Nokia’s PureView smartphones shine at Photokina

Published by Pino Bonetti on September 21, 2012

Photokina is the world’s largest trade fair for the photographic and imaging industries, which has been held biennially in Cologne, Germany since 1950. Just as in 2010, Nokia is participating at the event together with Carl Zeiss in hall 2.1 at booth B011, to be precise.

In two years, many things have changed but one: Nokia is still strongly innovating in imaging. Actually, 2012 has been another great year for imaging at Nokia: in February we introduced the Nokia 808 PureView and just a couple of weeks ago the Nokia Lumia 920. Both smartphones take excellent photos and address some of the most common problems that people face when they are taking pictures with camera phones.

To showcase our imaging innovation, we invited Photokina visitors to experience both of our PureView smartphones. We also built a special demobox to simulate low light conditions and compare the results of the Nokia Lumia 920 with other smartphones.

Nokia's low light box demo at photokina

The imaging experts

At Photokina 2012 we are also participating at the Technical Image Press Association (TIPA) Awards Ceremony to receive the Best Imaging Innovation Award for Nokia 808 PureView that was announced in April. This gave me the chance to chat with our imaging experts Eero Salmelin and Juha Alakarhu.

“Consumers want to take great pictures in any conditions” says Eero “and the Pureview brand stands for the best imaging innovations we have created to solve everyday photography problems”.

With the award winning Nokia 808 PureView we solved the problem of zooming in with a camera phone. To deliver the best images imaginable at any resolution the Nokia 808 PureView features a large, high resolution 41 megapixel sensor, exclusive Carl Zeiss optics and Nokia-developed pixel processing technology.

“Low light performance has always been a very big problem in photography, since the very beginning; this is more manifest than ever in camera phones or compact cameras, which is why we looked into original ways to also solve this problem” continues Juha.

Nokia's imaging experts Eero Salmelin and Juha Alakarhu

Solving low light conditions

With the Nokia Lumia 920 we solve the problem of photos in low light conditions with a rear illuminated sensor, a f/2.0 aperture, optical image stabilization and the latest version of our imaging software.

All these elements combine to capture at least five times more light than other smartphones in similar conditions. In particular, the algorithms we are using in the Nokia Lumia 920 are enhancing brightness, colours, sharpness and clarity in the same way they do on the Nokia 808 PureView.

This is not only relevant in low light conditions; photos that are taken indoors are also sharper. In daylight the Nokia Lumia 920 can take better pictures of fast moving objects, removing blur and imprecisions caused by handshaking. Last but not least, video capabilities are also dramatically improved.

Although the Nokia Lumia 920 performs extremely well in low light conditions, you might sometimes want to use flash to create special effects. To our knowledge, the built in flash on the Nokia Lumia 920 is the brightest LED flash in the market, which also delivers better colours and a shorter flash pulse for best results.

The blogger’s view

Blogger visiting the Nokia stand

“Very often, you have only one chance to take a picture and the Nokia Lumia 920 clearly gives you the possibility to get it right” says blogger Steve ‘Chippy’ Paine.

“I use my DSLR for work, but in my everyday life I rely on the Nokia 808 PureView, with which I can capture so much more memories and emotions than without a camera; now I am very excited about the Nokia Lumia 920, because it basically allows me to take five times more usable photos.”

Photokina is always a great experience for me because I am amazed by the amount of technology packaged in cameras and relevant accessories. A feeling that, I know, is being shared by many other visitors.

Two years ago they couldn’t believe my photos were taken with a camera phone (Nokia N8). This year they are trying their best, unsuccessfully, to match their camera phones to the Nokia Lumia 920 and its performance in low light conditions.

Comments

  • http://www.facebook.com/simone.giovagnorio Simone Giovagnorio

    Trepidously waiting for Nokia LUMIA920
    YES!

  • Nokiagadgets

    Can’t think of other Nokia phone since N9 that i have wanted this much like Lumia 920.
    Can’t wait!

  • http://www.ultrabooknews.com chippy

    Thanks for the quote! I’m truly excited about the 920 although more so for video than for low-light work. I don’t do a lot of ‘still life’ in low light. Lumia 920 in the day, 808 for night perhaps ;-)

  • dazz

    When will you make available some real pics taken with the 920 (in low light and regular conditions)?

    • http://twitter.com/haikus Pino

      Some photos taken by Nokia Lumia 920 are available at http://www.nokia.com/global/products/pureview/

      • Stoli89

        Given Nokia Marketing’s horrific disaster of a launch with the 920, the only pics that will now count will have to come from a 3rd party professional reviewer.

      • Stoli89

        Given Nokia Marketing’s horrific disaster of a launch with the 920, the only pics that will now count will have to come from a 3rd party professional reviewer.

  • Hunter944

    I’m very impressed about OIS , but still I don’t get how OIS will help with still image for moving object

    • http://twitter.com/haikus Pino

      Hi @hunter944:disqus as Eero and Juha are explaining in this post, it’s not only about OIS. We have developed the camera of Nokia Lumia 920 in a way that it can collect 5x more light than other smartphones. More light means that you can take sharper photos also at faster shutter speed, removing the blur from fast moving objects.

      • Stoli89

        In the same scenario, how is the Lumia 920 advantaged vs other smartphones with the f2.0 lens? Here’s an excerpt from an HTC One series advertisement:
        “Super wide lens – an f2.0 lens is
        the widest currently available on a smartphone. It allows more light to
        enter the lens resulting in less blur and great low-light performance.”

        • http://twitter.com/haikus Pino

          Hi @Stoli89:disqus , I quote from above “With the Nokia Lumia 920 we solve the problem of photos in low light conditions with a rear illuminated sensor, a f/2.0 aperture, optical image stabilization and the latest version of our imaging software.”
          Not 1 or 2 elements, but 4 add up to collect much more light than any other smartphone.

  • Neil Frederick Calderon

    Now I’m undecided whether to get the 808 or the 920.

  • http://www.facebook.com/micke.atlanta Micke Jo

    In addition to Google and Apple employees, we had on Saturday and Sunday the iPhone5 on the Photokina booth to compare the imaging capabilities of it with the Nokia Lumia 920.
    They tried all, with or without flash, with or without HDR. But well, it difficult to beat physics. If you can keep the shutter open for a longer time through OIS, you get the better picture.

    The Lumia takes both brighter low-light images compared to the iPhone5 and with less noise. Smaller print that you still could read on a Lumia 920 picture, you couldn’t on an iPhone5 picture.

  • miki69

    Thanks Pino for this great article.

    OIS is a real breakthrough and resolves some of the ancient low light problems – camerashake. I’m sure most people will have more great images without knowing what’s the reason behind (average Joe). What also amazes me is the EASE to achieve this. You don’t need to be knowledgeable in order to produce great results.

    One question – being 3rd gen LED or not, LED will always fail short comparing to Xenon in 2 key departments: strength and reaction time eg (freeze- moment). Was the device thickness (or better say thinness) main reason for not adopting Xenon? Also sensor size: N86 has 1/2.3″ FSI while 920 has 1/3″ BSI – why? I know BSI are more photo-sensitive, but still…

    Coming from N8 (and previously having N86), it’s kinda hard for me going back to LED.

    Cheers,
    Miki