Nokia
was expected to make a splash at MWC today with the announcement of
entry level Windows Phone Tango handsets like the rumored Lumia 610, as well as a version of AT&T's Lumia 900 for the rest of the world.
Besides the news on the Windows Phone front, though, we were also expecting with baited breath something associated with the PureView brand, which all clues pointed to being a Nokia N8 successor with a giant camera sensor.
The phone does 1080p video,
and for stills it scales down to 38MP for 16:9 format. The 41
Megapixels allow zooming without losing quality if you shoot at standard
8MP or 5MP resolutions, though, so that might have been on Nokia's mind
when deciding which camera sensor in their labs to throw in there. The
phone is also ready to shoot in less than a second, which gives the Xperia S camera "Quick" mode a run for its money.
The
camera guru Damian Dinning is behind this Nokia 808 PureView, and we can
be fairly certain the results will be splendid, no matter if Nokia has
overdone it with the megapixel count or not. He already hinted that the next best cameraphone "will have a Nokia logo on it, just like the current one :)", and also that "when we do 1080p, we'll do it like no other", so the puzzle starts to fit together.
The 1080p video can be captured with 4x lossless zoom, because of the huge sensor, using a new audio technology called Nokia Rich Recording.
The Rich Recording feat captures stereo sound in CD-like quality,
something that has been possible before only with external microphones.
The Nokia 808 PureView is also the first smartphone to feature the Dolby Headphones tech, meaning you get Dolby Surround sound with any pair.
The
Nokia 808 PureView comes with polished and easy to use camera interface
with plenty of options to take advantage of the monster sensor,
something that Windows Phone isn't quite ready to offer yet. The
interface has allegedly been designed with automatic mode in mind for
easy snapping and sharing, but giving access to the maximum sensor
capabilities as well.
Nokia's Jo Harlow said at the press event that "People
will inevitably focus on the 41 megapixel sensor, but the real quantum
leap is how the pixels are used to deliver breath-taking image quality
at any resolution and the freedom it provides to choose the story you
want to tell."
Nokia has been working
for years on this sensor, and the best part is that it will be brought
to future devices (nudge, wink, Windows Phone) at some point. The Nokia
808 PureView will be available in May for EUR 450 off-contract (about
$600). Any takers?
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