• Android thread V-garychencool finally rooted his phone and got ICS edition
    10,001 replies, posted
Going for a Xperia V then, hoping Cyanogen mod is available soon. :)
[QUOTE=garychencool;38679230]dat noise[/QUOTE] It was taken with my Nexus 4. It definitely won't be winning best camera award any time soon. Shame really. :(
[QUOTE=jaybuz;38679116]Took a pretty cool photo today. Turned out to be a nice wallpaper too. [IMG]http://i.jaybuz.me/Screenshot_2012-12-02-20-01-15.png[/IMG][/QUOTE] holy fuck that's a great picture looks like a painting
[QUOTE=xmariusx;38679523]Going for a Xperia V then, hoping Cyanogen mod is available soon. :)[/QUOTE] You're in luck. [QUOTE]LT25i - V - tsubasa - CM10 work in progress[/QUOTE] [url]https://sites.google.com/site/projectfreexperia/home/supported-devices[/url] I wouldn't expect any 2012 Xperia to not have support for this.
Here's the original [IMG]http://i.solidfiles.net/866d453685.jpg[/IMG]
No idea about the rest of latest Xperia phones, but the Xperia T for example has probably one of the most complete (and not broken) source codes available (not just kernel source like Samsung had until recently, and they're SLOWLY changing that too), so developing CM10 for it was really easy and the first public build with 99% things working was out in two weeks. So if the Xperia V is anything like that, you're in good hands.
Oh god that's a horrible camera. I've never seen a camera that noisey in natural light.
[QUOTE=jaybuz;38679668]Here's the original [IMG]http://i.solidfiles.net/866d453685.jpg[/IMG][/QUOTE] EXIF data says it was shot at ISO 100 @ 1/173 seconds, F-Stop unknown, Focal length 5mm. I would expect the camera to dip down to a lower ISO value like ISO 50 or something since the exposure time is so short. I assume you used the stock app right?
Meh, figured out how to access the bloody root folder, finally; only to find my file is probably not only too long, but the wrong format as well :/
[QUOTE=garychencool;38679710]EXIF data says it was shot at ISO 100 @ 1/173 seconds, F-Stop unknown, Focal length 5mm. I would expect the camera to dip down to a lower ISO value like ISO 50 or something since the exposure time is so short. I assume you used the stock app right?[/QUOTE] Yeah. I think I set to "Action" mode at the time because it looked the best.
[I]yay it's pitchfork time. let's trash talk the nexus 4![/I] On a more serious note, I really like the colors in the photo, they really add to the feeling (edit: like, the atmosphere. vintage color theme etc)
[QUOTE=PyroCF;38679709]Oh god that's a horrible camera. I've never seen a camera that noisey in natural light.[/QUOTE] Looks like it came from my Droid Eris camera. Which by the way is the Verizon equivalent of the HTC Hero. It produced muddy looking pictures like that even in good light.
Yah my Samsung Focus takes better shots. Also I never read Engadget's review of the Nexus 4, but they're now back on my list of websites that need to stop writing reviews because they don't know anything. [quote]This panel is one of the best you can get right now, and is on par with the 720p displays we've played with on the One X and Samsung Galaxy S III. It ranks in between those two competitors when it comes to color saturation. The darks are as dark as you'll see on the One X (but less than the GS3), and the whites are brighter than on either rival phone. We also noticed that the Nexus shows off the darkest reds and magentas, as well as the lightest greens and yellows.[/quote]
Let's talk more about cameras on your phones! (Open this in new tab) [thumb]http://i.minus.com/ibv9wuGaIXnitS.jpg[/thumb] EXIF: ISO 64, f/2.6, 1/1600, 4mm focal length
[QUOTE=garychencool;38679627]You're in luck. [url]https://sites.google.com/site/projectfreexperia/home/supported-devices[/url] I wouldn't expect any 2012 Xperia to not have support for this.[/QUOTE] Nice! :D Will stuff like mobile bravio engine 2 work with cyanogen mod? Or is it not a OS specific thing, and more like OLED thing. .. thing
[QUOTE=xmariusx;38679900]Nice! :D Will stuff like mobile bravio engine 2 work with cyanogen mod? Or is it not a OS specific thing, and more like OLED thing. .. thing[/QUOTE] The mobile Bravia engine is kinda useless imo, and you will most likely lose it with CM because it's a Sony related thing and they would get sued for using it without licensing and such.
[t]https://dl.dropbox.com/u/14575796/Cellular/2012-05-15 16.52.31.jpg[/t] 1/1183 shutter. F/2.8. No ISO info. K. Galaxy Nexus. [t]https://dl.dropbox.com/u/14575796/Cellular/IMAG0030.jpg[/t] ISO 100 (no other EXIF data) Last picture I took with my Droid Eris before I got my Galaxy Nexus.
[QUOTE=xmariusx;38679900]Nice! :D Will stuff like mobile bravio engine 2 work with cyanogen mod? Or is it not a OS specific thing, and more like OLED thing. .. thing[/QUOTE] It's a post processing engine. Good displays don't need something like that.
[t]http://dl.dropbox.com/u/5733962/IMG_20121120_154112.jpg[/t] [img]http://jesusfuck.me/di/YD60/exif-data.png[/img] although I'm pretty sure flash was actually turned off at the time oh well
[QUOTE=Demache;38679936][t]https://dl.dropbox.com/u/14575796/Cellular/2012-05-15 16.52.31.jpg[/t] 1/1183 shutter. F/2.8. No ISO info. K. Galaxy Nexus.[/QUOTE] With that shutter speed (I still find it odd that the Galaxy Nexus (and all of Nexus phones, maybe it's just Samsung?) doesn't use the standardized shutter speeds (like 1/60, 125, 250, 500, etc.) instead it uses whatever value it wants.) I'd assume the ISO is the lowest it can go. Maybe ISO100? I don't know the lowest ISO setting the camera can go so you can quickly test this by pointing the camera at something bright and taking a photo (like directly at a lamp or something) and report back with what the lowest ISO is. In terms of the actual photo, it looks pretty good. After comparing the highs, mids and lows on the photo, the Galaxy Nexus camera does perform better than my Mini Pros 5MP sensor for outdoor shots. My friend with a GNexus took a photo of a sheet of paper (school work) and it looked horrifyingly bad. The ISO was really high and such and I would think that it would perform better in low light. I later found out that the GNexus has a 3mm focal length, the Nexus S has 3.6mm focal length and mine has 4mm so based on the focal length alone, my phones sensor would allow more light in therefore using a lower ISO and taking better lower light images. The detail doesn't have much noise and things are not blown out. Maybe the photo had amazingly good lighting at the time you took the photo. [quote] [t]https://dl.dropbox.com/u/14575796/Cellular/IMAG0030.jpg[/t] ISO 100 (no other EXIF data) Last picture I took with my Droid Eris before I got my Galaxy Nexus.[/QUOTE] At a glance it looks pretty good, although sections of the fur was blown out. The dynamic range isn't bad either with the sensor though. /androidphotographythread
I always use my own photos on my phone: [img]http://i.imgur.com/Dc7XG.jpg[/img] It scrolls, too. Original: [url]http://dl.dropbox.com/u/12347804/capilano.jpg[/url]
HTC EVO 4G LTE [t]https://dl.dropbox.com/u/59459111/gaben%20orders%20asian%20food.jpg[/t] [t]https://dl.dropbox.com/u/59459111/gaben%20orders%20an%20exif%20tag.PNG[/t] I'll test the GS3 now
[QUOTE=Kaabii;38669939]The December thing was probably just a simple issue of a programmer changing something and forgetting to start at index zero or something.[/QUOTE] Essentially a logical branch changed and moving code around made things not work anymore. The fix is a few lines of shuffling, that's all.
GS3 CDMA + ParanoidAndroid ISO 80 with flash on. Holy shit the macro mode is awesome [t]https://dl.dropbox.com/u/59459111/metal%20gear%20solid%20II%20wallet.jpg[/t]
I gave panorama apps a try (open in new tab) [thumb]http://i.minus.com/ilo8T0lDNrWbH.jpg[/thumb] Used ProCapture
My HTC desire Z has a terrible camera, and the easiest scratched camera lens ever, combined they make photos like this [T]http://i.imgur.com/Nrt5k.jpg[/T] ...But on the other hand my BlackBerry torch 9810 took beautiful pictures like this [T]http://i.imgur.com/guJP2.jpg[/T] [editline]2nd December 2012[/editline] (middle click them)
[QUOTE=garychencool;38680097]With that shutter speed (I still find it odd that the Galaxy Nexus (and all of Nexus phones, maybe it's just Samsung?) doesn't use the standardized shutter speeds (like 1/60, 125, 250, 500, etc.) instead it uses whatever value it wants.) I'd assume the ISO is the lowest it can go. Maybe ISO100? I don't know the lowest ISO setting the camera can go so you can quickly test this by pointing the camera at something bright and taking a photo (like directly at a lamp or something) and report back with what the lowest ISO is. In terms of the actual photo, it looks pretty good. After comparing the highs, mids and lows on the photo, the Galaxy Nexus camera does perform better than my Mini Pros 5MP sensor for outdoor shots. My friend with a GNexus took a photo of a sheet of paper (school work) and it looked horrifyingly bad. The ISO was really high and such and I would think that it would perform better in low light. I later found out that the GNexus has a 3mm focal length, the Nexus S has 3.6mm focal length and mine has 4mm so based on the focal length alone, my phones sensor would allow more light in therefore using a lower ISO and taking better lower light images. The detail doesn't have much noise and things are not blown out. Maybe the photo had amazingly good lighting at the time you took the photo. At a glance it looks pretty good, although sections of the fur was blown out. The dynamic range isn't bad either with the sensor though. /androidphotographythread[/QUOTE] Yeah, the GNexus isn't very good for low light pictures, you learn that very early on. They get noisy as all hell and if your not careful when you press the shutter, they blur badly. Flash is definitely a life saver if detail is important. Also I tried it on my ceiling lamp, and it was at ISO 100. Took a picture underneath my bed, and it was at ISO 640. The Eris one shocked me, because that is unbelievably good for the camera. Like I mentioned earlier, its practically a Hero, just a few months newer, so I'm sure it used the same sensor. Not sure if the camera on the Hero was any good for the time, but that seriously blew my mind.
These two pictures were taken with my Galaxy Nexus shortly after I got it, at my uncle's place: I liked the detail on this one... [t]http://i.imgur.com/W1J0z.jpg[/t] And "my" car, the lighting turned out pretty nicely on this one: [t]http://i.imgur.com/fnxKI.jpg[/t]
Man we need some sort of Android camera spec sheet or something, making one now... [url]https://docs.google.com/spreadsheet/ccc?key=0AhZvgtcPC9vMdEhNUnZRM2x3UWFNR0ZZOW9kd2ZJcGc[/url] You all can edit
How do I find out the exact details of my camera?
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