Monday 4 February 2013

Compare with iphone5 camera Quality to other smartphones

Compare with iphone5 camera Quality to other smartphones

For many of the people scooping up an iPhone 5, its 8-megapixel camera will be their go-to shooter. But how much of an improvement is it over the iPhone 4S? And how does it compare to the smartphone—and point and shoot—competition?

We tested the iPhone 5's camera against the iPhone 4S, the top Samsung Galaxy S III, HTC One X, and Nokia's preposterously high-resolution, 41MP 808 PureView. And just to see if it can really hold its own with high-quality, pocketable point-and-shoots we put it up against the Canon S100.

Can the iPhone 5 keep up with (or outshoot) these cameras in everyday conditions? We tested two very common situations: a daytime cityscape, and a very low-light close-up in the darkest corner of the office. Below, we've collected a series of side-by-side comparisons. The area inside the loupe will be at 100-percent resolution if you click to expand each of the images. The cameras all have slightly different focal lengths and stock apertures, but we did our best match the field-of-view in each of the shots. Beyond image quality, we were also interested in the speed of each camera's performance.

Design and performance
The main addition to the iPhone's camera arsenal in iOS 6 is panorama shooting. But otherwise the camera app's interface is the same as ever, which is to say crazy simple. Every other camera we used has way more customizability—from manual function controls to continuous shooting modes to additional scene settings. The iPhone just takes care of all of that for you—or expects apps like Instagram or Camera+ to provide filters and processing for tinkerers.

That makes the iPhone 5 an easy camera to use, but that simplicity turns out to be a major drawback when shooting in the dark. Every other camera in our test has a built-in low-light setting that use fancy tricks to improve image quality and reduce noise and distortion.

On the upside, the iPhone 5's A6 processor makes a huge difference compared to the A5 in the iPhone 4S. The camera responds faster to touch and when you hammer on the volume button repeatedly to release the shutter, the iPhone responds like a blazing semi-automatic weapon.

All that being said, what really matters is the final product. So how does the iPhone 5 snapper stack up?

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