|
|
|
|
|
by Samuel_Michon
4655 days ago
|
|
> the early cameras were so far below the specs of other contemporary phones. I don’t think that was the case at all. The original iPhone had a better camera than my high-end SonyEricsson smartphone did at the time. Also, the camera on the iPhone 3G was exactly the same as the camera on the original iPhone, so it couldn’t have been used as a way to people to upgrade their phones. Apple tries to get people to upgrade every two years, not every year. The difference in photo quality between an iPhone 3GS and an iPhone 4S or an iPhone 4 and an iPhone 5 is immense. However, all of those models were among the top camera phones when they were new. |
|
"..it's still a lousy sensor by even ultra low-end dedicated camera standards, so we'd recommend this not be used in the field for anything but the occasional candid shot"
Ars Technica compared it semi-favourably to low end camera phones, but:
"..Another glaring omission is the lack of video capabilities in the iPhone's camera: something that many very basic (and much cheaper) handsets can do"
It wasn't terrible, but it wasn't anything special, lacked many features found on much cheaper phones and again wasn't upgraded for two full years. By that time it's camera capabilities were woefully behind even the most basic camera phones. Here's what Macworld said about the 3G:
"For a product as on the cutting edge as the iPhone, its built-in camera is an embarrassment"
IMHO the reason they didn't upgrade the camera on the 3G was that they didn't have to. They were selling as many of them as they could make and being in a class of their own had essentially no competition. As I said, they kept improving this feature in reserve for when they needed it. This isn't really a criticism, I loved my 3G, but this is Apple's modus opperandi.
http://www.engadget.com/2007/07/03/iphone-review-part-3-apps...
http://arstechnica.com/apple/2007/07/iphone-review/11/
http://www.macworld.com/article/1134482/iphone3g_review.html...