Do you remember when back in the day, one of your friends would
whip out his or her mobile and brag about its camera, which amounted to just
around 2 megapixels? Yes, such was the folly of the mid-2000s, but as
technology marched on, so did the capacity of the cameras that were in them.
Your once- prized 1.3MP is now but the front-facing call camera of many a
Smartphone in today’s mobile world.
Nokia was such a company that
heavily invested on cameras in their phones. From their early color phones like
the 6600, to the classic N-series devices like the N90, there has always been a
niche that the Finns filled with their Carl Zeiss-lensed photography aids that doubled as ringers. Fourteen
months ago, they solidified that claim with the 12-megapixel N8.
It was no surprise that
people were once again in for a shock when Nokia showed up at theMobile World Congress (MWC) in Barcelona last week. Having been in
the backburner for quite some time, the boys from Espoo delivered something
that once again left consumers with their mouths agape. It came in the form of
the Nokia PureView 808 – a 41-megapixel monster of a phone!
Now if you are currently
questioning my sanity, or on a lesser scale, Nokia’s, for making such a claim,
let me tell you that all this hype is true. The 808
PureView has a 41MP Carl Zeiss camera at the heart of it. That’s three times
the resolution of their last camera phone – the now-venerable N8.
With
a 16:9 resolution of 7728×4354 pixels
(7152×5368 in 4:3), it
can literally take billboard-sized photos and still retain quality. In fact,
this camera blows out nearly every point-and-shoot camera in the market, and
can even go toe-to-toe with low and mid-range SLRs – keep in mind that the
Nikon CX sensor is 1”; the PureView’s is at 1/1.2”, and the highest-end
point-and-shoot models that are offered today have 1/1.7” sensors. Come to
think of it, with this kind of power, it makes the compact camera seem
obsolete.
You may be thinking about how a phone could handle such massive
photos. Well, frankly, it doesn’t. While the PureView has a maximum image sensor size of
41MP, only 38 of them are actually usable at any given time. And even
then, the phone usually takes 2, 5 or 8MP pictures. But don’t be alarmed – it
still has the bang for its buck.
What the PureView does,
however, is a process called ‘oversampling’. In this process, the big 38-megapixel picture is
compressed into a smaller scale, with all those pixels squeezed at a ratio of
8:1 – which means that when you zoom in, instead of blowing up the pixels, you
simply decompress the squeezed ones. That means even at 3x zoom, the picture is
still at pin-sharp 5 or 8MP. Add this factor to the fact that it records video
at 30 frames per second in 1080p, and you got yourself a phone that never runs
out of pixels. To top it off, with thePureView function off, you
can take pictures in all its 7700-pixel glory.
The rest of the phone is comparably Spartan to the massive
camera. A 4” ClearBlack AMOLED screen with 360×640 resolution isn’t exactly
breath-taking, and neither is the 1.3 GHz processor or the 512 MBs of RAM. It
has a 16GB internal capacity, with an SD-micro slot that is expandable up to
32GB, for all those pictures. It’s also chunkier than the N8, and comes
in black, white and red.
Despite Nokia’s declaration
of the death of their longtime OS Symbian in favor of Windows Phone, the
PureView packs the latest version of Nokia Belle – which brings into question
why they continue to invest in what they call a “dead” system. Well, fact of
the matter is this – the technologies fielded by these Symbian phones will
eventually fall into the platforms of their WP successors. Nonetheless, it
still got the Best New Mobile Handset, Device or
Tablet award at
MWC 2012 – not bad for a Symbian!
The verdict is this – while
the rest of the mobile world is scrambling with their Androids and iOSes (Nokia
isn’t an exception, having committed to WP), the Finns still see the importance
and marketability of a well-built phone, and the niche that a world-beating
camera can rake in. While it would be greatly appreciated that this technology
would eventually be incorporated into Windows Phones, the humble Symbians, in
their waning days, still prove their worth as a stable, no-nonsense OS that can
run these wonders of photography.
Nokia continues the
legacy, the ode to mobile photography. And who knows – maybe the Finns
are onto something again, perhaps to reemerge themselves as a major player in
today’s competitive mobile industry. Or, should Symbian sputter and die
altogether unceremoniously in the hands of the public, this would then be but a
herald for bigger and brighter things from the former leader in the telecom
industry.
(Note to reader: This article
was originally posted by Daryll Alvero, and was reposted on our site for
sharing purposes only.)
Source: www.wheninmanila.com
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