New camera war brewing in the smartphone market
HTC and Nokia are both expected to announce products in February
IDG News Service - HTC and Nokia are preparing to go head-to-head with new cameras on upcoming smartphones, as they hope to steal market share from Apple and Samsung Electronics.
This year will once again see the camera become a key feature as smartphone vendors try to differentiate their products.
"Differentiating your device on looks alone has become almost impossible, which has resulted in manufacturers looking back at some of the other features on the phone as a way to differentiate what a consumer gets and give salespeople some hooks, and the camera is a very, very useful vehicle to do that," said Ben Wood, director of research at CCS Insight.
The importance of cameras in people's daily lives has grown exponentially because of social networks like Instagram and more people using the phone as their primary camera, according to Wood.
Already this year, vendors are focusing more on the camera and video capabilities of their smartphones.
At International CES, Sony announced the Xperia Z, which uses HDR (High Dynamic Range) technology when shooting video and still images. The Android-based smartphone also has a burst mode that can take 10 pictures per second at a 9-megapixel resolution until there is no more storage. BlackBerry 10 has TimeShift, which takes a rapid series of images and lets users choose the best facial expressions in each one and then combine them to one picture.
But it seems like HTC and Nokia may have something more spectacular in store. HTC will be first out of the gate when the company presents its new flagship smartphone on Feb. 19. The rumored M7 is expected to combine three 4.3-megapixel sensors to produce a single, better image. HTC isn't commenting, but a blog posted earlier this week does state that it will offer a new "camera experience" in 2013.
The post is entitled "A Brief History of Photography" and includes criticisms of the effort to increase the number of pixels as a way to improve image quality, which lends some credence to the idea that HTC will choose a different approach. One of the digs is specifically aimed at the 41-megapixel sensor on Nokia's Symbian-based 808 PureView, which was launched at last year's Mobile World Congress.
Nokia declined to comment on the post, but the image quality produced by the 808 PureView has received a lot of praise. Since its arrival, hints from Nokia have helped spark industry rumors that the underlying sensor technology will be transplanted to its Windows Phone-based Lumia family, and the latest round of reports now say that a device dubbed EOS -- which is likely a code name, since the term is already being used by Canon -- will arrive later this year and do just that.
- Google I/O 2013's Coolest Products and Services
- 10 Star Trek Technologies That are Almost Here
- 19 Generations of Computer Programmers
- 25 Must-Have Technologies for SMBs
- A walking tour: 33 questions to ask about your company's security
- 15 social media scams
- The 7 elements of a successful security awareness program
- IT Certification Study Tips
- Register for this Computerworld Insider Study Tip guide and gain access to hundreds of premium content articles, cheat sheets, product reviews and more.
- Getting Ready for BlackBerry 10 and BlackBerry Enterprise Service 10: Tips for the IT Manager This overview document provides hands-on pointers for IT administrators who want to make their organization's transition to BlackBerry® 10 as simple, seamless and...
- TCO & Security of Enterprise Grade Mobility In this whitepaper, Strategy Analytics present the findings of extensive research into the total cost of ownership (TCO) and security for the major...
- Consumer Mobile Platforms: Are they Ready for the Enterprise? This study from Trend Micro compares today's four leading mobile operating systems - BlackBerry® OS, Apple iOS, Windows Phone, and Google Android™ -...
- Apps on BlackBerry 10: What Every Developer Should Know Get a quick review of what you need to know about creating, deploying, and managing the apps that enterprises rely on today, and...
- Doing More, with Enterprise Applications and BlackBerry 10 BlackBerry® 10 delivers an incredible apps ecosystem, full of new ways to empower your business. Get the details you need, right here.
- The Enterprise Security Capabilities of BlackBerry 10 See how BlackBerry® 10 guards against data leakage, prevents unauthorized access, secures corporate apps on personal devices and more - with advanced policies... All Smartphones White Papers | Webcasts