Photo retrospective shows off Apple's iPhone camera quality evolution
The team behind a popular iOS camera app has put together a retrospective showing the dramatic improvement in image quality from Apple's first iPhone on through the iPhone 5.
The makers of Camera+ gathered all six versions of the iPhone ? from the first-generation model on through the iPhone 5 ? and took pictures in similar conditions with each. The resulting photographs (via TUAW) demonstrate the evolution of photo quality in Apple's bestselling handset.
The Camera+ crew shot three pictures with each phone: a well-lit macro, a skyline shot, and a candlelit low-light macro. The progression in image quality is immediately noticeable, with photos from the original iPhone very blurry and ill-defined in comparison to later models.
"It's clear from the detail shots," Lisa Bettany writes in the post, "that the iPhone 5 produces sharper photos with more accurate white balance, contrast, and saturation."
Possibly the biggest jump in quality is from the iPhone 3G to the iPhone 3GS. Despite the inclusion of a camera on the device, photography had to an extent been an afterthought on the iPhone. Apple hadn't seen fit to equip its first two models, the iPhone and iPhone 3G, with a flash, and the ability to send and receive photos as MMS messages was absent until a software update enabled the feature.
Apple has since considerably improved the iPhone's camera with nearly every new hardware iteration, adding features such as panorama mode and giving the lens a sapphire crystal surface. As the camera has improved, Apple has touted it more regularly, and now ads devoted to the camera are part of Apple's latest marketing campaign for the iPhone 5.
The makers of Camera+ gathered all six versions of the iPhone ? from the first-generation model on through the iPhone 5 ? and took pictures in similar conditions with each. The resulting photographs (via TUAW) demonstrate the evolution of photo quality in Apple's bestselling handset.
The Camera+ crew shot three pictures with each phone: a well-lit macro, a skyline shot, and a candlelit low-light macro. The progression in image quality is immediately noticeable, with photos from the original iPhone very blurry and ill-defined in comparison to later models.
"It's clear from the detail shots," Lisa Bettany writes in the post, "that the iPhone 5 produces sharper photos with more accurate white balance, contrast, and saturation."
Possibly the biggest jump in quality is from the iPhone 3G to the iPhone 3GS. Despite the inclusion of a camera on the device, photography had to an extent been an afterthought on the iPhone. Apple hadn't seen fit to equip its first two models, the iPhone and iPhone 3G, with a flash, and the ability to send and receive photos as MMS messages was absent until a software update enabled the feature.
Apple has since considerably improved the iPhone's camera with nearly every new hardware iteration, adding features such as panorama mode and giving the lens a sapphire crystal surface. As the camera has improved, Apple has touted it more regularly, and now ads devoted to the camera are part of Apple's latest marketing campaign for the iPhone 5.
Comments
So no changes from 4 to 5. Only in hue or tone.
Having upgraded from the 4 to 5, I noticed there is also a bump in both resolution and sensitivity in low light. Color balance is also different, yes, but it is not the only thing. The 5 has one of the best looking phone cameras out there.
Where is the reference photo?
Update: http://campl.us/posts/6iPhoneCameras
I'd give something else a try but the most important thing to me is being able to capture the moments in my life.
Surfing the web is the other major use case for me. Pretty much any phone out there I am interested in does that as well, if not better, for a number of reasons.
So the camera has me locked in.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Just_Me
So no changes from 4 to 5. Only in hue or tone.
You're wrong. The front cameras on the iPhone 4 and iPhone 4s are the same but the rear camera is quite different indeed. On the other hand, the rear cameras on the iPhone 4s and the iPhone 5 are also the same but quite different from the rear camera on the iPhone 4.
Since the article focusses explicitly on the rear camera only, if you said ... "So no changes from the 4s to the 5" ... you'd be (sorta) correct.
Of course with 10 seconds worth of effort you could have discovered this for yourself. The fact that you didn't bother, speaks volumes about you, and about whether we should care about what you think or say about stuff. You basically just looked at the picture and spouted off some nonsense right?
The pictures and article were from September! What kind of "news" is this?
I love my iPhone 5 and its pics. But.... But I want camera improvements -- better zoom - it should take every pic in 16x9 unless u specify regardless of what way you hold it... And of course night pics.. Look it.. whoever truly finds a way - a real way to limit noise in night shots -- that's a winner -- half of our lives are at night -- no joke
Quote:
Originally Posted by gijoeinla
I've said this before.. The camera has become the most important factor in smartphones today? I'm wrong? Why do you think Apples Ad agency homed in on that feature in its recent-- I think brilliant ad campaign? Look up the stats Apple follows interms of uploads through its servers -- it's OBVIOUS the camera and its functions have played a HUGE role in the love of iPhone -- did somebody say Instagram??
I love my iPhone 5 and its pics. But.... But I want camera improvements -- better zoom - it should take every pic in 16x9 unless u specify regardless of what way you hold it... And of course night pics.. Look it.. whoever truly finds a way - a real way to limit noise in night shots -- that's a winner -- half of our lives are at night -- no joke
It is not a matter of finding a way to reduce noise as Canon and Nikon already do a very good job. It is getting that tech into smaller form factors. Or it could be licensing. I think Apple uses Sony (who is a distant 3rd to Canon and Nikon).
I'm trying to limp my 4 until the 5s comes out and I really hope much better low light performance and adaptive exposure so that the entire scene is exposed properly. (i.e. background not super dark while foreground is light, or objects positioned left or right of center)
If you look at the originals it's pretty clear that the 3GS has the focus that the 2G/3G did not have.
In all your blathering rush to call him an ass, you never even bothered to say HOW the cameras were different. Did you ever stop to think maybe his comment was based on the photo included with the article? The images from the 4/4S/5 look extremely similar in detail quality, with only a difference in hue. Just like he stated. But of course he's the one being an ass :rolleyes:
What zoom? Except for the phones which were grafted onto cameras, there aren't a lot of phones with zoom, unless you count cropping or pixel multiplication a zoom. You can call them a zoom, but zooming in digitally doesn't actually increase captured detail.
That's silly. There's nothing inherently magical about 16:9. It's just an aspect ratio, not everything has to fit your TV.
Quote:
Originally Posted by JeffDM
Quote:
Originally Posted by gijoeinla
it should take every pic in 16x9 unless u specify regardless of what way you hold it...
That's silly. There's nothing inherently magical about 16:9. It's just an aspect ratio, not everything has to fit your TV.
More particularly that would entail lower resolution in one orientation or a square sensor, and then throwing away a bunch of pixels on each shot, both of which would be completely pointless.
Yes, there is advanced noise-reduction technology in modern camera chipsets, but it is almost inconsequential compared to the physics behind why a 1"+ DSLR sensor is going to have dramatically better low light performance than an iPhone sensor the size of your pinky finger's nail... There is only so much that can be done without revolutionary new optics or silicon sensor architecture/material
I am using 4 still will not see good upgrade IP5
The next iPhone will shoot in RAW mode and has a Lytro-style full light field sensor...
...claims an anonymous rumor obtained by DigiTimes.
Richard Getz
I'm trying to limp my 4 until the 5s comes out and I really hope much better low light performance and adaptive exposure so that the entire scene is exposed properly. (i.e. background not super dark while foreground is light, or objects positioned left or right of center)
The 4 can shoot in HDR, which is designed for that use.
iPhone 4 has better low light details than the iPhone 4s. That is disappointing because I just upgraded to the 4s about 3 months ago from a 4.