In addition to those 4 frames, the camera also captures interframes, plus a long exposure, all of which are merged into a single photo with improved dynamic range.Īpple has finally gone the Pixel way, but as we established in our iPhone XS review - it's almost there but needs some fine tuning.īut wait, there is more. The camera benefits from a new image signal processor with 4-frame buffer for zero shutter lag, and there is a new Smart HDR feature. The iPhone X had a bit narrower FoV with its 28mm lens. Now, the main camera of the iPhone XS and XS Max offers an equivalent field of view of a 26mm lens (in 35mm camera terms). The wide-angle f/1.8 lens has changed since the iPhone X, though. The primary 12MP sensor sits behind a f/1.8 lens, while the telephoto one - behind a f/2.4 lens, both optically stabilized, just like on the iPhone X. The telephoto camera has a 1.0µm pitch as before, no changes here. The iPhone XS and XS Max introduce an all-new 12MP sensor for the main shooter with larger pixels - 1.4µm, up from 1.22µm and doubles the focus pixels. The quad-LED dual-tone flash is here to stay, as well as the large piece of scratch-resistant sapphire glass that is supposed to keep everything away from harm's way. The Apple iPhone XS phones have a similar dual-12MP (wide+telephoto) camera setup as the iPhone 7, 8 Plus, and X.
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