The Citizen (Gauteng)

Phone cameras: be informed

PICTURE THIS: PHONES AS GOOD AS REGULAR CAMERAS

- GOLDSTUCK ON GADGETS Arthur Goldstuck

Here is a subjective choice of the best phone cameras in SA, based on general use. Specificat­ions courtesy

The new generation of cellphones come with so many lenses they can pretend to be as good as regular cameras. Which is right for you? Here’s a guide to the best camera phones available

Does anyone remember when Nokia boasted the best smartphone camera in the world? That was a mere six years ago, when the Nokia 1020 left anyone from Apple to Samsung in the dust with a 41 megapixel lens and the biggest light sensor seen on a phone.

Now, both Nokia and Sharp, which pioneered the phone camera with the J-Phone at the beginning of the century, are forgotten as leaders in the field.

Even so, the legacy of the 1020 was hard to shake off until other smartphone makers showed hardware advances and software genius readily compensate­d for megapixels.

This is good news and bad news: on one hand you don’t need megapixels for mega pictures; on the other, there is no specific number that tells you which phone has the better camera.

However, a combinatio­n of numbers does help.

Megapixels matter, although not by themselves. Aperture, measured in “f”, matters more as it tells you how much light the lens allows in – the smaller the number, the more light. Sensor size counts as it dictates how much light is captured. The bigger the size, the more light. Finally, and this would have been an absurd suggestion six years ago, the number of lenses counts.

When dual-lens cameras were first introduced in 2011, they were designed to take 3D photos – which no one really wanted. Consumers were demanding something seemingly simpler: better photos. Today, that is exactly what multilens cameras do, with each lens contributi­ng a different aspect to the quality of the combined image.

HTC was the first with a dual-lens camera in the One M8 four years ago, but its two average lenses didn’t necessaril­y add up to one great photo. LG was next in the G5 and G6.

It was only when Huawei partnered with Leica for dual lenses on the P9 and P9 Plus that the ability to combine images from two cameras came into its own. Now, all smartphone makers are on the same path. None of this guarantees perfect or even great photos.

It is notable that only two of the 10 phones listed have a single lens on the back, suggesting it is dual-lens arrays – or more – that have finally laid to rest the ghost of the 1020.

1. HUAWEI P20 PRO

If this phone was allowed in the US, we’d hear constant references to hitting the ball out of the park. But the rest of the world is making up for it as the specs shake up the smartphone market.

In South Africa, the P20 range outsold its cheaper predecesso­r, the P10, in the first six weeks. Expect it to lead a trend to triple-lens devices.

The P20 Pro’s front camera is the best on the market. An artificial intelligen­ce detects the type of scene being captured and optimises the settings for the scene. Leica optics on all three lenses and 3x optical zoom make this the camera to beat.

info

Back (main camera): Triple 40 MP (f/1.8, 27mm, 1/1.7”) + 20 MP B/W (f/1.6, 27mm) + 8 MP (f/2.4, 80mm), OIS, Leica optics, 3x optical zoom, phase detection and laser autofocus, LED flash.

Front (selfie camera): 24 MP (f/2.0, 26mm), 1080p.

2. SAMSUNG GALAXY S9+

There is a magic to the photos taken by the Galaxy S series all the way back to the S6 Edge. Purists dislike its artificial sharpening and saturated colours but for the average user, that translates into images that often astonish.

The latest flagship’s f1.5-2.4 variable aperture makes this the best phone on the market for lowlight photograph­y. It is the market leader in selfie features and functional­ity, offering dual-video recording for incorporat­ing selfie video into the main video.

info

GSMArena.com:

Back: Dual 12 MP (f/1.5-2.4, 26mm, 1/2.55”, 1.4μm, Dual Pixel PDAF) + 12MP (f/2.4, 52mm, 1/3.6”, 1μm, AF), OIS, phase detection autofocus, 2x optical zoom, LED flash.

Front: 8 MP (f/1.7, 25mm, 1/3.6”, 1.22μm), autofocus, 1440p@30fps, dual video call, Auto HDR.

3. SAMSUNG NOTE 8

The Note 8 just beat Apple to market with optical zoom, but it’s still the only game in town for stylus interfaces. The selfie camera

Back: Dual 12 MP (f/1.7, 26mm, 1/2.5”, 1.4μm, Dual Pixel PDAF) + 12MP (f/2.4, 52mm, 1/3.6”, 1μm, AF), OIS, phase detection autofocus, 2x optical zoom, LED flash.

Front: 8 MP (f/1.7, 25mm, 1/3.6”, 1.22μm), autofocus, 1440p@30fps, dual video call, Auto HDR.

4. APPLE IPHONE X

That absurd notch has been touted as pioneering and other

manufactur­ers have been caught up in the hype, slavishly following this gimmick for maximizing display space.

The sooner it vanishes the better, as we can then focus on what makes the X a superb phone. It has possibly the most versatile video functional­ity on a phone camera and closest to true natural colour.

info

Back: Dual: 12 MP (f/1.8, 28mm) + 12 MP (f/2.4, 52mm), OIS, phase detection autofocus, 2x optical zoom, quad-LED dual-tone flash.

Front: 7 MP (f/2.2, 32mm), 1080p@30fps, 720p@240fps, face detection, HDR.

5. SONY XPERIA XZ2

The Xperia XZ Premium was first to market with a 960 frame per second video, allowing super slow-motion, but Samsung and Huawei have both caught up. However, it matches up to any of its competitor­s for video quality and advanced imaging software.

info

Back: 19 MP (f/2.0, 25mm, 1/2.3”, 1.22μm), gyro EIS, predictive phase detection and laser autofocus, LED flash.

Front: 5 MP (f/2.2, 1/5”), gyro EIS, 1080p.

6. LG V30S THINQ

The label speaks to the artificial intelligen­ce built into the phone, similar to that in the current Huawei flagship phones. However, the spec to check is the f1.6 aperture, which puts it up there with the Samsung flagships. It also boasts superb audio software, enhancing the video experience.

info

Back: Dual: 16 MP (f/1.6, 1μm, 3-axis OIS, PDAF) + 13 MP (f/1.9, no AF), phase detection & laser autofocus, LED flash.

Front: 5 MP (f/2.2, 1/5”, 1.12μm).

7. HUAWEI MATE 10 PRO

Had the P20 pro not hit the market, this would have been a strong enough phone to claw out additional market share. With dual Leica lenses and artificial intelligen­ce, it holds its own.

info

* Back: Dual: 12 MP (f/1.6, 27mm, 1/2.9”, 1.25μm) + 20 MP B/W (f/1.6, 27mm), OIS, 2x lossless zoom, Leica optics, phase detection & laser autofocus, dual-LED dual-tone flash.

* Front: 8 MP (f/2.0, 26mm, 1/3.2”, 1.4μm), autofocus, 1080p.

Two phones with highly regarded cameras that should be mentioned, the Google Pixel 2 and 2 XL

 ??  ?? Edited by Thami Kwazi 010 492-5227 city@citizen.co.za
Edited by Thami Kwazi 010 492-5227 city@citizen.co.za
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 ??  ?? matches the S9+ for widest aperture in a front camera.
matches the S9+ for widest aperture in a front camera.

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