Night time scenes never fail to impress me
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Portrait mode with morning frost
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Thanks, it's seriously amazing.^great shots. Really impressive camera.
This is a great comparison but I just need every to slow down a bit here. The Pixel does win but it's only because of the processing. This can not be overlooked. The Sony image has no processing(or at least the bare minimum to produce the JPG) done to it while the Pixel 2 image does(a lot goes into making an HDR+ shot). If you want to do a more fair comparison just turn HDR+ off and then compare the results. Google's software processing is what really shines not so much the camera or the lens on the Pixel. But the fact that the processing is so good and believe I know it is cause it has done wonders even on my LG V20 can't be dismissed. That's what makes taking pictures on the Pixels such a delight.
Heck I dare any of you Pixel owners to do an HDR+ off vs on and compare the results side by side.
So my point is that the software processing matters. You can't just blindly say something is better than the other when so much work is being done in the background. That's all I'm saying. Like I said it is really good but I'm just trying to make a point as to the "why" before people get carried away. Don't be so defensive about it.And???
The whole point of this, along with every other smartphone camera, it is all about the final results/user experience. Whether one has better processing vs. the other has better optics/sensors, the end result is all that matters. And this is where Google is winning. Sure, they are using processing to do some of it but all that means is that, when they improve the optics/sensors, it will simply get better (not to mention how they will improve the processing).
The end result is everything. The journey to get there is irrelevant.
So my point is that the software processing matters. You can't just blindly say something is better than the other when so much work is being done in the background. That's all I'm saying. Like I said it is really good but I'm just trying to make a point as to the "why" before people get carried away. Don't be so defensive about it.
This is a great comparison but I just need every to slow down a bit here. The Pixel does win but it's only because of the processing. This can not be overlooked. The Sony image has no processing(or at least the bare minimum to produce the JPG) done to it while the Pixel 2 image does(a lot goes into making an HDR+ shot). If you want to do a more fair comparison just turn HDR+ off and then compare the results. Google's software processing is what really shines not so much the camera or the lens on the Pixel. But the fact that the processing is so good and believe I know it is cause it has done wonders even on my LG V20 can't be dismissed. That's what makes taking pictures on the Pixels such a delight.
Heck I dare any of you Pixel owners to do an HDR+ off vs on and compare the results side by side.
Fair enough.1) Why would I intentionally make my pictures worse? I already know that HDR+ is like photo magic.
2) The point of photography is the end result, the picture you take. I'm not going to hinder the Pixel 2 so that it's on the "same level" as the Sony. I'm going to ding Sony for not being able to match the software prowess of Google when it comes to photo processing.
The why does not matter. Trying to discredit the Pixel 2 because it has superior image quality due to superior software isn't going to work with me.![]()