The upcoming Nokia Lumia 1020 debuted on 11 June at a press
event in New York City, and the presentation focused almost
entirely on the phone's massive camera. The phone shares many of
the camera features introduced with the Lumia 920, but it brings
the PureView 808's huge 41-megapixel sensor into the equation. This
makes for a camera that not only adapts to a variety of situations;
it also accounts for a lot of human foibles and gaps in the average
user's photography knowledge (and equipment set).
Physically, the Lumia 1020 is as near to the Lumia 920 as can
be, save for the camera housing that juts out of the back of the
phone. The phone doesn't feel significantly heavier than a Lumia
920, nor does it feel unbalanced. Resting on a table, the sensor
plateau in the back will also keep the lens off the table, which we
appreciate (and don't always see prioritised in smartphone body
design).
Unfortunately, a camera with the breadth of features and
capabilities of the Lumia 1020 is hard to review in full on a show
floor. The photos we took with the camera itself were compressed
either when they were emailed or stored (they averaged 400-600 KB
in size, compared to iPhone 4S photos at 1-1.2 MB). But we gave a
handful of features a try and came away fairly impressed with what
we saw.
The Lumia 1020 continues the Lumia tradition of great low-light
photos, but it adds the ability to capture good photos even when
the subject is moving. One demo room featured a breakdancer just
doing his thing in a near-pitch black room. "This is one use case:
people dancing in the street at night," the presenter said. (The
Lumia 1020: for when you're on a moonlit stroll and become just
overwhelmed with the urge to pop and lock because this isn't real
life and you are on the set of Step Up 2: The Streets.)
The presenter invited a group of us to do our best (worst)
trying to take photos of the moving dancer with flashes on. We
performed the photography equivalent of swinging a bat at a ball
and hitting nothing but air. When the presenter tried with his
Lumia 1020 (flash on), he was able to capture a fairly crisp,
in-focus shot of the man as he left it all on the dance floor.
Wider shots of the show floor didn't come out like we expected,
but we attribute most of the quality issues to compression. Nokia
has said little about how the Lumia 1020 compresses or stores its
41-megapixel photos -- whether it can store all of that information
raw, for instance, or whether the oversampling and processing is
done pre-storage. In the former case we expect people would run out
of storage space fairly quickly, so there had better be settings to
control that.
The best part of the camera is a bevy of manual controls within
the Pro Cam camera app. By pulling out the shutter button on
screen, you get a translucent overlay of manual settings like ISO,
aperture, and shutter speed. The app will auto-adjust one or a few
of the other settings if you change one (upping the ISO increases
the shutter speed and so forth), so it will continue to
self-balance the other settings for the scene unless you change
them yourself. The overlay design allows you to see how the
lighting dynamic is shifting for your photo in real time as you
play with the settings. This is incredibly handy and a better setup
than letting all the little toggle-menus take up screen real
estate. If you pull the shutter button back to where it was, the
settings you changed will be locked. Holding a finger down on the
screen locks the focus and exposure, which is a welcome
feature.
In addition to the Pro Cam app, the Lumia 1020 will also come with Nokia's Smart Cam app, which offers a number of features based on a long, swift capture of a series of photos. There is a "best photo" option, as well as one that can amalgamate all the photos together to either focus on the moving objects and blur the still ones, or vice versa.
There are features aplenty that we have yet to test -- we'll evaluate them all when we get the phone in our own hands, on our own time. In other words, stay tuned for our full Nokia Lumia 1020 review.
This story originally appeared on
ars technica. Click through for their hands-on photos of the
Lumia 1020
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