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The sensors are way better now. The colors are better now than that shot you posted.
But agreeing with what you said, HTC has put little effort into the cameras. I would gladly sacrifice the stupid HD video for a better still camera like the iPhone Sent from my fast as hell phone that you can only wish you had
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Re: Camera improvements?
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I like how vibrant the colors are in our pics compared to the "superior older phone"
Sent from my fast as hell phone that you can only wish you had |
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Re: Camera improvements?
I will post another one in a few.
Edit: I guess there is a little compression when you upload the pics to ppcgeeks but it looks decent none the less I think. Last edited by themuffinman; 09-29-2010 at 10:29 PM. |
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Re: Camera improvements?
My bad, it's been a while. but with these specs on the 6265i (like i said, been a while) these specs http://www.phonearena.com/htmls/Noki...e-pa_1326.html from 2005 kill todays camera. come on manufacts, lets get back to when things worked.
Last edited by jpwhre; 09-29-2010 at 10:30 PM. |
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Re: Camera improvements?
The rear camera is 8 megaPixels. That means that each one of those pixels has to be painted (turned on) with light coming though the lens. Their are two things that affect the rate in which the light is able to paint the pixels, aperature size and time the lens is opened. In a fixed aperature camera, the only variable is "lens speed" or the time the lens is open. The lens are rather large on the EVO but the pixel count is very high. For example, my daughter's low end Nikon SLR is the same pixel demsity but her lens are nearly 2 inch in diameter (50mm) (though her aperature is much smaller). She can bring in a lot more light in a shorter period of time so her shutter speed is much higher and she can take pictures of must faster moving objects. Available Ram may also be a factor, though it is hard to believe swapping is involved.
But, all in all, the Evo camera is SLOW! |
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