Nokia Lumia 1020 PureView Windows Phone leaks in full

Nokia’s big reveal for the Lumia 1020 PureView isn’t expected to take place for another few hours, but that hasn’t stopped full details of the Windows Phone 8 flagship from emerging beforehand. The Lumia 1020 will have a 4.5-inch AMOLED display on one side and a 41-megapixel PureView camera with an f/2.2 lens and optical image stabilization on the other, with a new “Pro Camera” app to give more access to manual settings and tweakable modes than on any Windows Phone before it.

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According to The Verge‘s sources, that will include control over white balance, focus, ISO, shutter speed, and image ratio. There’ll be a new “radial” interface to scroll through the options, it’s said.

Nokia has even included the ability to take two photos simultaneously but at different resolution, presumably giving one low-res shot for instant and speedy sharing to social networks like Twitter and Facebook, and another full-res version for printing and archiving. It’s also likely to be the basis of the “Zoom, Reinvented” tagline Nokia has picked for the Lumia 1020′s launch: by cropping out portions of the full-res image, the user will be able to in effect take advantage of a lossless digital zoom even after the original frame has been captured.

The Lumia 1020 will have 32GB of internal storage to store all those shots, and a Xenon flash.

Other specifications supposedly include a wide-angle front facing camera lens, for fitting more people into the frame, and 2GB of RAM. Wireless charging won’t be integrated, though – like on the Lumia 925 – Nokia will supposedly offer a wireless charging cover that can be snapped on to enable the feature.

However, the Camera Grip shell we’ve already seen leaked is arguably a more interesting case to wrap up the Lumia 1020 in. That, as we’ve seen suggested before, has both a battery and a two-stage camera button, as well as a tripod mount for more professional use of the new PureView phone.

As for why PureView is special, and how the lossless digital zoom actually works, check out our full SlashGear 101 on Nokia’s camera technology.

SlashGear will be at Nokia’s Lumia 1020 event later today in New York City to bring back all the details of the new Windows Phone’s launch. It kicks off at 11am ET (4pm London; 8am PT).

Update: Screenshots of the Pro Camera app have emerged, courtesy of Vizileaks, showing the radial layout for control over ISO, white balance, and other settings, as well as one of the settings pages for stills. That confirms the dual-capture feature, apparently grabbing up to a 40-megapixel still (along with what we’re guessing is a more regularly sized image). Vizileaks also has some sample shots from a prototype Lumia 1020 and an early version of the Pro Camera app.

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Nokia Lumia 1020 PureView Windows Phone leaks in full is written by Chris Davies & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2013, SlashGear. All right reserved.

Nokia Lumia 1020 camera full spec sheet leaked ahead of launch

Earlier today we saw a gallery of the Lumia 1020 camera’s grip leak, which hints at some features of the device, such as an extra battery for a charge time boost. Slipping in right before Nokia launches the device has been another leak, this one purporting to be the complete specification sheet for the device, giving us a nice look at what users can expect. UPDATE: See our full Nokia Lumia 1020 hands-on now!

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The device will, according to the specifications sheet, will feature a 4.5-inch AMOLED HD+ display with a resolution of 1280 x 768 with Gorilla Glass 3. To make it easier to use, there’s also a high-brightness mode, as well as a Sunlight Readability feature that ensures users can see what they’re doing outdoors. The display is designed to be “super sensitive” so that it can be used with a glove or by a fingernail touch.

Inside, users will find a dual-core Qualcomm Snapdragon (version unknown) at 1.5GHz, along with 2GB of RAM and 32GB of internal storage space. There’s no mention of a microSD slot for expansion, but there is an included 7GB of SkyDrive storage in the cloud. The camera is listed as the expected 41-megapixel PureView with optical image stabilization, as well as a backside-illuminated sensor and an Xenon flash. The device is capable of recording in 1080p at 30fps, and is accompanied by Nokia Pro Camera and Nokia Smart Camera modes.

As far as connectivity goes, the spec sheet shows GSM 850/900/1800/1900, WCDMA 2100/1900/900/850, LTE bands 1/3/7/20/8, HSPA+ DL Cat 24, dual-carrier 42.1mbps/UL Cat 5.76mbps. There’s also said to be “free global HERE Maps and HERE Drive+, free HERE transit available in the store.” Likewise, there’s the typical NFC, Bluetooth 3.0, 802.11 a/b/g/n, GPS, and USB 2.0.

There’s a 2000 mAh battery, support for wireless charging, dual microphones, a standard 3.5mm AV connector, and IHF speakers. The dual microphones are accompanied by Nokia Rich Recording, which records stereo audio that is said to be distortion-free and capable of recording in loud environments. It will be available black, yellow, and white.

SOURCE: My Nokia Blog


Nokia Lumia 1020 camera full spec sheet leaked ahead of launch is written by Brittany Hillen & 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.

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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.

More Nokia Lumia 1020 Hardware And Camera Details Surface Ahead Of Official Launch

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In case you’re somehow immune to all of Nokia’s incessant teasing, the company’s going to unveil a shiny new smartphone on Thursday in hopes that a tremendous camera will endear the thing to the masses.

The folks at WPCentral got their collective hands on a new render of the forthcoming flagship — which is apparently going to be called the Lumia 1020 after all — along with some juicy tidbits about what else Nokia’s camera-crazy device has going for it.

To briefly run through the laundry list, Nokia’s new Windows Phone will reportedly pack 2GB of RAM, 32GB of internal storage (alas, there’s no microSD slot here) and NFC. Of course, the real moneymaker is the device’s camera, or so Nokia hopes. It’s no secret that the 1020 will sport a whopping 41-megapixel rear camera sensor, but WPCentral’s Daniel Rubino has shed a bit more light on how the device will handle those images. Should his intel hold true (and I’m willing to bet it does), the 1080 “takes the image in a 32MP and 5MP at the same time in 16:9.”

Also onboard is an f/2.2 lens, which just so happens to match EXIF data from an image apparently posted from the device by Windows Phone chief Joe Belfiore. And for you strident mobile camera nerds, the 1020 is said to sport optical image stabilization, a feature that didn’t even make it into the phone’s ambitious (and chubby) ancestor.

Smartphone manufacturers are constantly latching onto anything they think will afford them an advantage against the other guys, and considering the absolutely stupid popularity of mobile photo sharing, engineering a top-flight camera for a phone is perhaps par for the course. What’s interesting is to look at just how these companies go about their business in this regard. I’ve already ranted a bit about this smartphone camera war and the issue of diminishing returns that could stymie it, but Nokia’s approach stands in stark contrast to, say, Samsung’s. Samsung was content to cobble together a cameraphone that was more camera than phone, a move that has the potential to seriously limit the S4 Zoom’s mass-market appeal. I mean really, who (save for the most ardent mobile photogs) would walk into a store and purchase a phone with a tumor-like camera pod protruding from its back?

But a staggeringly good camera in a package that doesn’t look like a misguided point-and-shoot? At first blush, that certainly seems like the smarter way to go. Then again, Nokia simply has to play it smart — they don’t really have the sort of resources to throw lots of things at walls in the hope that something sticks the way Samsung often does. And, as crappy as it is, thought engineering and envelope pushing aren’t always enough to make a device a financial success. As always, Nokia is gambling here — it hopes the promise of a game-changing camera is enough to load the die, and we’ll soon see if the company is right.

Nokia Lumia 521 Review

If you thought the Nokia Lumia 520 was good, boy are you going to have a great time with the Nokia Lumia 521. Essentially the same device as you’ll be getting internationally, this T-Mobile iteration of the entry-level Windows Phone 8 device brings the same package (with slightly different radio connections and a few extra apps) to the USA, here with the same bright white back cover as we saw across the sea (one of three, as it were).

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Hardware

With the Nokia Lumia 521 you’re rolling with a 4-inch display (running at WVGA) which, if you’re using anything sharper at the moment, will be just a bit more pixely than you’ll want to live with. This machine is, instead, made for those users upgrading from feature phones – and it’ll do a fine job of it.

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The handset measures in at 4.9 x 2.5 x 0.4 inches and weighs just 4.4 ounces – it’s lighter than it looks. You’ll connect to this machine with a microUSB cord (included in the box) and a microSIM for data, and both the back cover and the battery within are removable. There’s also a microSD card slot under the hood for an additional 32GB of space if you do so desire – you may want to pick up a microSD card when you purchase the smartphone since the 521 works with just 8GB of internal storage.

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Inside you’ve got a Qualcomm Snapdragon S4 dual-core processor at 1GHz paired with 512MB of RAM. Again, this is meant to be an upgrade for the feature phone crowd and not a battle-ready beast for the top-tier entrants in the Windows Phone 8 world. That said, this machine is swift as much of the Windows Phone 8 crowd simply because the processor paired with this screen – small and low-res as it is – makes for hot-tapping and access to the basic collection of apps available to the whole Windows Phone 8 smartphone collection.*

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You won’t be set up for future implementation of T-Mobile’s LTE network, instead kicking it up to today’s fastest data speeds from the network at HSPA+ 21. We’ll be bringing you “top speed” results as soon as we can kick out speeds above the general average – for now you’ll take comfort in knowing we’ve not have a dropped signal anywhere inside the metro area in Minneapolis / Saint Paul, Minnesota.

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The back of this machine is replaceable – compatible with the international edition of the handset as well, so finding even 3rd-party offerings in the wild-and-wacky case-making environment will work. Or SHOULD work – always be cautions if you’re buying 3rd party gear. Nokia brings the heat with this machine in white (seen here) as well as yellow, blue, and red.

Software

It should be made clear that this device brings Nokia’s unique collection of Windows Phone apps to the show – the same as each other Lumia both here in the USA and overseas. While you’ll get a limited number of these on the device right out of the box, you’ll have Nokia’s app portals to keep you busy.

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*At this point in history it’s difficult to find a smartphone running Windows Phone (Windows Phone 8 and forward, that is), that isn’t able to work with every app in Microsoft’s official app store. Nokia also provides such unique offerings (available to Lumia devices only) as Nokia Music, HERE Maps, HERE Drive, and HERE Transit. It’s all HERE, you could say.

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All except – notably – app abilities such as the augmented reality bits of City Lens (as seen with the Nokia Lumia 920 demo we got all the way back in September of 2012, courtesy of Nokia) inside HERE Maps. This doesn’t exist on this machine due to the lack of a digital compass in the 521. With A-GPS and Glonass you’ve still got turn-by-turn navigation throughout the USA

Camera

While there’s no front-facing camera on this machine, the back-facing 5-megapixel shooter is more than enough for the standard social networking sharing and general photo-taking activities you’ll be inevitably taking part in. While Nokia’s real industry-leading efforts in the camera world rest with devices like the Lumia 925 (internationally) and the Lumia 928 (here in the USA with Verizon), the Lumia 521 brings a decent “that’ll do” sort of setup – which you’ll see in example photos and video here.

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Battery

While Nokia rates this device at 7.5 hours talk time with standby at 12.5 days, we’ve found the 1430mAh battery to be standing up to a full days’ standard use without issue. If you’re a heavy user, on the other hand, expect to knock this battery out in a matter of hours – especially if you’re streaming video from something like T-Mobile TV (also built in to the device, courtesy of the carrier.)

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Wrap-Up

The Nokia Lumia 521 isn’t the nicest Windows Phone 8 device on the market – and it’s certainly not the hottest Nokia machine out today – but it’s not meant to be. Working to be the cost-cutting entry level to the Windows Phone 8 universe with the good ship Nokia – that’s the aim. That’s what this machine will do, too – expect quite a few upgrades to higher-powered Lumia devices once the 521 is paid for in full by users on T-Mobile.

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Nokia Lumia 521 Review is written by Chris Burns & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2013, SlashGear. All right reserved.

An engineer has found references to 1080p Windows Phone support in Microsoft’s new Visual Studio 201

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Windows Phone 8 Handsets Could Get Full HD (1080p) Support

Windows Phone 8 could boast of Full HD support soon.

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Facebook App For Windows Phone 8 Updated

Facebook 5.0 for Windows Phone 8 arrives.

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Facebook app for Windows Phone 8 out of beta

While Windows Phone 8 has had an iteration or two of Facebook now for some time, this week the first Facebook-made Facebook app is available for the masses. Having been plagued, more or less, by oddities and off-brand Facebook portals since birth, Windows Phone 8 here finally has an app that’s up to snuff. The

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