Coarse State of Cellphone Imagery
Cell Phones have been toting cameras for nearly a decade now if not longer. The technology gets smaller and better and so we see an increase in the uber awesomezorz mega pixels and yet not one cell camera that I've seen has handled any lighting condition outside of flouresent or natural with any form of quality. Every picture is rather dark, a bit washed out (or sepia toned) and usually grainy. Why? Digital cameras aren't new. I understand that the actual sensor in a cellphone camera isn't big by any standard, but why is all the focus on mega pixels rather than making "fine" image quality mean something (pun intented)? I own a Nokia N900. It says it has Carl Zeiss optics on the cover to the camera, yet its easily beat by a 12 year old 1.3 megapixel Fujifilm digital camera that uses an 8 megabyte SmartMedia card. I did install FCam and it does offer a bit more control over things, but low light pictures still look crappy. Does it really cost that much board real estate to put a decent CMOS sensor in a phone? I'm not asking for a pocket sized dSLR, but I am asking for a decent digital camera in a ~$500 phone.
Note: I didn't actually pay $500 for my phone.
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