SlashGear 101: Nokia Lumia 1020 Oversampling and the 5MP “Sweet Spot”

The Nokia Lumia 1020 is a smartphone with a 41-megapixel camera introduced by the company with intent on having it carried by AT&T here in 2013. This device works with a unique blend of abilities, tending not only to the massive photos produced when it takes 34MP and 38MP photos, but 5 megapixel photos as well. And why would Nokia suggest taking 5 megapixel photos when they’ve got a 41 megapixel sensor on this camera? It’s the sweet spot!

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As suggested by Nokia’s own in-depth talks on the subject, the “sweet spot” in 5-megapixels exists for both image quality and for sharing purposes. You can print this size photo up to A3 side with ease and they’re well and above high-quality enough for slapping up on Facebook and Google+. The key with Nokia’s release of the 1020 and the 41MP / 5MP tie in lies in one word: Oversampling.

Oversampling

This is not a brand new concept for the camera industry – it’s not even new to Nokia, if you consider devices like the Nokia 808 PureView – but what’s happening with this device is a rebirth of efforts in the space. We’ll be having a chat on the possibilities of this setup with “lossless” or high-res zooming-in on photos as well, but for now, it’s all about the “amazing detail” Nokia promises in the everyday common 5 megapixel size shot.

The image you’re seeing below is one coming straight from Nokia’s white paper on the subject, suggesting that their technology kicks 5 megapixel photos into gear. With Oversampling – capitalized here so you know it’s Nokia’s unique software attacking the situation, in this article, you’re in for a very obvious different league with clarity.

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Nokia suggests that with the technology appearing in the Nokia Lumia 1020, you’ve got a high resolution sensor bringing in one whole heck of a lot more information for images than what’s offered with a “standard” 5 megapixel sensor. That makes sense on a very basic level – you’ve got a more megapixels, so you have a better photo, right? It’s not quite that simple, actually, and it’s not just dependent on the number of megapixels either.

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The big difference between a standard 5 megapixel shot and one produced by this new system from Nokia is in the amount of image data spread out across the photo. A standard system – here referring to technology appearing in basically every device in the market through history, especially in smartphones – takes, for example, “5 megapixel” photos but does not work with 5 million pixels of independent data.

Five megapixel photos can look like the image above on the left or the image above on the right, it all depends on how much data is given to each pixel. (Figure 3, that is)

Am I having deja-vu?

This system is extremely similar to what’s been described and implemented by HTC this year with the HTC One. In their case it’s called “UltraPixel” technology, and it’s created a device that’s been held in high regard for its photo capturing abilities, even with what the company calls it’s 4 UltraPixel (or 4 megapixel) camera on its back. Have a peek at our SlashGear 101: HTC UltraPixel Camera Technology post for more information on that alternate vision.

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You’ll also be able to find more information on the brand-name PureView from our SlashGear 101: Nokia PureView considering the Nokia 808 PureView as well. Keep it all straight and you’ll do a lot better than the vast majority of lay people in the public – good luck!


SlashGear 101: Nokia Lumia 1020 Oversampling and the 5MP “Sweet Spot” is written by Chris Burns & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2013, SlashGear. All right reserved.

SlashGear 101: Nokia PureView

Smartphone buyers pick handsets on the basis of cameras, that’s what the big manufacturers have realized, and Nokia is determined not to be left behind. As well as transitioning to lead the Windows Phone charge, the Finnish company is also positioning itself as the most imaginative firm in mobile photography, putting snapshots at the core of every recent device. One name stands out as special to any mobile photo pro, however, and that’s PureView, expected to crop up again with the imminent launch of the Nokia Lumia 1020. There’s a lot to be said for 41-megapixel cameras: read on, as we walk you why PureView is special, and what might come next.

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41-megapixel photos, right? Who needs that?

Don’t get too hung up on the headline-grabbing number: PureView photos aren’t really about raw megapixels. Instead, you need to start looking at megapixels as a means to an end, and in that respect there are several ways you can use a surfeit of imaging data.

Nokia’s analogy is putting out buckets in the rain. If you have a regular number of buckets, you’ll catch a regular amount of water. If you have many, many more buckets, you’ll catch even more water. In this case, the PureView’s 41-megapixel sensor is the field of buckets, and the rain is light hitting the CMOS. More light means more imaging data, and that data gives extra flexibility for Nokia’s processing to work with.

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So, the original PureView system was never intended to produce 41-megapixel images (in fact, it technically couldn’t: the sensor may have had that many, but captured either 38- or 34-megapixel images at most, depending on whether they were 4:3 or 16:9 aspect ratio). Instead, it used pixel oversampling: combining the data from, say, seven pixels in close proximity on the CMOS, for a single pixel in a roughly 5-megapixel end image.

By comparing what light seven pixels have captured, PureView can iron out any glitches – say, pixels that erroneously see more light than they should – and get a more accurate result on things like color, brightness, and other imaging detail. That makes the final photo more accurate too.

But does it work?

Nokia’s 808 PureView proved that it does. The bulky 2012 smartphone may only have really found buyers among true converts to the PureView system, but that was more down to it being Symbian’s last real hurrah than any shortcomings in the camera technology. Released while most attention was on Nokia’s Windows Phone efforts, sticking with Symbian was a practical decision rather than a preferable one: PureView had been in development for five years, and Nokia simply wanted to get it out the door.

“Nokia never expected the 808 PureView to be a best-seller”

Sales figures for the 808 PureView haven’t been released, but Nokia never expected it to be a best-seller. Instead, it was more a proof-of-concept for the PureView system, and in that respect it was a roaring success.

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The 808 PureView actually had two different modes. As well as taking photos in the PureView system, it could shoot full-resolution stills; the latter didn’t get any of the benefits of pixel oversampling, but they did show off the core aptitude of the specially-designed sensor. In PureView mode, the 808 produced roughly 2-, 5-, or 8-megapixel photos, but Nokia’s boast was that an image at each resolution would likely out-class a comparison shot from a rival device a megapixel-tier up.

There are sample images in our original Nokia 808 PureView review, but the takeaway is that, for all its faults as a smartphone, as a camera it proved superb. It took no small amount of engineering, but Nokia and its imaging team had come up with a photo experience that rivaled dedicated Micro Four Thirds cameras and above.

What about this lossless digital zoom?

Pixel oversampling is only one way to use all those extra megapixels. The other, Nokia decided, was to create a zoom system with the best of both optical and digital methods. For photographers, optical zooms are generally preferable, since they don’t result in any quality loss. Digital zooms, in comparison, don’t need any moving lenses, which makes them more straightforward and less prone to damage, but since they basically enlarge a portion of the frame, you end up with a picture at half the quality for every 2x you zoom in.

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PureView allows for a digital zoom with no loss in quality and no extra moving parts. It’s easiest to imagine it as a progressive cropping of the full-resolution image the sensor is capable of: taking, say, a 5-megapixel section out of a maximum-resolution still. The 808 PureView topped out at 3x digital zoom, since that was the level Nokia could reach before it would have had to start enlarging the picture and thus losing quality.

ImpureView

For PureView purists, there’s the “golden age” of the technology and then a dark period where simply the name – but not the true magic – has been used. Nokia was keen to carry over the halo effect of PureView to its Windows Phone range, and so the Lumia 920 became the first device to bear the brand, even though it didn’t have a 41-megapixel sensor.

Instead, the Lumia 920 used a new type of lens assembly, aiming to deliver better quality images than rivals but using a different system again. The Lumia 920 has optical image stabilization, by physically suspending the sensor on a moving jig that can be quickly shifted as the user’s hand shakes. By ironing out those judders, the end picture can have less blur; it also makes for better low-light performance, as the Lumia 920 can use longer shutter speeds without worrying about shake.

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The same system was used on other Windows Phones, most recently the Lumia 925, and Nokia actually described the system as the “second phase” of PureView, pushing the term to refer to a more over-arching attitude toward mobile photography than the system we’d been wowed by on the original 808. In a white paper [pdf link] on the technology, the company argued that its OIS sensor could, with 8.7-megapixels, deliver the same sort of quality as had been achieved with the 41-megapixels of the first phone.

“Many PureView converts were unconvinced by Nokia’s recent use of the name”

However, the lack of oversampling and the complete absence of a lossless digital zoom left many PureView converts unconvinced by Nokia’s more recent use of the name. For them, PureView means packing in the pixels, just as the 808 demonstrated.

So why hasn’t everyone slapped a massive sensor in their phones?

The clue is in the question: the 808 PureView’s sensor was physically huge, since Nokia realized it would need a 1/1.2-inch, 7728 x 5368 CMOS in order to deliver on the 3x optical zoom goal it had set itself. That made for a materially bigger handset, since the large sensor also had to be paired with lenses with sufficient focal length.

Even with a custom Zeiss lens assembly, the 808 PureView turned out to be a big device. Not quite as large as the average compact camera, but not far off, and in a world where slimline smartphones still command a premium, the chunky PureView system looked old-fashioned despite its cutting-edge guts.

Instead, we’ve seen other manufacturers follow different routes to improve mobile photography. Samsung, LG, and Sony, for instance, have chased higher and higher resolutions, each with 13-megapixel models on the market (and Sony expected to have a 20-megapixel phone next). Obviously, more megapixels means more data, but if you’re aiming for a phone that isn’t unduly bulky, it also means the pixels themselves have to be small and densely packed onto the CMOS. That can cause issues when it comes to low-light performance, as you end up with lots of pixels grabbing very little light in each exposure.

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Another route is HTC’s with the One. Dubbed UltraPixel, it echoes Nokia’s decision to ‘maximize the buckets’ but does that with bigger individual pixels rather than a bigger overall CMOS to accommodate more of them. So, the HTC One has a mere 4-megapixel sensor, but where the average phone camera of twice the resolution would have roughly 1.2 micron pixels, those in the One measure in at 2 microns. That might not sound much, but it means considerably more light, allowing for faster shutter speeds or, thanks to the inclusion of optical image stabilization, longer exposures without blur for bette low-light shots.

So what’s next?

In the short term, it’s the Nokia Lumia 1020, codenamed “EOS”, and widely expected to be the first Windows Phone to use “proper” PureView. A new 41-megapixel sensor and lens assembly is predicted, with Nokia using what it learned from the 808 PureView to slim down both components and make for a phone that’s not outlandishly large. It’ll still be on the bulky side for a modern smartphone, most likely, but not the pocket-buster the 808 was.

Beyond that, it’s all about light. PureView’s goal is getting as much light as possible, and Nokia is already investing in the next-generation CMOS technologies that will allow it to do that. One such example is the array camera system developed by Pelican Imaging, which clusters 25 sensors and lenses into a single unit.

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The advantage of Pelican’s camera module is that as well as combining the raw data from each sensor into a single frame, traditional PureView style, it can also be used to create 3D images, photos that can have their point-of-focus changed after they’ve been captured, and elements of the frame digitally excised without any loss in overall quality.

Then there’s so-called quantum-dot sensors, developed by Nokia-invested InVisage Technologies. They throw existing CMOS out the window, replacing them with a so-called QuantumFilm sensor that’s hugely more sensitive to light. In fact, InVisage claims, its QuantumFilm sensors can capture as much as 95-percent of the light that falls upon it, versus around 25-percent for a standard CMOS.

That could mean 4x sharper sensors with twice the dynamic range, but in a smaller overall package. Even the reduced bulk of 2013′s PureView could be slimmed down further again by junking the CMOS and replacing it with QuantumFilm sensors. Pair it up with advanced software processing, such as the Scalado technology Nokia acquired the rights to in 2012, and you have a new age of what Nokia calls “computational photography”, where the point where the image is captured is no longer the end of how the raw data is processed.


SlashGear 101: Nokia PureView is written by Chris Davies & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2013, SlashGear. All right reserved.

Galaxy S4 Zoom vs Galaxy Camera vs iPhone 5 vs Nokia 808 hardware photos leak

It would appear that someone in China has gotten their hands on the Samsung Galaxy S4 Zoom, a smartphone/camera hybrid unveiled earlier this month and set to be shown to the press in full on the 20th of this month. What they’ve done – like any good tech reporter with every single phone in the

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Nokia “Zoom Reinvented” event confirmed: EOS PureView likely star

Nokia has fired out invites for a New York launch event, teasing with the tagline “Zoom Reinvented” in what could be the official reveal of the Nokia EOS PureView. The event, taking place on July 11, will be a chance to “see more from Nokia” according to the invite, and judging by the magnifying glass

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Nokia EOS 40MP camera stars in leaked lens demo video

A new video showing the Nokia EOS PureView smartphone in action – right up close to what’s expected to be a roughly 40-megapixel sensor – has leaked, further stoking enthusiasm about the high-resolution handset. The footage, shared by ViziLeaks, demonstrates the EOS’ shutter and optical image stabilization in action, though the pre-production Windows Phone still

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Nokia EOS leaks again teasing PureView camera prowess

Nokia’s EOS camera-phone just can’t stay under cover now the leaks have started, with the presumed PureView 41-megapixel smartphone cropping up in a new set of shell photos. The much-rumored handset – tipped to be a Windows Phone 8 device packing the same sort of super-high-resolution sensor as wowed on the 808 PureView – was

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AT&T Nokia “EOS” 41MP PureView Windows Phone tipped in testing

The application of Nokia’s brand-name camera technology “PureView” is reportedly headed to AT&T in its original form, 41-megapixels strong and attached, this time, to Windows Phone 8. While the original 41-megapixel-toting Nokia 808 PureView was a smartphone running Symbian, here the Windows Phone version of the device is being tipped to hit the blue network

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Nokia’s Lumia 925 will resurrect the “true PureView” question

All eyes are on Nokia this week, as the company prepares for another new Windows Phone, expected to be the Lumia 925, and one with even more of a photographic bent at that. The Finnish firm has made no bones over the past months that digital imagery is one of the key differentiators it sees as distinguishing it from the rest of the mobile market, both from other Windows Phone manufacturers and the smartphone segment at large, and its London launch is expected to be the most camera-centric of the year. Speculation that we could see the “EOS” or the “Catwalk” is rife.

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Nokia stoked that camera speculation itself with its TV commercial yesterday; since then, the first shot of the Lumia 925 has leaked. You could be forgiven for seeing Nokia almost as a mobile photography company first these days, given imaging tends to be its top-line features for every new smartphone.

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Nokia has been pushing camera tech for years now, but arguably made its name as an innovator with the 808 PureView of 2012. It may have been chunky, and used Symbian – which Nokia had already confirmed was in its death-throes – but it also tore up the playbook for mobile photography, approaching elements like lossless zooming and balancing picture size with levels of noise in previously-unseen ways.

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The 808 is best remembered for its 41-megapixel sensor, a huge CMOS positively overspilling with pixels. At the time, Nokia likened it to putting out more buckets to catch more rainfall: the 808 was designed not to produce ridiculously high resolution stills, but more average shots (the default was 5-megapixels) that combined data from clusters of pixels to smooth out glitches and aberrations, and make for more accurate colors and brightness.

“The new Nokia Lumia is coming…” teaser video:

In the process, it also enabled lossless digital zooming: zoom without the moving lenses of an optical system. By cropping sections of the image – still at the 5-megapixel resolution – the 808 could effectively zoom into the frame but without the quality loss associated with every other digital zoom.

So far, though, we’re yet to see that original PureView approach replicated on a Windows Phone. The Lumia 920 and 928 both bear PureView branding, for instance, but their emphasis has been on the way more typical megapixel sensors can be supported with optical image stabilization to boost picture quality. Instead of the pixel-clusters of the 808, both of the high-end Windows Phones try to craft better images by holding their sensors steady.

That’s not to say they can’t be “true” PureView just because they lack a few dozen megapixels, however. The massive sensor was only half of the 808 story: equally important was Nokia’s custom Carl Zeiss optics, which were essential for piping the right light in the right way to the oversized CMOS. Nokia even took us to meet with the Zeiss team for a behind-the-scenes look at what optical magic was used, a complex, five-lens assembly with a range of aspheric surfaces that explained some of the 808′s thickness, just as the broad sensor explained its width.

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Lenses may not be as immediately headline-grabbing as great lashings of megapixels, but they’re the unsung heroes that Nokia has been busily working away on. Zeiss and Nokia renewed their partnership back in early 2012, and came up with what’s described as “PureView Phase 2″: a groundbreaking optical image stabilization lens which can be paired with a more traditional-resolution sensor.

Discussed in this white paper [pdf link] around the time of the Lumia 920, the second-gen system actually has a more light-friendly lens than the 808 manages: f/2.0 versus the original PureView’s f/2.4, with the same 26mm wide optics. That works with an image stabilization system that rather than move just a single lens element, actually shifts the whole optical assembly up to 500 times per second.

Hardware is only half of any story, of course, and Nokia will undoubtedly have software news to share about the Lumia 925 as well. As we’ve seen from the company’s own work to-date on Camera Lenses, and on rivals’ photography systems like Zoe on the HTC One and the native GIF-maker on the Galaxy S 4, ways of not only shooting but of manipulating stills are big business in today’s handsets.

They all demand good quality to begin with, though, and interestingly all approach that in different ways: a small number of gigantic UltraPixels from HTC, 13-megapixels-worth of smaller pixels from Samsung, and whatever PureView combination Nokia decides to bless the Lumia 925 with.

Nokia isn’t a camera company, but it’s camera technology that it’s counting on to set it apart in the market. We’ll find out how the Lumia 925 fits into that strategy tomorrow, when Nokia unveils the phone officially at its London, UK event on May 14th.


Nokia’s Lumia 925 will resurrect the “true PureView” question is written by Chris Davies & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.

Nokia teases new Lumia PureView phone ahead of Tuesday reveal

Nokia has teased its next camera-centric Lumia, running a promo campaign on UK television this weekend for the new Windows Phone 8 handset it is expected to officially unveil on Tuesday, May 14. The commercial, which focused on the dual-LED flash of the new smartphone, as well as what looks to be its slightly protruding lens, gives away little in the way of technical detail, but did drop the hint that it would be “more than your eyes can see,” leading to speculation it will be the device so-far known as ”EOS“.

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The obvious interpretation of the tagline is a super-high-resolution sensor, something previously rumored for the EOS and to which Nokia itself is no stranger. Chatter of the EOS picked up at the top end of the year, described as offering “proper PureView” in a similar manner to the well-esteemed but niche 808 PureView. However, there’s also talk of a separate device, the Nokia Catwalk, which is also believed to have a large-megapixel-count sensor (though smaller than EOS) and a metal body.

Although recent Lumia handsets, such as the 920, have borne the PureView brand, Nokia has yet to repeat its complex pixel-clustering approach to high-resolution photography on the 808. That phone used a whopping 41-megapixel sensor, though defaulted to roughly 5-megapixel stills: the camera combined data from multiple adjacent pixels to iron out any glitches or mistakes, or alternatively could provide lossless-quality digital zooming.

As a system, the original PureView technology worked – you can see quite how well in our review of the Nokia 808 PureView – but the oversized sensor had unavoidable consequences on the heft of the handset. The larger-than-normal build, along with the fact that the roughly five year development time meant it was still running Symbian, rather than Windows Phone, meant it never amounted to much more than a curio in Nokia’s line-up.

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Assuming the EOS – or whatever Lumia name the phone is officially dubbed – can avoid that bulk issue, it could well succeed where the 808 struggled, however. According to the rumor-mill, it will use a specially-waterproofed, aluminum casing courtesy of nano-coating experts P2i, though it’s impossible to tell from the commercial whether the handset is metal or metal-effect plastic.

Nokia is no stranger to teaser-campaigns, with the company having spent much of the last seven days flirting around the new Lumia 928. That handset, headed to Verizon in a few days time, was originally expected to make its official debut alongside the “EOS” on Tuesday, but Nokia pulled the trigger on the announcement on Friday last week.

SlashGear will be with Nokia this coming Tuesday to bring back all the details of the new Lumia.

SOURCE: TechCrunch; Pocket-lint


Nokia teases new Lumia PureView phone ahead of Tuesday reveal is written by Chris Davies & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.

Nokia tipped to bring 41 megapixel sensor to standard smartphones (again)

This week The Guardian is tipping the world from one of their anonymous sources that Nokia may well be bringing their full-on Nokia 808 PureView 41 megapixel sensor to a set of standard smartphones in 2013. This tip comes from “sources close to the Finnish handset maker” and is indeed appearing to us to be just about as incredible as it may seem to you. What we’ll likely see instead is a continuation of the Nokia Lumia 920′s high-powered camera technology rather than the beast that is the lens configuration on the 808 – let’s have a chat about why.

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The Nokia 808 PureView is a smartphone that’s meant to be used primarily as a camera. It’s got a massive lens configuration on its back that Nokia never intended to compete with the thin and light frames of the high-end smartphones we’re seeing throughout the industry today. Instead it was (and is) meant to show the world that Nokia can, indeed, deliver this camera power in a real market-ready handset.

What we’ve got with the Nokia Lumia 920 is a device that takes on the same “feel” for the brand that Nokia is pushing with “PureView”, this time in a more realistic package for the mass market. This device is not the thinnest smartphone in the world – not by a long shot – but it’s certainly ready to compete against the average top-tier smartphone in its overall package delivery. Nokia is banking on the idea that the camera brand PureView technology will push the rest of their handsets into the limelight.

SIDE NOTE: There’s also the possibility here that the Nokia EOS Windows Phone spoken about recently could be connected to a real-deal high-powered PureView sensor. Think about it!

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With the tip you’re seeing here about the 41-megapixel sensor coming to the standard handset, it’s much more likely that a game of “telephone” is going on. That means that the original message was likely something more like “Nokia will bring on more high-powered PureView smartphones in 2013″, translated several times to come out to “Nokia PureView smartphones (started with the 808) will come to market in 2013.” The realistic way of looking at this situation is as follows:

Nokia will continue to push forth with PureView brand camera technology in the handsets they deliver that, first and foremost, deliver an overall solid experience in and of themselves. Another possibility is that Nokia is evolving as quickly as HTC and will deliver something wild like multiple layers of lenses sandwiched together to create a camera that, in the end, works with enough sensors that they’d have otherwise created a 41-megapixel photo.

Perhaps four layers of 10 megapixel sensors to create one beast of a photo? We shall see!


Nokia tipped to bring 41 megapixel sensor to standard smartphones (again) is written by Chris Burns & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.