Lumia 920 and HTC 8X, but beyond that it's a good display with wide viewing angles and accurate colour reproduction, (our camera makes the UI look orange, but it's actually bright red.) 153554b96e
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