Ultrapixels work well enough, but there's definitely a lot more to come from the technology.Īnother 'failing' some perceive for the HTC One is that, by default, the phone shoots in 16:9 size, rather than the traditional 4:3. We've noted some criticism of the HTC Ultrapixel system already, and yes, if you really care about photos on the go, working hard on scene composition all the time and fiddling with the exposure chances are you won't want this phone. You probably won't look at many photos this way, but if you're thinking of uploading them to Facebook, you probably will get some people checking out your efforts at a larger size. However, on the computer screen things are oddly different, with higher exposure and some loss of detail. How does the HTC One fare in our ultimate cameraphone test?Īnd the photos we took looked stunning at times on the phone screen, which HTC says is where most of them stay - which we agree with to a degree.It's a bit closer now the competition has caught up - the Galaxy S4, LG G2 and iPhone 5S all excel in this area too, plus the Nokia Lumia 1020 is in a league of its own when it comes to cameraphone-ability. The HTC One DESTROYS the Galaxy S3 at low-light ability, as you'll see in the photos below. We were surprised how trigger happy the flash was in auto mode given this ability. There's a lot of noise thanks to the lower pixel count at times, but the range of light levels you get to shoot in compared to other camera phones is excellent.
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