Seoul - Expect sharper, clearer selfies this year.
Samsung has
beefed up the camera in its Galaxy S5 smartphone due for April release
and added smarter camera software, following Sony and Nokia in their
upgrades of handset cameras.
The tweaks mean smartphone photos,
ubiquitous nowadays because of social media such as Facebook and
Twitter, will be closer in quality to images captured by digital
single-lens reflex cameras, also known as DSLR.
How to give a
super-thin smartphone the power of a DSLR camera that can capture moving
images with clarity is a key challenge for the likes of Samsung, Sony,
Nokia and LG as they try to differentiate their offerings in a crowded
handset market.
Their efforts to make smartphone cameras more
powerful have taken a toll on the compact, point-and-shoot camera
market, but catching up to the high-end cameras used by professional
photographers had appeared a far-fetched ambition.
Software trickery
The
gap is getting narrower thanks mainly to improvements in camera
software and other technologies, but may never close completely.
The
global wireless show that wraps up in Barcelona on Thursday showed
smartphone makers using software trickery to offset their camera
weaknesses: inferior image sensors and lack of optical zoom lens. The
companies are also making photo manipulation on the phone easier to
learn than manually controlling DSLR cameras.
Instead of touting
their smartphones as thinner, lighter or bigger screened, Samsung, Sony
and LG were boasting how their latest mobile gadgets can record
ultra-high definition videos known as 4K, take big-pixel pictures
without a second of delay and capture clearer images even at a low-light
settings and when a subject is moving.
One trend in smartphone
camera this year will be phase detection autofocus, previously available
only in cameras with interchangeable lens, said Chris Chute, a director
at research company IDC.
Samsung showcased the feature in the
Galaxy S5, the latest version of the South Korean company's flagship
smartphone. It reduces the time it takes to focus on a subject to 0.3
second so even when the subject is moving, the image can be captured
with a sharp edge, said Seshu Madhavapeddy, Samsung's senior vice
president for US product and technology.
"Now that phones are
starting to have this, consumers will only be more likely to use phones
for not just everyday pictures, but more and more for special event
photography",
Chute said.
With the 16 megapixel rear camera
in the Galaxy S5, it is possible to preview the result of applying high
dynamic range imaging to pictures. HDR imaging usually helps create
better pictures in extreme lighting conditions but with digital cameras,
it is processed after snapping a photo.
Lure buyers
Samsung
and LG also showed how their high-end smartphones can selectively blur
and sharpen a picture by tapping the area a user wants to adjust. This
feature, which adds depth to a photo, was a major trait in DSLR cameras.
While DSLR cameras did this trick in the image's raw data by
changing the lens aperture, Samsung's S5 and LG's G Pro 2 do it through
software. Nokia and Sony said their latest smartphones have similar
features.
Nokia is also betting big on powerful camera features
to lure buyers from Samsung and Apple Inc. Among Nokia's major products
is the Lumia 1020 smartphone announced last year, which can take 38
megapixel images.
Larger pixels in the camera don't necessarily mean a better picture, which also depends on the lens and image sensors.
But
bigger pixels allow taking photos with sufficient details for
poster-size prints, something that professional photographers are keen
on. Other high-end smartphone cameras are around or below 20 megapixels.
Sony's
Xperia Z2 smartphone, announced at the Mobile World Congress, has a
rear camera with 20.7 megapixels, same as the predecessor Z1, but Sony
upgraded the camera's video-recording power to 4K. The Z2 is also
equipped with technologies that allow users capture to moving subjects
blur-free.
All these handsets from Samsung, Sony and LG can
record ultra-HD picture quality video, something that isn't widespread
among digital cameras.
"This trend is happening much faster than most predicted", said IDC's Chute of the 4K video recording in high-end smartphones.
But will these moves push smartphone cameras to reach the market reserved for premium cameras over $1 000?
"You're
getting to the stage where cameras in high-end models are good enough
for the majority of consumers in most environments", said Nick Dillon, a
senior analyst at Ovum. But there will be a significant quality gap
between the pictures from DSLR cameras and smartphones for the
foreseeable future, he said.