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***Official Camera Pictures Thread***

Simply put, don't use your cell phone for pictures and don't use your camera to make phone calls.

I agree with the responses above.

I have two Nikon DSLRs and a backpack full of lenses, a carbon fiber tripod with a ballhead, and more memory cards/batteries/accessories than you can shake a stick at. I know what good photos look like.

It doesn't mean that an ultra-convenient, take-anywhere camera doesn't have a damn good place in my arsenal. The best camera is the one you have with you - and if I can pick a phone that has a quality camera that will be with me at all times, that's pretty freakin' great.

Phone camera quality is important. Don't dismiss it. Make personal decisions around it - maybe for you, it's not worth using. But for a lot of people, it is.
 
well I for one hate sony pictures, phones or camera,,

more saturated,, gross,, sony cameras are so over saturated they look animated,,

guess you cant please everybody,, i would sooner the pictures to stay as they are, then go with more saturated,
 
I agree with the responses above.

I have two Nikon DSLRs and a backpack full of lenses, a carbon fiber tripod with a ballhead, and more memory cards/batteries/accessories than you can shake a stick at. I know what good photos look like.

It doesn't mean that an ultra-convenient, take-anywhere camera doesn't have a damn good place in my arsenal. The best camera is the one you have with you - and if I can pick a phone that has a quality camera that will be with me at all times, that's pretty freakin' great.

Phone camera quality is important. Don't dismiss it. Make personal decisions around it - maybe for you, it's not worth using. But for a lot of people, it is.

The truth on phone camera is somewhere between your guys. I was also on the camp that camera on smartphone is secondary function not too long ago. But iPhone4 cam changed my view on it. It's definitely excellent for web posting and sharing on SNS. I heard that Apple's design spec requirement for phone camera is very high, so I guess it's due to its great lens quality combined with good imaging software. But if you blow it up on large monitor at 100% crop resolution, even iPhone4S cam shows grainy, noisy nature a lot of times under dim lighting and unsharp depending on user. I think phone camera definitey has its place for every day use if you don't intend to take serious pictures for large printing.

The phone camera performance is basically limited by its small sensor size regardless of MP. I read somewhere it's about 1/7~1/8" diagonal on phone camera sensor. Most P&S cams have 1/2.3" sensor with 12~16MP these days. So 8MP on 1/8" is probably like pixel density of well over 20MP on 1/2.3" sensor. Most camera geeks think sweet spot for 1/2.3" sensor is 7~10MP and going beyond that hurts image quality due to too high noise. I haven't done math to figure out what's the equivalent MP on 1/8" sensor, but my gut feeling is about 4~5MP. DSLRs have sensor greater than one inch diagonal with big aperture lens and that's why it blows away tiny cams in image quality and speed.
 
I don't think any of us are denying that. It's just impossible to replicate on a miniature scale what bigger cameras can do with better optics, longer focal lengths and larger sensors. If you're planning to blow a pic up and pixel peep, then you're right, even a tiny dedicated point-and-shoot is going to show shortcomings. But to "capture the moment" in average lighting conditions, a cell phone camera can be your friend.

As for my comment on Sony P&S cams, I, too, am not a fan of the in-camera processing, although they have toned it down a bit from where they were about three years ago. The Sony is a marvel because it has a respectable wide angle lens that most cameras of this ilk lack (a necessity for indoor group shots), some great low-light capabilities that produce mostly respectable results, and a wonderful internal lens design that mean not external moving parts (other than a sliding lens cover), which means it's a great camera to keep in a purse full time without a case, or in a back pocket. But this Sony TX9 is hindered by its small sensor and miniature, complex optics, that mean every photo is a bit of compromise vs. carrying around a slightly larger point & shoot with a more traditional extendable lens design.

I just threw it out there to point out that "real cameras," too, are full of compromises -- the Sony is great at being small, but not something I'd go to for framed prints.
 
Coming from my Droid X, I'll be happy if it doesn't take blurry pictures and the flash fires at the right times.

I don't need great pictures from my phone, but it would be nice to not have to take 5 tries for the phone to get it right.
 
I don't think any of us are denying that. <snip> But to "capture the moment" in average lighting conditions, a cell phone camera can be your friend.

Exactly.

I know why these tiny cameras don't take great photos. Incidentally, I think 5-7mp is all any point-and-shoot camera needs, whether it's a cell phone or just a consumer camera.

However, you don't take a camera everywhere. I take my camera a whole lot of places that other people don't, but it's not ALWAYS hanging off my shoulder. Sometimes, it's not about art, or stellar photography, or making prints. Sometimes, it's just about capturing a moment. That's important, and I think people lose sight of it - a cell phone is a perfect device for ensuring that you can capture any moment that presents itself.

THAT is why a good quality camera on a cell phone is a valuable tool. It's not because I don't know what the sensor sizes are, or the pixel densities, or the signal:noise ratios for those densities, or all of the inherent compromises and advantages of the various form factors. It's just because a "real" camera isn't always there when you need it, but the cell phone frequently is.
 
I wanted to start a thread to post all of those panoramic and other photos that you've taken with your Galaxy Nexus! We had this in the Dinc thread and I LOVED to see the photos that everyone took. I'll start tomorrow morning when I get my Dinc and update this post with my first photos.
 
Merged threads together, hopefully we will get more pictures rolling in now that more people will be getting this phone shortly.
 
Here are some from today -- so far very, very satisfied with the camera.

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H2Nxk.jpg


41LhR.jpg
 
Have you seen pictures taken by the Rezound or more importantly, the Galaxy S2? Maybe you should.

Yes, the Rezound's pix were spectacular and you could shoot in 16:9.

Has ANYONE figured out to take a 16:9 picture with the Nexus? I find it very weird that there is no setting for this. Many people like displaying 16:9 pix on their HDTVs and that's the AR you want.

Is it possible I missed that setting or does this thing really not have that???
 
Fantastic! I tried the Pano app on my Incredible today for the first time but the Galaxy panoramic is way better looking.
 
Played with the Nexus in the store today. Camera shots are great. I don't care if a couple of phones take better ones, I'm very satisfied with the ones the Nexus took.

Video is shaky, especially while zooming while recording. However, I can live with it.

Have a scheduled call at 6:30 PST. I will be purchasing this phone.
 
Played with the Nexus in the store today. Camera shots are great. I don't care if a couple of phones take better ones, I'm very satisfied with the ones the Nexus took.

Video is shaky, especially while zooming while recording. However, I can live with it.

Have a scheduled call at 6:30 PST. I will be purchasing this phone.

You don't have to live with it. Just get an alternate camera app until they fix the stock one.
 
It does good with flash on, but without flash the pictures aren't as impressive as I would like. They don't take time to focus when flash is turned off..

IMG_20111215_154635.jpg

IMG_20111215_154647.jpg
 
There was another thread started but it ended up being a debate on Megapixels.

It would be great to get everyone's review of the Galaxy Nexus Camera Here.

Feel free to display or link pictures you've taken with your Nexus and compare it to your previous smartphone camera.

Also if you just want to chime in with tips or questions we can all post here as well.

Here is Mine:

Previous Phone: Droid X

The Good:
Great Results in outdoor and in well lit indoor lighting. Autofocus is much faster than my old DX. No shutter lag is a great feature to have and has already captured some moments with my daughter I could have missed otherwise.

Camera Interface is much improved in ICS and picking your focus point has really helped my image quality using my phone.

The Bad:
Focusing with no shatter lag is very hit or miss for me.

Low light shots seem to get blown out at times and are very dark other times. Wish it would get this right but it has been very inconsistent for me.


My thoughts/ Tips:

So far I am very happy with this camera especially when compared to my previous Droid X. It is, of course, no where near my Canon T3i but that is not what I was expecting. The Zero shutter lag helps with my quick pics as this is what I use my camera for. I am hoping with some software updates we can get better low light pictures out of this thing as it seems the the exposure it is auto choosing is all over the place.

TIP:For getting the best shots dont rely on the no shutter lag feature. Once you have the picture your looking for in frame, click on the screen to grab your focal point, then press and hold shutter button. The second it is in focus and your hand is steady let go. I can almost always get a clean shot this way. It also only takes me 2-3 seconds to do it.


Sample Shots:

(Coming Soon)

Will update my review with more use.

Please add your reviews!
 
I don't know if this is the right place to ask this, but... I've been taking some pictures with my Nexus and playing with some of them using the built-in editing features (e.g., lighting). I've discovered something REALLY annoying: when you save an edited figure, the phone (software, I presume) does NOT overwrite the older photo, but saves it to an ENTIRELY different folder in the Gallery (Edited, rather than Camera). If I want to show anyone pictures, I have to show them one gallery, then switch to another for the rest.

So I'm looking for two things:

(1) Is there a way to merge the two folders, or move all the pics from one to another? There's no "Move" command in any menu I can find in the Gallery...

(2) Is there some way to configure the camera to NOT do this, and instead to automatically overwrite the original with the edited version? I don't think this should be automatic because some people might want both, but this is something that definitely should be configurable.

Thanks in advance for any help!
 
here is my dog, took the picture with the nexus the moment i got home. (and don't give me crap about mowing the yard, it is winter!)
 

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Just pasting what I had in the other camera threads since this one has "official" in it..so it must be good.

Was farting around with the nexus yesterday around Toledo..










 
Took some pictures at the national harbor yesterday of sunset and then of some cheese fries at a restaraunt nearby. Not to bad, also tooks some with my DSLR which I won't post :)
 

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