The Nexus 5 has a lock-screen shortcut to the camera that can feel like taking the scenic route: it takes way too long for the app to fire up. The slow theme continues with annoying shutter lag. Focus speed and shot-to-shot times are fine but not as snappy as the best of the competition. Even toggling the otherwise-excellent HDR+ mode locks up the camera app for several frustrating seconds.

In good light, the Nexus 5 captures plenty of detail, albeit not as much as phones with the best higher-resolution cameras. Colors are usually pleasant, if not as natural as on the highest-profile 8MP shooter in the field, the iPhone 5s. Exposure is good, although occasionally the phone selects a higher ISO than is required.


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There are 22 images in our Google Nexus 5 samples gallery. Please do not reproduce any of these images on a website or any newsletter / magazine without prior permission (see our copyright page). We make the originals available for private users to download to their own machines for personal examination or printing (in conjunction with this review), we do so in good faith, please don't abuse it.

An additional samples gallery offers a look at images after the Android 4.4.1 software update. You'll notice a couple of duplicate images: the first image of the duo demonstrates the software before the update, the second demonstrates the software after the update.

I have been using this mobile for 4 months and its one of its kind. It is an excellent device, with stunning display, nice graphics and awesome power. And it offers pure Android experience and I even installed the Android L developers version which runs perfectly on my device. The only problem I faced with device is about setting custom ringtone. I found the procedure about how to set ringtone in this link and it worked perfectly, -ringtone-in-nexus-5-and-nexus-4/

I'm glad you did the update, particularly because Google stepped up to it right away. I did a painless OS update (4.0 to 4.1) on my Samsung phone and my question was how easy it is to do an update on Nexus 5 (with the latest phone improvements, say). The latest pics look rather good.

I find the camera to be completely adequate. I recently got a great pic of my kids with Santa good enough for Christmas cards prior to the 4.4.1 release. My Nikon D5200 gets used when it really counts. The rest of the time the Nexus 5 does just fine.

I noticed that even prior to the 4.4.1/2 update that improved shooting speed, you could actually significantly improve the shot-to-shot speed if you use the volume button shutter activation rather than the on-screen shutter. For whatever reason, you're right, the screen shutter is ignored if you try spamming it, and you're getting a shot per half a second.

Good Review!

Couple of newbie qns-

Which of the shortcomings listed are fixable by a software update & which are due to hardware limitations ?

In the meantime, which camera app av in the play store can help overcome some major shortcomings?

Lastly, any comments/recommendations re the add-on lenses made by Photojojo?

While it may not fix the hardware or the camera application (directly). There's hope that the lackluster launch speeds and several of the features get some attention with the upcoming Camera API changes that were not finished in time for the Android 4.4 release:

"dedicated" is the key word here. You can use the volume buttons on almost any Android phone I have seen but only a dedicated shutter button, like on the Nokia, the HTC One or the Sony Xperia Z1, offers a half-press, just like a shutter button on a camera.

I've been using the Nokia 808 for over a year and still use it just because of its great camera. But it was time for a useable smartphone and so I got the Nexus 5.

I didn'T expect much camera-wise (it's Android and a non Samsung one at that). I was pleasantly surprised. OIS works quite well and I haven't found the startup time of the photo app or the shutter lag to be worse than other smartphones, maybe this is subjective. 

What makes me furious is the stupidity of showing a full screen presview (distorted) and making a 4:3 image. Almost all photos I make with a smartphone are being viewed on a computer screen and I like to have it in 16:9, even if it means cropping. Why on earth can't the Nexus do this? Why so many resolutions but no way to change aspect ratio? I'd love to see these 2 questions answered by someone from Google. I just don't get it. Manual ISO on the other hand I never missed- I use a smartphone just as a point and shoot. 

All in all it's a quite good camera phone.

The shutter lag makes the Nexus 5 unusable for candid shooting - arguably the main use of a smartphone. I just spent a day at Disneyland and got absolutely zero usable pictures from this phone. I was tempted to throw it in the trash on a couple of occasions.

The Lumix S9 is Panasonic's newest full-frame mirrorless camera. It allows users to create their own custom looks for out-of-camera colors and is the first full-frame Lumix camera aimed squarely at social media content creators.

The Sony a9 III is the world's first full-frame mirrorless camera to feature a global electronic shutter with simultaneous readout. After extensive testing of this 120 fps sports camera, to see what you gain (and, perhaps, lose).

The Fujifilm X100VI is the sixth iteration of Fujifilm's classically-styled large sensor compact. A 40MP X-Trans sensor, in-body stabilization and 6.2K video are the major updates, but do they make the camera better?

What's the best camera for travel? Good travel cameras should be small, versatile, and offer good image quality. In this buying guide we've rounded-up several great cameras for travel and recommended the best.

If you want a compact camera that produces great quality photos without the hassle of changing lenses, there are plenty of choices available for every budget. Read on to find out which portable enthusiast compacts are our favorites.

"All camera and lens manufacturers have to be innovative," says Sigma CEO Kazuto Yamaki, but "technology competition among manufacturers may not always be beneficial to customers... some other specifications might be more important."

Every week, we ask newsletter subscribers a question about gear, creativity or life. Recently we wanted to know: If you could go back to your 20-year-old self, what camera related advice would you give yourself?

We had a chance to shoot with the Fujifilm X-T50 for quite a while, so we put together a first-look video, outlining what it can offer, as well as shooting a sample gallery using a variety of Film Simulations.

We had the opportunity to use the new Panasonic S9 for several days at Panasonic's Lumix Summit in Osaka, Japan. In this short video, we take a closer look at the camera, who it's designed for, and the philosophy behind its LUT-based workflow.

Furthering its quest to implement AI across its product line, Adobe is bringing Adobe Firefly's 'Generative' tool to Lightroom. Also announced today: expanded tethering for Sony cameras and an updated toolbar for the mobile version.

In late February, Sigma announced the 15mm F1.4 DG DN Diagonal Fisheye lens, and we put it into the hands of a professional astrophotographer for a shoot in the Canadian sub-arctic. Check out his gallery and see how it performs under the night sky.

The Pixel 8a is the newest member of Google's Pixel 8 smartphone family. It uses the same cameras as its predecessor, the Pixel 7a, but gets the more powerful processor and features found in the Pixel 8 and 8 Pro. We took it for a spin to see how it performs.

Every week, we ask newsletter subscribers a question about gear, creativity or life. This week, feeling nostalgic over our past 25 years, we want to ask about the one that got away, or rather, the one that you let get away. 152ee80cbc

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