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Nokia 808 pureview what do you think and are you getting one?
gregrichards
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What do you think of Nokia's new 808 Pureview with a 41 megapixel sensor?
I really like this phone it takes great pictures from the ones I have seen online. I would really like one but don't have £499 spare hopefully I will pick one up at some point in the future. I know they are planning to put them in the lumia phones but I'm not crazy about the interface.
If anyone manages to get one when they are released let me know what you think of it.
I really like this phone it takes great pictures from the ones I have seen online. I would really like one but don't have £499 spare hopefully I will pick one up at some point in the future. I know they are planning to put them in the lumia phones but I'm not crazy about the interface.
If anyone manages to get one when they are released let me know what you think of it.
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The vast majority of people don't need to take 41MP photos - and those who do wouldn't use a phone to do it. If Nokia were really trying to improve cameraphones, they'd be focused on adding optical zoom, not just cramming in extra pixels.
Not to mention, it runs a dead-end OS that wasn't even any good back when it was actually relevant.
They've said they'll bring out WP7 PureView handsets in the future, you're probably best saving your money for one of them.
You make some valid points it will be interesting to see how it sells.
1) Nokia Rich Recording - The capability to record sound with no deformation at around 140-145db. The majority of existing smartphones record up to 110db.
2) FM transmitter - Nokia the single company to contain it so you be able to listen to music with your car stereo with no cables.
The pictures produced are stunning, check out gsmarena and cnet Asia for some proper reviews than the fanboy rants about the OS.
Yes, it is a genuine 41mp sensor, taking images at 38mp (4:3) or 34mp at 16:9.
The images really are stunning in the 5 & 8 mp pureview mode, as has been said check out gsmarena and cnets reviews.
Those Nikon "pro" DSLRs are still far from high end imaging - if you go for full frame cameras, you can get 40, 60 or 80 mp camera backs that have options very similar to pureview. The only catch with those is the cost - between £15 and £25k. Just for the back. Body and lenses required ....
You've completely missed the point.
Optical zoom is not practical in a small body; invariably it offers horribly compromised optics (look at most compact cameras with folded optics, far from optimal).
The actual quality of images this 808 takes are equal to some bridge cameras, so its well ahead of probably every single dedicated compact camera on the market.
As for it being a dead-end OS that wasn't even any good back then ..... definitely not true. And you obviously haven't used any recent Symbian devices, the interface is good, fast, easy to use. To be honest anyone who finds it harder to use than Android needs a brain check.
Wish people would stop confusing the OS with the UI. Two separate elements.
The WP7 pureview devices won't offer anything like the resolution of the 808 - they will hopefully be good, but not as good as the 808.
http://www.gsmarena.com/pureview_blind_test-review-773.php
http://blog.gsmarena.com/nokia-808-pureview-vs-olympus-e-pl2-vs-canon-5d-mark-iii-vs-apple-iphone-4s-38mp-shootout/
http://mynokiablog.com/2012/06/15/cnet-nokia-808-pureview-vs-panasonic-lumix-dmc-lx5/
http://www.amazon.co.uk/Nokia-PureView-Free-Mobile-Phone/dp/B0080E5G9I/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1340106802&sr=8-1
Except they don't know for sure when it'll be released. Everywhere listing it for the UK is giving a different date. Amazons date has slipped a few times, and even the cost may not be definite.
That Nikon is 'full frame'.
You're talking about medium-format systems which are completely different.
Medium-format systems have sensors about the same size as the PureView's screen, that's pretty much the only connection between the two.
Also, to say that the Nikon is far from high-end imaging is simply wrong.
A £100 phone running an OS with a clear expiry date and a dearth of apps, being sold for the same money as iPhones, One Xs and Galaxy S3s because it features the amazing new features of interpolation and digital zoom (features that proper digital cameras moved away from years ago).
I think I've got the point exactly right.
And it is most definitely a gimmick, the fact that (as you said yourself) Nokia have no intention to produce any more handsets with such high-resolution sensors is proof of that - if it really were the ideal solution for quality cameraphone hardware then they wouldn't be dropping it and they certainly wouldn't be releasing the one example of it as a Symbian handset.
100,000 apps is not a dearth, its just not as many as iOS and Android. Is the only important benchmark for a phone the number of apps available?
So what if its a "gimmick"? This gimmick happens to have resulted in one of the best compact cameras ever released to the market. Its audio recording abilities, along with its low light imaging, will make it absolutely perfect for gig recording (something that iPhones, One Xs and S3s cannot even begin to do well).
It is something of a technology demonstration, and will be cut down for use in WP devices - but Nokia have shown that without a doubt they are the clear leaders in mobile imaging, and have bettered Canon/Nikon/Sony in the pocketable camera stakes. Which even you would have to admit is quite an achievement.
What do you suggest is done for zoom on a mobile? Folded optics give lousy quality. Normal compact lenses popping out of the body would be too bulky.
I've tried searching around and can't seem to find anything one way or the other.
I know that recently the Windows Phone Marketplace became the third app store to pass 100k apps (well, app submissions) - but then Symbian never had a single main app store in the way newer OSs do, so that's not conclusive either way.
I'm just not convinced.
I've seen too many cameras that seem to produce great images only to find that when you start to use them in real life, they don't measure up.
And I've seen even more in the way of Nokia handsets released to some sort of fanfare only to turn out to be complete mess.
Ha ha, if I could answer that question I'd be off making millions instead of sitting here debating with you
Liquid lenses seem to come around from time-to-time as a potential solution to producing zoom lenses that fit small devices but nothing ever seems to come of it.
If it was priced well they would have a hit on their hands I think.
Just what I've read over the last year, sorry but cannot find links to the relevant articles.
Symbian has had the Nokia/Ovi/whatever brand store for years, in exactly the same way that Android and iOS do.
Nokias big mistake was in their initial "offering", which was an app store of a kind before the iPhone was released. Except it was a complete and utter mess.
I've seen enough in the way of real world results from the 808 to demonstrate it does meet up to Nokias claims - it really is very, very good.
I was surprised that it somehow beat the Olympus micro 4/3rds in the gsmarena blind test, although they did then slightly discredit themselves with the subsequent comparison.
Liquid lenses have been talked about for a while - they do seem to have potential, I realise thats its quite fundamental research .... but it does seem to all be talk.
Personally I wouldn't've pegged it as high as that but then again, there was never the single cohesive focal point that the other OSs have - even the Ovi Store (which I think was the first attempt we'd recognise as an app store nowadays from Nokia) was only launched a little over 3 years ago.
So I suppose there could be a lot of apps just spread across a large number of sources.
See I don't agree with the outcome of the test, the Olympus is not only better in my opinion but obviously so.
There's just more detail to it's shots than the PureView's.
The PureView IMO is clearly better than the One X and the N8 (one of those Nokia handsets I touched upon before, launched to a great deal of fanfare but pretty poor in reality) but the Galaxy S3 and the iPhone4S give it a much closer run for it's money.
Maybe the problem if the perceived need for a zoom range.
Even fixed 'steps' of 2x, 3x, 5x or whatever would be a significant advantage over no optical zoom at all.
Not sure about the S3 and 4S - neither of those is even up with the N8 on overall still imaging ability, not even vaguely close to the 808s ability ....
I've never been happy with a 2 or 3x zoom on any of my cameras (even the DSLR with its original kit lens, although the lens was rubbish). 5x has always struck me as the usable minimum zoom.
Maybe it will happen, but it sure does look like its going to take a good while longer.
I disagree, I think the 4S takes better pictures, for example:
iPhone 4S
Nokia N8
Zoom in and look at the text on the books for example, the iPhone it's very readable but it's very jaggy and blurry on the Nokia N8.
if you think the picture from the 4s is better than the N8 you are blinded by your prejudice.
one of the worst informed posts you've written in a long time.
there is a white paper from nokia that explains the technology.
http://i.nokia.com/blob/view/-/1486928/data/2/-/PureView-imaging-technology-whitepaper.pdf
But the rest of the iPhone pic is awful - and as the pics have been taken at different angles it's hard to do a proper comparison but I can easily see there is much better colour and detail on the Nokia pic.
laughable.
I recall reading a comparison to a 12mp camera with everything mainly highlighted where the iPhone performed better.
At a later date I noticed technical comments there highlighting that the 12mp phone had actually been set to compress down to 9mp on on the fly.
That was at one of the better websites but why would a reviewer force a camera to crudely downgrade its pictures and not even mention it?
Obviously that 41mp camera can scissor size down to 5mp and supply photos many times better than any digital zoom.
On a side note, anyone using smartphones for recording holiday videos benefits from massive memory. SD cards cough cough.