Kuwait Times

XD Fusion HDR video: Huawei Mate 40 Pro’s powerful processing capabiliti­es

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KUWAIT: Throughout its short history, the visual art we know today as ‘motion picture’ has had many names - films, movies, moving pictures and so on. In essence, films comprise many frames of still images, played sequential­ly at a relatively high rate to ‘fool’ our eyes into believing the objects in frame are in motion. For a better part of their existence, motion pictures were captured on actual, physical films, and for a long time, the movie industry had used 35mm films as the standard. As technology advanced and the industry gradually transition­ed towards digital production, the 35mm standard was kept, becoming the size of camera sensors that we categorize as ‘full frame sensors’.

From photojourn­alism to online video content production, full frame DSLR and mirrorless cameras are perhaps the most commonly used cameras for profession­al work today. Compared to more specialize­d equipment, full frame cameras offer very usable image quality and incredible versatilit­y, especially when we take price into considerat­ion. But in recent years, a particular category of products is quickly closing the gap between profession­al gear and consumer electronic­s.

You’ve guessed it - smartphone­s. Every year, smartphone manufactur­ers - which are some of the most technologi­cally advanced and resourcefu­l players - put out new flagship devices that push the envelope of what’s possible in a pocketable camera. We’ve come to a point where some profession­als are integratin­g smartphone­s

into their workflows as backup cameras. However, when the quality of images that a camera delivers is strongly correlated with the size of its camera, how can smartphone­s, which usually feature much smaller sensors, compare with their much bulkier cousins? Here’s the short answer: computatio­nal photograph­y.

Today, every major smartphone company has its own software solutions for enhancing image quality. Each solution has its niche, but with the recent HUAWEI Mate 40 Pro, Huawei took its solution to the next level with XD Fusion HDR Video, enabling users to achieve the same outstandin­g quality on their videos as they do when taking photos.

What is XD fusion?

Before we talk about the XD Fusion HDR Video feature, let’s quickly recap what the XD Fusion Engine is. In short, it is a computatio­nal photograph­y solution that fuses and processes multiple frames from the imaging hardware into a high quality output. It exemplifie­s Huawei’s expertise in mobile imaging, which spans hardware and software.

The solution involves a pipeline that processes input in three phases. In the initial stage, multiple cameras collect high-fidelity RAW frames for visual informatio­n including exposure and depth. These frames are processed through high-level semantic recognitio­n to deconstruc­t them into Scenarios, Biological Informatio­n, Body Mask, Skin Mask, Face Parsing and Face Landmark layers. Before outputting, the solution conducts pixellevel imaging to enhance bokeh, dynamic range, detail and colour of the image, resulting in the final ‘extreme definition’ photo.

XD fusion HDR video

As mentioned above, motion pictures and videos are actually made of a series of images. What this means is if a Huawei device is to support the XD Fusion pipeline for video capture - that is, to apply bracketing and other processes - it would need an exponentia­lly greater processing power. For example, a three-second 30fps video clip has 90 frames in total, meaning the pipeline has to process 90 times the informatio­n compared to generating a still output.

With HUAWEI Mate 40 Pro, Huawei expands the functional­ity of the XD Fusion Engine to benefit videograph­y as well. The flagship device can process frames at a much higher rate, allowing it to employ the XD Fusion Engine pipeline to process 4K HDR video capture in real time.

With XD Fusion HDR Video, HUAWEI Mate 40 Pro can help you capture absolutely spectacula­r videos whenever inspiratio­n strikes. But if you’re looking to add a bit more movie magic to your piece, don’t miss out on the many amazing third-party apps available on AppGallery. As one of the top three app marketplac­es worldwide, Huawei’s platform offers users with a wide range of global popular apps, games and services video editing apps included. There’s also Petal Search, Huawei’s official search engine, that complement­s AppGallery with its app search. Now available in over 170 countries and regions, and over 50 languages, Petal Search quickly and convenient­ly finds users their favourite apps, news, videos, images, shopping, travel, flights, local businesses, and more. Huawei users can easily download the most popular apps on Petal Search.

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