- Jan 28, 2011
- 12
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I often read reviews of newer devices that almost always suggest that the slightly better device is not their first choice as they would prefer to make a few sacrifices in order to get that much better camera experience.
Obviously part of a journalists job is to often take pictures, but for those of us that don't take pictures as often (Less than 10 photo's per average week), is the camera really that big a deal breaker for you?.
I personally don't find the camera to be so important to me, I mean, if it has a good camera that is a bonus, but if it is not great that is not a deal breaker for me, I would prefer a device that feels like it has a good all round UX, smooth performance, good battery life(even if you're a very active user) and some extras like wireless charging, NFC, HD voice support, slim, thin bezel, high quality display(one thing I didn't like when using older samsung amoled devices was the over saturation of everything)
and of course, I would like for the volume controls to be usable when the device is in my pocket so when I'm listening to music, I can adjust the volume without having to pull the device out of my pocket ((at)OEM's: Please don't put power & volume buttons on the same side, as I don't want to accidentally press the power button, turn the display on and waste extra battery when all I was trying to do was turn the volume up/down).
But that's just my thoughts, do most of you non-journalists find the camera quality and camera app UX to be the one of the higher priorities when you are looking at new devices?
Obviously part of a journalists job is to often take pictures, but for those of us that don't take pictures as often (Less than 10 photo's per average week), is the camera really that big a deal breaker for you?.
I personally don't find the camera to be so important to me, I mean, if it has a good camera that is a bonus, but if it is not great that is not a deal breaker for me, I would prefer a device that feels like it has a good all round UX, smooth performance, good battery life(even if you're a very active user) and some extras like wireless charging, NFC, HD voice support, slim, thin bezel, high quality display(one thing I didn't like when using older samsung amoled devices was the over saturation of everything)
and of course, I would like for the volume controls to be usable when the device is in my pocket so when I'm listening to music, I can adjust the volume without having to pull the device out of my pocket ((at)OEM's: Please don't put power & volume buttons on the same side, as I don't want to accidentally press the power button, turn the display on and waste extra battery when all I was trying to do was turn the volume up/down).
But that's just my thoughts, do most of you non-journalists find the camera quality and camera app UX to be the one of the higher priorities when you are looking at new devices?