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Communications Hardware

Digital Camera Vs. Camera Phone 373

An anonymous reader writes "CNet.co.uk has done some simple head-to-head testing of camera phones alongside digital cameras to see which device takes the best quality pictures. The results are surprising, with Nokia's latest handset, featuring a built-in 5-megapixel camera, taking more vibrant pictures in medium light conditions than a 10-megapixel dSLR. Of course, the pictures aren't fully representative of how the images would look at full size; but given that most people resize images to put on Flickr, we could start to see a decline in dedicated digital cameras sales and an increase in camera phone sales."
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Digital Camera Vs. Camera Phone

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  • Herd-mentality. (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday April 24, 2007 @10:53PM (#18864995)
    "Of course, the pictures aren't fully representative of how the images would look at full size; but given that most people resize images to put on Flickr, we could start to see a decline in dedicated digital cameras sales and an increase in camera phone sales.""

    Most people? How do you come to that conclusion?
    • What I want to know is while posing for the group picture...

      Was the gold kitty pretending to pull the cord as a train conductor, "choo! choo!", or...
      Was the kitty mid stride in a left leg power lift release move? If so, that would explain the monster's reaction behind him, and the delirium cast over the M&M candy's face.

      "Everybody say cheeeeeeeeeese!"
      • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday April 25, 2007 @12:20AM (#18865837)
        This is total bull. Does the OP work for Nokia? This looks like viral marketing gone wrong. Five megapixel cameras with small cheap lenses do not take more "vibrant" pictures than digital SLR cameras with Zeiss lenses. Also, the assertion that "most people resize their images to put on flikr" is ridiculous. Less than one thousandth of one per cent of images taken with digital cameras have ended up on flikr. What are the authorities the OP relies on? I don't think I'm going to take Slashdot seriously any more. It's being invaded by bs.
        • by The Great Pretender ( 975978 ) on Wednesday April 25, 2007 @01:19AM (#18866341)
          Funny, I put all my digital pictures of my kids on Flickr and have never resized a single one. All 600+ are there in their full glory for family to download as they want and create their horrible home-made cards and calendars that they then send back to me (thanks Apple for that software). As for phone cameras taking taking better pictures I have to agree with our AC friend here, bunch of bull, or at least in my experience.
          • by trisweb ( 690296 ) on Wednesday April 25, 2007 @03:09AM (#18867089) Journal
            Their definition of "better" was simply not accurate (the better camera is apparently the "one that got the white balance right"), and they probably didn't know how to take a representative shot with either the Canon P/S or dSLR cameras -- simple settings would have made the white balance correct and the colors more "vibrant" (used as their biggest measure of quality). The scene was obviously also very poorly lit.

            That said, it is good that the better camera phones got the white balance correct; that's the main problem I have with my dinky camera phone, all the photos come out too orange or blue, never what they're supposed to be. But come on, obviously, you can't say a camera phone can compete with even a midrange pocket digital camera with options and lens quality and stuff, no less any digital SLR. You just can't make stupid comparisons... but then when have we ever trusted CNet with being 'intelligent'?
            • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

              by Annirak ( 181684 )
              I heartily agree, with the exception that the N95 does have quite high quality optics.

              The problem I have with the OP is that

              The results are surprising, with Nokia's latest handset, featuring a built-in 5-megapixel camera, taking more vibrant pictures in medium light conditions than a 10-megapixel dSLR.

              The N95 post-processed the image, by CNet's own admission. Then they didn't post-process the rest of the images. If vibrancy is the top measure of quality, they should at least be running a batch auto-levels

    • Because of simple maths. A 10 megapixels image... well, ok, they count the individual RGB components in that so it's really anywhere between 2.5 and 3.3 mega-pixels. At 4/3 aspect ratio, 2048x1536 gives you a bit over 3 megapixels. How many photos that size did you see online?

      So you don't have to poll everyone on Earth, you just need to look at what pictures you see online. If you don't have to scroll up and down to view it even in 1600x1200, then it's probably not the raw output of a 10 megapixel camera. I
      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        by pla ( 258480 )
        So you don't have to poll everyone on Earth, you just need to look at what pictures you see online
        [Bolding for emphasis mine]

        Can you say "sample bias"?

        I suspect you meant that as funny, but somehow got modded insightful. But for those who don't get the joke, "Dewey Wins!"



        A lot of those things are bought not because the owners actually needed an expensive camera, but just to show that they can afford an expensive camera.

        So why didn't soooo many people waste money on expensive cameras before mo
      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        by walt-sjc ( 145127 )
        And of course nobody has EVER cropped a picture, right??? Oh, wait...
  • It's possible. (Score:5, Insightful)

    by timeOday ( 582209 ) on Tuesday April 24, 2007 @10:54PM (#18865009)
    I think there are going to be a lot of defensive replies from dSLR owners. But with enough light, a small lens and sensor can take a good picture.
    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by EvanED ( 569694 )
      My own experience is that "enough light" is absent more than it's present.

      Even if it is, the SLR gives you manual control and a far wider zoom range.
      • My own experience is that "enough light" is absent more than it's present.

        Granted. Whether due to dim lighting, fast action, camera shake, or long focal length, or (for you hockey fans) all of the above, extra light-gathering capability is very often important.

        Still, the medium light [cnet.co.uk] photos were taken in indoor lighting, and that n95 shot looks good. Its only advantage over the real camera images is better white balance, but then again proper white balance is pretty darn important. (And, yes, you cou

        • Re:It's possible. (Score:5, Insightful)

          by dgatwood ( 11270 ) on Wednesday April 25, 2007 @12:33AM (#18865977) Homepage Journal

          The white balance is all over the map. The N95 shot looks good, but only because of the subject matter. The particular objects happen to look better with a blue cast. The N95 white balance is actually way, way off. If you look at the image with a color meter, you can see that the white areas are actually very purple. The IXUS is very yellow. The Sony (as is typical for Sony) is very orange. The Nokia 6300 is a blusih green (more green than blue). The other Canon is very orange. None of them are anywhere CLOSE to correct white balance. None of them.

          The high end Canon photo looks like it is the closest to accurately representing what your eye would probably see under the same circumstances, assuming that this was shot with standard incandescent lights (i.e. almost no compensation), while the Nokia phones overcompensated (a lot), and the Sony did just what I'd expect from Sony (exactly the same amount of overly-red hue whether indoors or in broad daylight). The others didn't appear to compensate enough, but tried to compensate a little.

          As for clarity, even at this level of size reduction (which is pretty substantial), the high end Canon took slightly sharper photos, but what was most striking was that the depth of field for the Nokia N95 is so noticeably wider due to the small lens even when viewed at a reduced size. There's no real foreground or background. It is all just flat. While that might make it easier for novices to shoot photos that aren't blurry, it often makes for very visually busy photos.

          The reality is that most users probably can't tell the difference, but for those who can, I would much rather color correct the Canon photo a little than use the N95 photo. If the background were a crowd of people instead of a blank wall, you would immediately understand why. :-)

          Another thing that I'm not seeing is any mention of the exposure. There's no guarantee that camera phone images of moving objects/people in interior lighting would look anywhere near as good. I realize that it is MUCH harder to come up with a reproducible test case for a moving object (though a swining clock pendulum would be a good place to start). However, that's where larger lenses are most likely to result in a significant improvement. They allow you to gather enough llight more rapidly than with a smaller lens, allowing for a faster shutter speed without the graininess associated with a gain up.

          • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

            by timeOday ( 582209 )

            The white balance is all over the map. The N95 shot looks good, but only because of the subject matter. The particular objects happen to look better with a blue cast. The N95 white balance is actually way, way off. If you look at the image with a color meter, you can see that the white areas are actually very purple.

            Did you actually try this? I just did, with the color picker in gimp and a sample radius of 5. Here are the results for samples from: 1) over the monster's head, 2) on the ping-pong ball, 3)

        • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

          Still, the medium light [cnet.co.uk] photos were taken in indoor lighting, and that n95 shot looks good. Its only advantage over the real camera images is better white balance, but then again proper white balance is pretty darn important.

          The site notes that the N95 does postprocessing by default that results in the color vibrance. Really, I'm not surprised that a point-and-shoot camera (that it is in a phone isn't really an issue) takes decent pictures in average conditions—that's what the point of a

          • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

            by troc ( 3606 )
            Indeed, I have my DSLR set to do almost no post processing In the camera when I shoot JPEG (I shoot RAW or Jpen depending on the situation) as I and Photoshop can do a much better job late on. So, indeed JPEGs straight from my camera don't look vibrant, they aren't even that "sharp". Compared to pictures from my little compact, they look flat and a bit fuzzy. Run them through my photoshop actions however and they are vastly superior to anything a point and shoot, or camera phone can produce, given the same
      • Then there's also control over depth of field too. Really nice photographs use depth of field to good effect.
      • by BiggyP ( 466507 )
        Of course if you're using primes that zoom range disappears, and for low light conditions you'd better be using a nice prime, considering that most trashy kit lenses run to f/5.6(!!?!?!!) at the long end.

        Camera phones do an excellent job in night mode of picking up detail that my dSLR might struggle with, of course the end results are only any good as snaps but if that was the idea that's good enough.

        remember that a dSLR with a f/1.7 50mm lens has pretty shallow depth of field, then consider that the camer
        • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

          by dgatwood ( 11270 )

          remember that a dSLR with a f/1.7 50mm lens has pretty shallow depth of field, then consider that the camera phone is what, f/2.8 3.8mm, that reduces the need to focuss on anything in particular.

          As I've said before, while a wide depth of field makes it easier for newbies to take so-so pictures, it makes it impossible to take really good pictures of anything but landscape photos (and other similar shots). For more typical photography (pictures of people, objects, etc.), you don't want a wide depth of f

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by Doogie5526 ( 737968 )
      I assume they did the comparison because they consider dSLRs the standard to measure by. While it's cool to see a comparison of the two. dSLRs and camera phones are meant for completely different audiences. What will likely be displaced is point & shoot cameras.
    • by BWJones ( 18351 ) *
      It is not about having just enough light. It also comes down to the quality of the optics, how well they are engineered to control light rays and deal with internal off axis light. Also, the ability of the larger sensor size of the dSLR allows for much less noise generated by each pixel allowing for higher range. To get some idea, all images on Jonesblog [utah.edu] are shot with a dSLR (Canon 20d) and I think you will agree that images captured with dSLRs are much higher quality in both low and high light levels.
      • by BiggyP ( 466507 )
        Christ man, but the Unsharp mask down and step away from the camera! There's a point at which postprocessing becomes over the top.
        • by BWJones ( 18351 ) *
          Actually, what you are seeing in some images is the result of experiments with HDR imagery. The halos are tough to deal with when combining HDR images a bit and I am looking at ways to minimize that effect. For me, post processing is simply part of the photographic process. It was that way when I was shooting B&W film, Kodachrome and now digital.

    • Re:It's possible. (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Jeff DeMaagd ( 2015 ) on Tuesday April 24, 2007 @11:08PM (#18865133) Homepage Journal
      Before anyone jumps on me, I don't have a dSLR, nor do I know how to use one.

      Let's just say that their methodology is suspect at best:

      "All the shots were taken with devices taken straight out of the box, and we used the default settings or an automatic mode if there was one".

      A person should not be buying a dSLR if they aren't going to take the time to learn how to use it. They should just be buying a point and shoot camera. The 5MP camera, they noted that it does badly in low light and the light has a blue tinge.

      The only thing that this thing compares is the quality of scaled-down pictures.

      It's kind of pointless to clamor for a high megapixel camera if it's only going to be scaled down to VGA res for the web. 2MP would be plenty and offer plenty of oversampling for web. If you want to do good prints, then that's where a nicer camera comes into play, but they don't compare that.
      • A person should not be buying a dSLR if they aren't going to take the time to learn how to use it. They should just be buying a point and shoot camera.

        Then again, there's no reason a dSLR should not be a very good point-and-shoot camera in auto mode.

        The only thing that this thing compares is the quality of scaled-down pictures.

        In this case the white balance on the dDSLR is wrong, and scaling down has nothing to do with that. It would be one thing if you simply couldn't tell the difference in scaled-dow

      • "A person should not be buying a dSLR if they aren't going to take the time to learn how to use it. They should just be buying a point and shoot camera. The 5MP camera, they noted that it does badly in low light and the light has a blue tinge."

        This is not how they are marketed though.

        It's an article that points out the fallacy of buying the most phenomenal camera out there to take pictures. It also points out just how good pictures the camera phones can take.

        A lot of people out there still think you need an
      • Re:It's possible. (Score:5, Insightful)

        by Hawthorne01 ( 575586 ) on Tuesday April 24, 2007 @11:56PM (#18865627)

        Warning: Photography Rant Ahead!

        I am sick and tired of camera snobs thinking that more money = better pictures. Look people, I worked as a commercial still photog for 15 years, with clients like IBM, ITT Finance and Compaq and I got out around the turn of the millenium because I saw how things were headed. I just can't compete with the millions of great cheap/free photos out there now. If you all think OSS is revolutionizing the software world, wait 'til you see what websites like istockphoto and sxc.hu are doing to commercial shooters.

        Ok, where was I... Oh yeah, cheap cameras. I had Sinars and 'Blads with enough lights to blind a whole regiment and still have my Nikons. But my favorite camera of all time was/is the Olympus XA becuase it was there when I needed it (and I'm in some good company in that regards [masters-of...graphy.com]). I ended up getting hundreds of great candids and quick landscape shots with my XA because it was with me when it was the right time and place to take a great picture. Fat lot of good that EOS 1DS will do you sitting on the closet shelf at home does you if a great picture happens to be right in front of your eyes.

        And another thing about small cameras (and to some extent, cameraphones): You don't look like a freaking dork when you're shooting. Unless you're God's gift to hospitality, getting a candid, relaxed environmental portrait while trying to light the place like Yusef Karsh is a recipe for disaster. Learning how to slow down and get to know my subjects before I picked up a camera made a bigger difference in my work than anything I bought at a camera store.

        • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

          by Jeff DeMaagd ( 2015 )
          I agree with many of the points you present, really. Having the fanciest device doesn't help if you don't know how to use it. I don't know if it necessarily applies so well to photography, but in my general experience, a talented person can do better work with a lesser device than a less talented person with the most expensive gear. I understand that it's harder to compete, but I think there's still a paying high end. I don't see the casual point-and-shooter doing shots for magazine ads, posters, weddin
      • It's not their methodology that I question, it's their eyesight.

        There are some seriously shit pictures in that article. I mean, really bad. They might be acceptable for eBay, but then again, I used to use a 680x480 toy that downloaded over the serial port for taking photos for eBay. It's not exactly a high standard.

        With the exception of the Nokia N95, which I do admit is impressive for a camera phone, the natural light photos are terribly yellow. They remark "the colours came out fairly balanced if not a little yellow..." about the top one of these two images [cnet.co.uk]. A little yellow? Look, Mr M&M there looks like he needs to get on dialysis, because his kidneys are shot. There's no white balance at all. It's tough to take the rest of their conclusions seriously when that's all they have to say there.

        With the flash on, it gets the color right (apparently it's just hardwired for the 5000K flash or whatever it has in there), but all the highlights blow out -- and it's not even that high-contrast a scene. I'd hate to see what would have happened on a black background.

        The N95 is, admittedly, impressive with its flash turned off. It's a pretty passable image at that resolution. I don't have much negative to say about it. But the flash image below [cnet.co.uk], which they describe as "vibrant"...? I'm not sure 'oversaturated' covers it; it's bordering on ridiculous. It's not even attractive oversaturation, like you might get on some consumer films designed for that effect (Agfa Ultra, Velvia, etc.), or by playing in photoshop; it's just ugly.

        Now, granted, in the 400D's photos (last page), they're doing something wrong in the available-light shot, because although they say they're using the automatic settings, it's obviously not auto-white-balancing, and I know that camera will do that in its automatic modes. Leaving that aside, the flash shot beats anything out of any of those cellphones, by a large margin. The lighting is pretty even (there are a few hot spots on the cat, but given that it was straight front flash, it could be worse), the highlights aren't blown, the colors are realistic, and the shadow detail is good.

        The photos tell the tale far better than their narrative does: you get what you pay for.
    • Re:It's possible. (Score:5, Insightful)

      by CptPicard ( 680154 ) on Tuesday April 24, 2007 @11:09PM (#18865155)
      It's possible that this "vibrancy" factor is due to the fact that most consumer cameras "enhance" the picture automagically. They fix contrast, add saturation, etc. It's a real PITA for those of us who just want the data off the sensor though, so that we can then Photoshop things to our preference. DSLRs tend to produce "duller" pictures by default, but you're expected to add the "pop" later on, and the potential is there in the image.

      Another possibility is that the tester used some crappy kit lens. For example the one that came with my EOS 300D a few years back is plain awful, and the first thing was to get a proper lens.
      • Re:It's possible. (Score:4, Interesting)

        by dgatwood ( 11270 ) on Wednesday April 25, 2007 @01:33AM (#18866427) Homepage Journal

        I somewhat agree about the 300D lens. It's a LOT better than most of the smaller cameras I've seen, but it pales compared to the same camera with a nicer lens. I found that out when I borrowed a prime lens from one of my coworkers while my lens was malfunctioning. Wow.

        I now have a much nicer lens and only use the stock lens when I'm in a high risk situation (e.g. the beach). :-)

        When I saw the flash photos fo the D95, the word "cartoony" came to mind. Anybody else think so?

    • Yes, it's entirely possible. I think that, for a lot of us, we just want a point-and-shoot camera with very few settings, but which will take passable pictures under many conditions. People with expensive cameras, assuming they have expensive cameras for good reason, have paid that amount of money to have a camera with lots of settings that enable them to take the best picture possible under any condition if the settings are tweaked just so.

      It's true that some small cameras (and camera phones) just have c

    • Re:It's possible. (Score:5, Insightful)

      by badasscat ( 563442 ) <basscadet75@NOspAm.yahoo.com> on Tuesday April 24, 2007 @11:16PM (#18865245)
      I think there are going to be a lot of defensive replies from dSLR owners. But with enough light, a small lens and sensor can take a good picture.

      "Good pictures" start with accuracy. That's the entire point of a camera, and that's what separates good cameras from bad cameras. Even in the pre-digital days, sure, different films and different settings would give you different results, but photographers paid the big bucks for cameras that would given them a reliable baseline of accuracy - that meant being capable of things like high shutter speeds for daylight photos, low shutter speeds for night photos, high quality light metering, and lenses capable of high resolutions, high color accuracy and low distortion. What a photographer chooses to do artistically is another matter, but the point is photographers don't rely on their cameras to be the artists; that's the photographer's job, not the camera's.

      So I don't even need to look at the article to know what the word "vibrant" means with regard to the Nokia photos - it means "artificially jacked colors". In other words, not at all accurate, in other words crap.

      I mean, look. I have a 2mp cell phone camera and I have an 8mp DSLR. I use my cell phone camera when I'm just out and about and don't care about quality. But there is a huge difference in color accuracy, noise and detail between even the best cell phone cameras and the worst dslr's. And that difference is not going away.

      So I guess you can consider me one of your "defensive" dslr owners - but hopefully, there will always be defenders of the truth out there.
      • by afidel ( 530433 )
        I highly disagree. Accurate pictures are good for a photojournalist, but may not be the best for a photographer (where a photographer is defined as a photographic artist). Intentional background blur, or focusing on the background rather than the foreground, or dodging/burning prints are all examples of techniques used by artists that are the exact opposite of accuracy. I know at least one Sports Illustrated photographer uses cheap disposable point and shoot cameras precisely because he likes the non-scient
      • Huh. Someone better tell all the shooters out there that use this camera [wikipedia.org] that their work sucks 'cause it's unpredictable...
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      Depends. Some cameras try to cram so many pixels into such a small sensor that you end up with a noisy, grainy, blotchy piece of crap even with loads of sunlight.

      Unfortunately "megapixels" are the "megahertz" of digicam marketing (same goes for lower reaction times in LCDs, often achieved at the cost of image quality and colour accuracy), and people don't realise that, for screen viewing, they're unlikely to ever need more than 3MP.

      Also, cameras with "angled" light paths (ultra-compacts without lens extensi
    • The article does show how well the camera phones are coming along(the noise processing on the digital cameras has come a long way) Each phone's post processing usually returning a usable image which a consumer might find desirable. Keeping in mind here that it's ideal for people who are more interested in the subject matter than an accurate photograph.

      Other than using a camera phone as an artists tool (similar to small toy fish eye cameras.) They're obviously not useful as a dSLR replacement as the images

    • Re:It's possible. (Score:4, Insightful)

      by StewedSquirrel ( 574170 ) on Tuesday April 24, 2007 @11:55PM (#18865619)
      It's not only the AMOUNT of light that is poorly handled by the mini sensors in these cameras... but the range of light. Dynamic range is the single quality differentiator between good sensors and poor ones. Almost all sensors these days have adequate resolution. My primary camera, as a professional, is only about 4 megapixels. I've made 30x40 prints that, while not having the absolute crispness and resolution of an old kodachrome slide, it is more than adequate.

      The dynamic range on my sensor, is an order of magnitude better than the sensor on my high-end point-and-shoot, not to mention my camera phone.

      When i shoot pictures in daylight conditions with the camera phone, they are absolutely terrible. Sun-light highlights are either totally blown out, leaving a glowing halo on everyone's forehead, or they are adjusted for and everything else goes dark, making the scene look like a shot on the back of the moon.

      As a professional, I learned to find lighting that does not have sharp high contrast definitions, but your average consumer does not practice this technique, so dynamic range is even MORE important for a consumer than for a pro in some cases.

      That's all :-)

      Stewed
    • Defensive? (Score:3, Insightful)

      by lorcha ( 464930 )

      But with enough light, a small lens and sensor can take a good picture.

      I would agree with this statement, but your statement differs significantly from the submitter's claim:

      we could start to see a decline in dedicated digital cameras sales and an increase in camera phone sales.

      That claim, of course, is total bunk.

      As both a dSLR and a camera phone owner, do you really think that I lug around that big camera for my health? Do you really think that I have spent thousands of dollars on camera equipment becaus

  • Where to Start? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by smack.addict ( 116174 ) on Tuesday April 24, 2007 @10:59PM (#18865041)
    Most people take pictures to put them on Flickr? In what bizarre alternate universe?

    And camera phones take pictures as good as a dSLR? You can be 80% blind and still tell that camera phones take inferior pictures.
    • by BiggyP ( 466507 )
      Well, an awful lot of dSLR users do just put photos on flickr, but the thing is that you can't attach a Tamron 70-300 and marvel at Teh B0keH! while ignoring the god awful CA and softness and being patted on the back by dozens of cretinous flickr users if all you have is a camera phone...
  • puleeeeze! (Score:4, Insightful)

    by cashman73 ( 855518 ) on Tuesday April 24, 2007 @11:00PM (#18865051) Journal
    Get over the "megapixel" factor of digital cameras. There are so many more factors involved in photography, it's not even close to fair to compare megapixels. Sure, it's entirely possible for someone with a low quality camera phone to take a reasonably good picture compared to something out of a dSLR. Half of the photo depends on who is taking the photo and how the lighting is set up. Who gives a frack about megapixels!
    • Indeed, in fact in a small sensor more megapixels is usually worse because the individual pixels can collect less light and so noise becomes worse.

      What would be good is if Fujifilm's high sensitivity CCD (as in the F30) was integrated into phones. That is perfect for the kind of low-light photos camera-phones get used for.
  • Maybe... (Score:3, Informative)

    by imamac ( 1083405 ) on Tuesday April 24, 2007 @11:01PM (#18865061)
    But there are countless jobs (many military) where you cannot have a camera phone at the workplace for many obvious reasons. I'm sure there are many corporations in the civilian sector who have similar regulations in place.
  • It's quite weird, but to think that 5 years ago I paid $450 for a 3.1 megapixel camera and another $150 for a 256 Mb memory stick, and just 6 months ago I paid $500 for a slider phone with a 3.1 megapixel camera (I got it when it just came out, if I had waited till now to get it, it would have been $350) and $50 for a 1 Gb MicroSD memory card. Comparing the physical dimension is yet another distinction, as the camera is about 2.25 times thicker than the phone but about the same size, and the footprint of t
  • by Rui del-Negro ( 531098 ) on Tuesday April 24, 2007 @11:02PM (#18865075) Homepage
    "Is 3DS MAX really more powerful than Google Sketch?" - We gave 10 randomly selected people half an hour to learn to use them, and then compared the results.

    And, coming soon...

    "Is DVCPRO HD actually better than VHS (after you resize it to 64x48 pixels)?"

    "Is a dual-socket, quad-core workstation actually faster than a ZX Spectrum (when playing Space Invaders)?"
    • by j79 ( 875929 ) on Tuesday April 24, 2007 @11:09PM (#18865145)
      Regarding DVCPRO vs VHS, you completely forgot that most people will recompress the video to put on YouTube...so seriously, what's the point of DVCPRO HD?
    • I don't think your criticism is fair. CNet isn't claiming that the cell phones are better cameras, but are comparing them to dedicated digital cameras in conditions that are common to point-and-shoot photographers. Default settings, medium/low light, point... and shoot. Resize to a reasonable size for e-mailing it, and see how it looks.

      So it'd be like if someone discovered that simple photo work like resizing, rotating, and cropping gave better visual quality when using built-in OS tools than if you do t

      • The criticism is rather accurate actually.

        Most people dont need a dSLR. Its a high end camera for a reason.
        You also wont find photographers going around with mobile phones.

        Duh camera phones are better for point and click - thats all they can do.
        A dSLR is for someone who is serious.
      • by Rui del-Negro ( 531098 ) on Wednesday April 25, 2007 @12:51AM (#18866117) Homepage
        It's not a matter of providing superior quality. They are deliberately limiting the quality by assuming that everyone's final goal is to post scaled down pictures on Flickr. Hence the comparison with video scaled down to a point where the original quality is irrelevant. 64x48 pixel video is worse than DVCPRO HD but my point is that it's also worse than VHS.

        Most people (especially the ones with two X chromosomes) like to be able to print their pictures, and most camera phones can't really produce acceptable results above 15x10 cm (6x4"), regardless of their resolution. Their sensors are simply too small and too noisy. In fact, for the same sensor size, a 3MP sensor is likely to have better quality than a 5MP model.

  • Flickr? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by dreamchaser ( 49529 ) on Tuesday April 24, 2007 @11:03PM (#18865081) Homepage Journal
    but given that most people resize images to put on Flickr

    Most people with digital cameras don't even know what flickr is. They email their pics to relatives or print them out, or just save them on their hard drive.

    I'm getting a sense that slashdot is in a way getting like Washington DC. People inside the beltway are totally detatched from what the majority of people are doing in their lives, and so is slashdot.
    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      by BWJones ( 18351 ) *
      I'm getting a sense that slashdot is in a way getting like Washington DC. People inside the beltway are totally detatched from what the majority of people are doing in their lives, and so is slashdot.

      *Gee*, do you think? Look, I've been around here for a while (and so have you from the looks of your ID), but Slashdot has always been an online home to a subset of society that is rather technically inclined, so yeah... we are a bit detached from what *most* people (I'd say unwashed masses, but, well..... you
  • by AaronLawrence ( 600990 ) * on Tuesday April 24, 2007 @11:03PM (#18865083)
    Amusing that CNet (that bastion of photographic expertise) kept commenting positively on how "vibrant" the N95 photo was. Obviously the Nokia boosts the colours artificially, to make the photo look more exciting, even though the colours are not that strong in reality. Of course, they invalidate their entire results by not making any comment (let alone measurements or reference photos) on how close the photos were to the real colours.

    But the interesting thing is what this says about people - the average person doesn't care much about realism, they want a nice looking photo regardless, and if the phone adjusts things artificially to make it look "better" then that might actually be the right thing to sell more phones. It's kind of an extension of the point and click idea.

  • "Vibrant" (Score:5, Insightful)

    by evilviper ( 135110 ) on Tuesday April 24, 2007 @11:05PM (#18865099) Journal
    Vibrant doesn't mean much of anything to me... About as much as audio sounding "warm".

    It sounds like "vibrant" to them simply means over-saturated. It wouldn't be difficult to tweak ANY of the images to be more "vibrant".

    It's really impossible to tell which photo more faithfully reproduces the actual scene, without seeing it in person. The Nokia may work well on animation colors, but if people come out high-contrast, looking more like cartoons, it's not a good camera.

    In other words, this article is utterly useless.
    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • Just look at the "medium light" images [cnet.co.uk], which looks best? Which would you rather hang on your wall? The one from the N95. Vibrancy has nothing to do with it. Compared to the real camera images, the n95 image has better white balance, so it's the better image. And yes, you can tell without seeing the original scene. That ping-pong ball should be white.
      • Re:"Vibrant" (Score:4, Insightful)

        by evilviper ( 135110 ) on Wednesday April 25, 2007 @02:25AM (#18866789) Journal

        That ping-pong ball should be white.

        Not if the lighting in the room has a yellow tint to it.

        I wonder how people would feel if they captured a picture by a campfire, only to have it turn out perfectly clear and white, looking like they are standing under massive lights...

        Of course, I'm not being entirely honest, because HOW WHITE that ping pong ball should be is entirely debatable. In the N95 images, it certainly isn't pure white. Just open it up in your nearest image editor, and use the eraser tool on the ball...

        What's more, anyone could easily increase the contrast of any picture to make it look even WHITER than white, and blacker than black. Cameras are supposed to capture a image as close to reality as possible... not blue-shift everything to play perceptual tricks on the viewer.
    • by servognome ( 738846 ) on Wednesday April 25, 2007 @01:13AM (#18866275)

      Vibrant doesn't mean much of anything to me... About as much as audio sounding "warm".
      Your text is very "Chewy"
  • Sure, camera phones can take decent pictures for a lot of people, but let me know once one can use specialized lenses. Of course, most people don't need zoom/macro/etc lenses, so they're fine with a digital camera. However, the benefit of such lenses and the falling prices of dSLR's makes it very unlikely that higher end digital cameras will ever go away. There's just a different market for both, just like PDAs vs laptops vs desktop systems.
  • Dynamic Range (Score:4, Informative)

    by ironring2006 ( 968941 ) on Tuesday April 24, 2007 @11:14PM (#18865219)
    It was interesting to see that this "test" consisted of a single scene. While I was impressed with the N95, it says nothing of the versatility of the camera. The subject was located what seemed to be about a foot or so away from the lens. It would be interesting to see its ability to focus on something further away. Currently, I think that is the biggest shortcoming of camera phones at the moment. Yes, it is a limited space that they can cram the lens into, but until they've got "good enough" optical zoom, they still won't fully replace a handheld point and click, and I think we can all agree that they'll never be able to replace a good dSLR (that's just plain silly!).
    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      by vought ( 160908 )
      It was interesting to see that this "test" consisted of a single scene.

      Exactly. C|Net wouldn't know how to do a real photographic "test" if Ansel Adams came back from the dead and held them by the hands while explaining the Zone System - which is still a great way to understand sensitometry.
  • Sensationalized (Score:5, Insightful)

    by metalhed77 ( 250273 ) <`andrewvc' `at' `gmail.com'> on Tuesday April 24, 2007 @11:14PM (#18865221) Homepage
    I'm suprised, the camera phone did a great job, which is a good thing for consumers who don't know how to color correct their photos. However, as the article points out, this is solely a product of post-processing in the camera. I'm quite surprised that the 400D did such a terrible job with the white balance. Was it stuck on the daylight preset or was the AWB that bad?

    They didn't really address night time flash performance. Lots of people want to take pictures when they go out at night and these tests were inadequate since the subjects were small and close. Large people 5-6 feet away require a brighter flash and/or higher ISOs. Cell phone cameras haven't the room for a large flash and the capacitors it requires. I wonder how these phones would fare under these conditions?

    Also not addressed was dynamic range. The test scene was fairly flat. If you're on a vacation, and whip out your dinky cell phone to take a picture of the landscape, what might on a DSLR be a nice image of the land and sky, could turn out to be a dark silhouette of the land with a detailed sky, detailed land with a blown out sky, or some combination. How good is the metering as well? Will your relatives be a series of black lumps against the grand canyon if you aren't a pro photog? The more this stuff is automatic the more joe consumer wins.

    Additionally, the lens choice on the 400d is slightly disappointing. Cheap lenses like the 18-55 kit lens can't really give you the detail possible with 10 megapixels.
    • by garcia ( 6573 )
      They didn't really address night time flash performance. Lots of people want to take pictures when they go out at night and these tests were inadequate since the subjects were small and close. Large people 5-6 feet away require a brighter flash and/or higher ISOs. Cell phone cameras haven't the room for a large flash and the capacitors it requires. I wonder how these phones would fare under these conditions?

      They don't address the simple fact that some people, like me [lazylightning.org], don't give a shit about what the mobile
  • RTFA (Score:5, Informative)

    by richdun ( 672214 ) on Tuesday April 24, 2007 @11:16PM (#18865231)
    Do the submitters even read the articles now? For both photo conditions tested, they found that the dSLR (a Canon 400D) better - "highest level of detail" in medium light and the best-lit and most focused shot overall in low light. All they mentioned were that the N95 camera phone showed more vibrant colors in the medium light conditions, and that that was probably due to post-processing.
  • I have an EOS 400D and I'm quite fond of it, although I'm still getting used to it and all of the whiz-bang features it has over my old Bronica ETR (you know, one of those old monstrosities which used that barbaric technology called *film* (Actually, aside from weight and speed concerns, I prefer shooting on film, but digital is so damn fast and convenient)).

    It seems to me from playing with several camera phones, several digital cameras, and a large variety of old mechanical cameras
  • by kbahey ( 102895 ) on Tuesday April 24, 2007 @11:20PM (#18865281) Homepage
    Megapixel is not the only, nor the most important, aspect.

    The lens is probably more important.

    This is just like the megahertz/gigahertz race, and the number of transistors in radio: something to get people to think "it has more, so it must be better", while reality is not like that at all.
  • Yes, for general-purpose, fully-auto-mode pictures, the cameras in *some* phones are getting closer and closer to a medium-quality standalone digital camera. Of course, with an unlocked N95 listed at around $800 on Amazon right now, it better have a pretty good quality camera built-in. It wouldn't surprise me in the next few years to see a lot of people satisfied with simply using their camera phones and not buying a separate camera. Not everyone, but a substantial number of people.

    However, it's all abou
  • FTS "but given that most people resize images to put on Flickr..."

    Most people? Could that possibly be true? Lets even grant that they meant "most photographers in the developed world" (and not most people on the planet.) Does anyone else think that most photographers do NOT use flickr? I've never used it, but I will grant that I am not representative of most people.

    My Aunt Marge in Cleveland, she has always seemed the person I know who is most like "most people." She's like a one woman focus group on the

  • Rediculous (Score:4, Insightful)

    by EnsilZah ( 575600 ) <.moc.liamG. .ta. .haZlisnE.> on Tuesday April 24, 2007 @11:24PM (#18865325)
    We're going to take some camera phones and dSLR, we'll use the lowest common denominator features and resolution and we'll show you that camera phones are just as good as Canon's latest pro-sumer dSLR.

    Well, no fucking shit sherlock.

    I can show you that my old Voodoo 3 is quite compareable to the Geforce 8800GTX when playing Quake at 640x480.
  • by hey! ( 33014 ) on Tuesday April 24, 2007 @11:24PM (#18865331) Homepage Journal
    They take pictures of bizarre, artificial objects, under unspecified artificial lighting, then judge the pictures on how "vibrant" the colors are.

    We don't know what the colors ought to be. Nor do we know what kind of lighting is being used, although I'm guessing florescent office lights, given the color difference between the ambient lighting and flash pictures. Nor do we know what lighting mode the cameras were set to (sunlight, tungsten, fluorescent). Although many people many never learn to adjust their camera's lighting setting, they will also find results dramatically different under different lighting sources.

    If you are going to do one kind of test, then use human subjects under bright and indirect daylight. That way the readers have a clue as to what the subject should look like, and represents common conditions that anybody can reproduce.

    Overall, this test is only valid if (a) you are taking pictures under florescent lighting and (b) color accuracy is not as important to you as color saturation and (c) you don't know how to adjust your camera's settings.
  • Phone camera? (Score:5, Interesting)

    by DeadboltX ( 751907 ) on Tuesday April 24, 2007 @11:25PM (#18865337)
    I'd rather have a crappy phone on a good camera rather than a crappy camera on a good phone.

    Someone call me when they make a "Phone Camera"
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by asninn ( 1071320 )
      Myself, I'd rather have a good camera (without a built-in phone) and a good phone (without a built-in camera). Seriously - when I want to take pictures, I'll use my camera, and when I want to make a phone call, I'll use my phone.

      Camera phones are useful for people who want to take quick snapshots that they can MMS to their friends (or that they can show them on the phone in person later on), but little more. That doesn't mean that they're necessarily a bad idea, but they simply aren't the same as cameras, a
  • First, given enough light, yes, small sensors can generate pretty darn decent pictures. I own both a compact camera and a DSLR - actually the Canon 400D tested. [komar.org]

    But sure looks to me like in the "medium" light pictures that the Rebel 400D had white-balance issues and provided a yellow cast over the shot. In fairness, s*it happens and it's an interesting side-by-side test.

    In the low-light (with flash) examples, note how the shadows move quite a bit - they didn't make sure the camera was at the same spot ea

  • by Eugene ( 6671 ) on Tuesday April 24, 2007 @11:28PM (#18865369) Homepage
    It's like comparing a Porsche and a 10-speed bike and claim it's the same because people only use it to go from point A to point B.

    people who use dSLR will take different shots then people who use a camera phone. People who are interested in taking good pictures will probably want to have much more functions then camera phone's simple point and click.. Those who use camera phones to take pictures will not care about about the aperture settings, ISO.. etc.

  • by spaceyhackerlady ( 462530 ) on Tuesday April 24, 2007 @11:33PM (#18865423)

    I see no point in a head-to-head comparison of products that are not actually competitive to each other. Am I missing something?

    I have owned point-and-shoot digital cameras, but my best digital camera is a Canon Digital Rebel (aka 300D). I didn't buy it as a point-and-shoot camera, because that's not what it is (though it can do a pretty good imitation in fully automatic mode). What I did buy was the flexibility of an SLR: interchangeable lenses, full control over all functions. Plus the things digital is so good at: instant image review, image processing capability, zero reciprocity failure.

    I can hook it up to a telescope and take first-rate astronomical pictures. I can use my wonderful Pentax M42 lenses and extension tubes to fill an entire frame with a single flower if I want.

    This is not the sort of stuff you do with a point and shoot.

    ...laura

  • by MasterC ( 70492 ) <cmlburnett@gm[ ].com ['ail' in gap]> on Tuesday April 24, 2007 @11:35PM (#18865431) Homepage

    ...but given that most people resize images to put on Flickr, we could start to see a decline in dedicated digital cameras sales and an increase in camera phone sales.
    Sorry, but what complete and utter horseshit. People who buy DSLRs don't buy them to put pictures up on flickr. People who buy thousand dollar lenses and up (e.g., me) don't buy them to put pictures on flickr.

    Let me try my hand at these baseless assumptive statements. People who buy camera phones to be their primary camera do so to put their pictures up on flickr. People who compare the merits of a camera phone to a DSLR are people who put their pictures on flickr. (Hey, baseless statements are pretty easy!)

    I've stated for a long time in "defending" my ownership of an SLR and canon L-series lenses is that its a tool for how I want to take pictures. I'm the first one to admit that lugging my equipment around is not something I want to do 24/7 so it is by no means convenient. The camera on my phone, however, is extremely convenient and I have found it to be useful in its own times. So my beef with the /. summary is that predicting a sales trend on the assumption that the majority of people are flickr users is beyond absurd, it's stupid and reckless. And, of course, 4 cameras is sufficient sampling to draw such conclusions to boot (where's the top-of-the-line camera with top-of-the-line lens to compare against the bottom-of-the-barrel camera phone?).

    Honestly, it's crap story submissions like this that just grinds me about slashdot.
  • by SuperBanana ( 662181 ) on Tuesday April 24, 2007 @11:39PM (#18865479)

    The results are surprising, with Nokia's latest handset, featuring a built-in 5-megapixel camera, taking more vibrant pictures in medium light conditions than a 10-megapixel dSLR.

    That isn't even remotely what the article said. It said: "As you can see the top photo, taken in medium light conditions, is in focus and the colours are very vibrant, if not a little over saturated." and, "This difference in colour is likely due to the N95 processing the shot after it was taken."

    Nowhere do they describe if the images actually represented a faithful reproduction of the colors of the objects, and they did not test under multiple lighting conditions, such as outdoors, under incandescent and fluorescent lights, etc. They also did not conduct any test which would demonstrate the camera's dynamic range, and they did not show us any 1:1 crop areas.

    There's one simple site I point any of small but persistent who claim things like "film is superior to digital" (it hasn't been for at least a few years, in terms of resolution, signal to noise ratio, and dynamic range.) Clarkvision. The guy lays it all out in cold, hard science with good illustrative graphs and examples.

    Does Pixel Size Matter? [clarkvision.com] lays a real cold hard blow to all the idiots that claim dSLRs are overpriced or unjustified. They VASTLY outperform "point and shoot" cameras because the sensors are huge. Current dSLRs already approach the theoretical maximum sensitivity, SNR, etc. The bigger the sensor well, the more photons it collects- and the less electronic amplification is necessary. dSLRs have sensors the size of your phone's screen. Your phone's camera has a sensor around the size of an eraser. Not only does that cause a lot of noise problems, but it causes problems for aliasing filters (which spread light across the red, blue, and green sensor wells.) It's very easy to make a very good aliasing filter on a scale required for the very large pixels in a dSLR. Sensor wells in the point and shoots are so tiny that the filters really, really blur the image.

    Practically, this means that if you and I stand next to each other and take a photo towards sunset, and then take both to a photo lab and get them printed, my (several year old dSLR) will blow your (current P&S) out of the water. My photo will have more detail because of better aliasing on the sensor and dramatically less noise (which doesn't have to be hidden with blurring). Nevermind that I can shoot a photo at 800 ISO and it'll have less noise than your camera at 100 ISO, which means I get several stops of sensitivity which I can use for, oh, a faster shutter speed so there's less motion blur, or a smaller aperture for greater depth of field.

    • I've always loved big sheets of film. My P&S back in the day was a 6x7 so that I could make contact prints big enough to be viewable and give away to friends. My 4x5 negs are the treasured records of my youth. So when you say digital is better than film, I'll just wear a little smile and remember that generalizations are bad but that you generally can't convince people of that.

      Once we get into little-camera world (35mm-size SLRs and smaller), you make lots of sense. I *really* want to get heavily in
  • by StewedSquirrel ( 574170 ) on Tuesday April 24, 2007 @11:48PM (#18865561)
    OK, I don't make my living doing photography today but I have for several years in the last decade.

    There are two things that pop out. I am not addressing "professional" features such as manual settings, bounce-flash, strobe capability, interchangeable lenses, large aperture effects (depth of field blurring), shutter speed considerations, flash sync, etc, etc, etc which obviously favor the DSLR. But lets just look at the things that the every-day average consumer cares about.

    1) The image quality issues with the Canon cameras was due almost entirely to poor white balance. The author described this is 'vibrancy' a few times, but while there was perhaps somewhat lower color saturation, increased saturation of those poorly white balanced photos would have made them look WORSE, not better. Why did the "real" cameras have such awful white balance? Is this a problem with Canon's processing? I have a bunch of Nikon gear and have had great luck with auto white balance, though I prefer to use custom white balance for important photos, obviously Auto is simple and good for snapshots. But given the consumer target of the article, auto is the target and I'm disappointed with Canon in this regard. Go get a Nikon. Or a Fuji. Or a Panasonic even... they have good auto white balance.

    2) They chose an extremely SIMPLE scene that is not reflective of the use that most people have for their cameras. A close-up, small and flat-lit still life is a very poor scene for testing overall image quality. Set up a scene with various light levels across it. A room with a light in the corner, or a bar with neon signs everywhere.... or a daylight/shade mix. Watch the compact sensors in the small phones and even the point-and-shoot camera absolutely blow the highlights and completely submarine the shadows and you can see the value of the high quality sensors of the dSLR. How about making an element in the scene move... like a parent might shoot a kid at a baseball game. In the case of a small, static, flat-lit still life, the camera phone is obviously adaquate. In the case of high dynamic range, moving, dark or varied scenes, the camera phones, in my experience, just don't cut it.

    As a professional, I have trained myself to see the dynamic range of a scene and work to minimize areas of the frame that will cause problems with digital sensors (even the best dSLR is not even close to old Chrome slide films) and have learned to avoid those elements. Your average consumer snaps the picture, despite the big shadow on grandma's face. Suddenly your Norwegian grandmother looks like a coal miner because of deep shadow on her face totally submarined by poor sensor dynamic range. This is perhaps the biggest issue I see with this comparison and something that should be addressed.

    Stew
  • Great.

    And under non-average conditions?

    Didn't think so.

    The things I use my cheap DSLR for the most are:

    1. Indoor photography where flash is not an option. (f/1.8, ASA 1600)
    2. Photographing moving targets where shutter lag is not an option.
    3. Long-exposure star trail or milky way type shots.
    4. Rudimentary time-lapse intervalometry.

    A phone that can take decently detailed pictures of nearby, still objects under good lighting is one thing. A phone that gives me the ability to do any of the four above would be
  • Neither of the phones I carry around has an embedded camera, and I've been looking for one with as decent a camera as I can find. The N95 has great quality but rattled me with sticker shock.

    I want a camera phone not as a main camera but as an auxiliary I can carry around; I'm not overlooking the important features (most?) camera phones lack. Optical zoom is important; that 5 megapixel imager with a 2X digital zoom becomes the equivalent of 1.25 megapixels, and zooming further only makes it worse. Exposur
  • by chromozone ( 847904 ) on Wednesday April 25, 2007 @12:03AM (#18865705)
    Many photographers use Canon cameras because they intentionally don't "juice" up photos like other makers do. They also don't over-sharp an image and Canon's photos are "soft" out of the camera compared to others. They allow the photographer to add what they would like in post processing. It's easier to add then to take away.
  • by weave ( 48069 ) on Wednesday April 25, 2007 @07:58AM (#18868469) Journal

    I have an N95. I'm really impressed with it. It's not going to take the best pics, but it's pretty damn good for a camera phone and, as someone else posted here, it's always with me so I can grab a shot when I see one easily.

    The thing also has a great web browser, email, wifi, GPS with mapping and navigation and takes some decent videos.

    I'm not a professional photographer. I'm not the best at picking out the best shots, composition, etc. I'm just some Joe taking pics of my life and stashing them somewhere.

    I started out with a T610, then a Nokia 6600, N90, and now N95. The rapid advancement in quality these little phones put out is incredible. It's pretty neat stuff and lots of fun and that's all I really care about.

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