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Saturday 9 March 2019

Huawei Mate 20 Pro Camera Review

The three cameras and a flash forms a square!!!

Hauwei Mate 20 Pro Camera Review
The past duo years have been a strong period for smartphone cameras; and the Chinese giant
Huawei has really put its bit to push forward the mobile photography, it has taken a few
considerable years but the esteemed partnership between the company and German optics 
brand Leica, finally seems to be bringing out impressive results. It should be no surprise that 
the Mate 20 Pro has impressive photography skills over its rivals and has improved a ton over 
its predecessor Huawei P20 pro.

The main 40 megapixel f/1.8 sensor, the 20-megapixel f/2.2 ultra-wide sensor and a 
8-megapixel f/2.4 telephoto sensor for zooming; there’s also a dual-tone LED  flash rounding 
out the package that’s organized in a 2×2 grid on the rear of the device, gives a attractive look 
to the handset.

The most obvious change from the Huawei P20 Pro is that ultra-wide sensor, replacing the 
monochrome sensor that Huawei had been using for a while. The reason behind this switch is 
understood: Huawei spokesperson said there’s enough data and detail captured in the 
40-megapixel sensor to make the extra info collected by the black and white sensor useless. 
That seems to be a clever move, and it’s the one that pays off more in practice.

The duo having a normal focal length, ultra-wide and telephoto sensor presents a ridiculous 
level of versatility with your pictures. By default, the Mate 20 Pro utilizes pixel-compressing 
technique to use those 40 megapixels to produce a 10-megapixel image. You’ll get the best 
shots out of the 40-megapixel main sensor and can shoot purely at the same,but this limits the number of features available; for instance, you can’t zoom and leaves you with very large file sizes.




Telephoto sensor: You don’t lose much when you zoom
By default, another option ‘on’ is the Master Artificial Intelligence(AI) system, which alters the look of the picture in the process by making use of the dual 
neural engines inside the Kirin 980 to detect scenes and objects. We found this AI boosts 
colors,smooths faces and adds some minor image sharpening to landscapes; though,nothing 
is too strong, generating amicable pictures.
The Master AI will also suggest at appropriate times when the user should switch across the assorted modes available. Pointing the camera at a person, will enable portrait mode; pointing it at a bridge,will automatically switch to ultra-wide. We’ve been rigorously stirred by, that how well it adjudges the subjects presented to it in ‘my viewfinder’.
At occasions, the Master AI makes so many unnecessary changes to an image, often making 
greens and reds look unnatural, boosting blues in the sky too far. Though, some might 
probably prefer these “Instagrammable” specific changes.
There’s an option to turn the feature off completely, if one really dislikes the AI changes, yet it
will be advisable against the aforementioned, since it really leaves your snaps lacking in 
dynamic range and color and flat in appearance.
Ultra-wide adds some more versatility to your shots. These shots can suffer from some loss 
of details around the edges but in general, colours and details are great. The only one of the 
bunch to be optically stabilized is the 8-megapixel telephoto sensor (the all others rely on 
Huawei’s software-based EIS) and that is what helps to minimize hand-shake when taking 
portraits. Furthermore, the results are mostly very good, with precise cut-outs around 
everything out there.

Videography
The Mate 20 Pro camera is less efficient in video capturing and selfies. Video recording, is 
nothing more than adequate. The front camera,too, that’s a 24-megapixel shooter delivers 
relatively poor selfies; it feels as all those high rated megapixels are being wasted. There’s no 
4K at 60fps and the image stabilization is less effective in this segment.

Low light photography
Low-light shots from the Mate 20 Pro really  impressive, as the colors are kept intact and look 
great. The dedicated Night mode for capturing a photo of still objects or building at night 
generates amazing output.even with the Night Mode off you will get a more natural shot and 
that would still look great. In dark situations, even zooming works well, thanks to the Telephoto 
sensor for the same. Night Mode can struggle a bit with movement.

To sum up, Huawei Mate 20 pro is an excellent camera phone with great features and above 
all an efficient processor that makes it a  perfect choice for the users, but beware it comes with 
a hot price tag!!!
To get more information regarding Huawei mate20 pro please visit wikipedia.

Samsung Galaxy S10 Camera Review

The three cameras in a lane

Samsung S10 Camera Review


Samsung Galaxy S series is known for the high-quality optics phones, and the S10 is not an exception. The handset has a very nice 12-megapixel camera with optical image stabilization(OIS), an ultra-wide-angle 16-megapixel camera with a 123-degree field of view and a bonus 12-megapixel telephoto lens which enables 2X zoom.


Likewise LG’s similar V40 phone’s cameras, one can swap between these lenses with a finger touch at a button. Samsung will also save your efforts as you can simply scroll in and out more like a traditional camera, and the smartphone will automatically switch the lenses as appropriate. The interface is more easy to grasp and comes loaded with modified extras, including an enhanced panoramas and a Pro mode. There’s even a setting that allows Samsung’s algorithms to work automatically to suggest a better angle.

In-short, you won’t need the plethora of extra modes to click a great photo. The Galaxy S10 captures better shots than almost any phone out there in the market. It's in the same league with the handily outperformed: the OnePlus 6T iPhone XS and Google Pixel 3.

Though, the Night shots cannot match the Pixel 3’s new Night Sight mode, but they’re comparably far better than most else. The combination of lenses did a great job pulling in more light and color than we expected on a particularly brisk evening walk through a park.

Samsung S10 Camera review

The automatic scene effects did let us down in a few shots, for instance, Samsung's algorithms decided that each and every street lamp must sparkle like a star. At first that was charming, then we had to turn off the camera's Scene Optimizer to eliminate the sparkles.

On the contrary, we had fun with the Live Focus mode, which worked particularly great for selfies. Particularly, it finds your face and lets you blur the background in different manners.